Tag: tim donnelly
Donnelly Says Obama Is Like Hitler, Stalin On Gun Control

Donnelly Says Obama Is Like Hitler, Stalin On Gun Control

By Chris Megerian and Seema Mehta, Los Angeles Times

SACRAMENTO, California — California Assemblyman Tim Donnelly, a Republican candidate for governor, on Tuesday likened President Barack Obama to dictators such as Adolf Hitler and Josef Stalin on the issue of gun control.

The comparison, issued in a tweet, included an image with two rows of portraits. The first one showed George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and others who Donnelly said “stood for gun rights.” The second had Obama alongside Hitler, Stalin and King George III as people who “stood for gun control.”

Donnelly, a lawmaker from San Bernardino County, has made expansion of gun rights a central part of his platform, aligning himself with advocates who view gun regulations as a dangerous form of government overreach. He’s also criticized Neel Kashkari, another Republican gubernatorial candidate, for not having similar views.

In a recent fundraising appeal, Donnelly said Kashkari “wants to trample your rights and seize your guns.” Kashkari is a gun owner who has said that a background check and waiting period when purchasing firearms did not bother him.

Although firearms have been a core issue for Donnelly, they’ve also gotten him into trouble. He was placed on probation for three years after taking a handgun to an airport in January 2012; Donnelly said he had accidentally left it in his briefcase.

The handgun was not registered to him. Donnelly said “he never got around” to registering it and has refused to answer additional questions about his purchase of the weapon.

Donnelly’s rhetoric on Tuesday drew criticism from Tenoch Flores, spokesman for the California Democratic Party.

“It’s despicable and more than anything shows the degree to which this Republican gubernatorial candidate lives in an alternate universe populated by right-wing tea party delusions,” he said.

Donnelly and his campaign manager, Jennifer Kerns, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Nazi comparisons have backfired on California politicians in the past, including Flores’ boss, party Chairman John Burton.

During the 2012 presidential campaign, Burton said Republican rhetoric was rooted in falsehoods and “that was Goebbels, a big lie.” Burton was criticized by Republicans and the Obama campaign for referencing Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels.

Two years earlier, during California’s 2010 gubernatorial campaign, Democrat Jerry Brown said Republican opponent Meg Whitman’s advertising campaign was “like Goebbels.”

Both Burton and Brown offered apologies to anyone their remarks offended.

Photo: Rob Bixby via Flickr.com

California Republicans Fear Another November Of Democratic Dominance

California Republicans Fear Another November Of Democratic Dominance

By Seema Mehta, Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Facing a daunting effort to unseat Gov. Jerry Brown, Republican activists in California are openly worrying about whether the party’s donors, elected leaders and voters will embrace any of the GOP gubernatorial candidates.

If Neel Kashkari or Tim Donnelly — the two major GOP candidates hoping to challenge Brown in November — do not receive enough support to gain momentum, critical races across the state could be lost.

They include several tight congressional races that could affect the party’s level of power in Washington and enough state legislative contests to affect Republicans’ ability to increase their voice in Sacramento by breaking the Democrats’ supermajorities there.

“I believe we are about two steps away from a nightmare scenario where (some) Republicans begin to simply give up and throw in with Brown, with serious negative consequences,” said Ron Nehring, former chairman of the California Republican Party.

His concern is emblematic of the party’s troubles in California. A Republican has not been elected to statewide office since 2006, and the GOP share of registered voters has dipped beneath 30 percent, a historic low. No viable Republicans have emerged this year to contest most of the other statewide offices up for contention, such as attorney general, controller, treasurer and lieutenant governor.

Political leaders in other states have grappled with cross-party backing for a popular incumbent, stoking Nehring’s fears in California.

In New Jersey, many Democratic mayors endorsed Republican Gov. Chris Christie’s re-election bid last year. That has been thrust into the news recently with allegations that his administration rewarded those who backed him and punished those who didn’t.

Earlier this month, a state GOP chairman in New York sent a letter to Republicans leaders imploring them not to endorse Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo for a second term. That state has not elected a Republican to statewide office since 2002.

In California, Republican Jon Fleischman, publisher of an influential conservative blog, is particularly worried about the gubernatorial contest’s potential effect on more than half a dozen congressional seats.

Many of those are held by Democrats considered vulnerable because their narrow victories in 2012 were sealed by the high turnout of President Barack Obama’s supporters. If Republicans could flip those seats, their power in the nation’s capital would increase, or at least help them offset losses elsewhere.

“That could tilt the balance of power in Washington, D.C.,” Fleischman said. “Because of that more so than anything else, there is a reason to not want to see the top of the ticket be anemic in California. If Jerry Brown wins in a blow-out election … he has big coattails.”

Public attention has just begun to focus on the governor’s race.

Kashkari, a former U.S. Treasury official and fund manager, jumped in Tuesday. Donnelly, a second-term assemblyman from Twin Peaks, began exploring a run in late 2012 and declared his candidacy in November 2013.

Kashkari, a Laguna Beach multimillionaire who has never held elective office, is a fiscal conservative who supports same-sex marriage and abortion rights and voted for Obama in 2008. He has pledged to create jobs and improve schools.

He spent much of the past year meeting with donors, voters, party activists and others as he weighed a bid for governor. Whether he can raise money and whether he will be competent on the stump are open questions.

Kashkari has some establishment support. His team includes veterans of the campaigns of former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and former GOP presidential nominees Mitt Romney and John McCain.

The Republican Governors’ Association last week urged its Twitter followers to check out Kashkari’s campaign website, something it did not do on the day Donnelly kicked off his bid.

But what Kashkari’s campaign touts as his chief credential — leading TARP, the taxpayer-funded bank bailout under presidents George W. Bush and Obama — is also a vulnerability. The program was deeply unpopular among voters, who saw big banks getting help from the government as many homeowners suffered.

Donnelly, meanwhile, appeals to the grass roots of the Republican Party with his unabashed conservatism. He is a Tea Party favorite and the founder of a Minuteman border patrol chapter.

His campaign asserts that he excites bedrock Republicans, who are tired of being urged to support ultimately unsuccessful moderates such as 2010 GOP gubernatorial candidate Meg Whitman. She and others were said to have a better chance of winning a statewide race than a conservative candidate.

But Donnelly’s hard-line views on issues such as immigration and gun control may not appeal to a broad swath of Californians. And he has failed to raise any significant money.

Money will be critical in the contest against Brown, who has already raised $17 million, can claim to have repaired the state’s finances and is popular among voters.

GOP strategist Rob Stutzman, a former Whitman and Schwarzenegger adviser who is not working for a gubernatorial candidate this year, repeated what many Republican leaders said privately: that they fear the fallout if Donnelly is their standard-bearer in November. But they also don’t know if Kashkari is viable.

“If Donnelly somehow ends up being the nominee … I think you’ll see institutional Republicans, elected Republicans, supporting Gov. Brown. I think it will create a Republicans-for-Brown movement that will be rather open and probably energetic,” he said.

But “Kashkari remains a huge unknown,” he added, “because he’s never done anything like this before. ”

Photo: Amy The Nurse via Flickr

This Week In Crazy: Demons Are In Your Weed, And The Rest Of The Worst Of The Right

Welcome to “This Week In Crazy,” The National Memo’s weekly update on the wildest attacks, conspiracy theories, and other loony behavior from the increasingly unhinged right wing. Starting with number five:

5. Bryan Fischer

This Year In Crazy honoree Bryan Fischer has a problem: He knows that the Obama administration is destroying America by inviting demons into the White House, and letting hypermasculine homosexuals take over the military. But every time he finds a hero like Todd Akin who is willing to restore the Christian theocracy that Fischer is certain the Founding Fathers wanted, the voters refuse to accept them.

Thankfully, Fischer has a solution: Stop poor people from voting!

“You know, back in the day, in the colonial period, you’d have to be a landowner, a property owner to be eligible to vote and I don’t think that’s a bad idea,” Fischer said on the Tuesday edition of his radio show. “People that are not property owners — it’s like people that pay no taxes, they have no skin in the game. They don’t care about the same things that somebody does who is rooted in the community.”

As the good folks at Right Wing Watchpoint out, Fischer also opposes Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps, and the minimum wage, so it may be hard to find a candidate to run on the Fischer platform. A candidate other than Ted Nugent, that is. Speaking of whom…

4. Ted Nugent

On Thursday, movie producer and major Democratic donor Harvey Weinstein announced his intention to make an anti-gun film that will make the National Rifle Association “wish they weren’t alive.

You’ll surely be shocked to learn that the right-wing media is not pleased with this development.

The rush to condemn Weinstein was quick and comprehensive — highlights included Fox News’ Martha McCollum falsely asserting that gun control caused the Holocaust and Dana Perino suggesting that if Weinstein really wants to reduce gun violence, he should “take on the teachers’ unions” — but no response was more unhinged than that of NRA gadfly Ted Nugent.

Appearing on the NRA’s Cam & Company program, Nugent declared that he doesn’t fear Weinstein’s movie, because “I know that God is inspiring this subhuman punk Weinstein to create what is going to be the most powerful promotion tool for the NRA ever.”

According to Nugent, viewers “will see that Joseph Goebbels and Saul Alinsky is alive in the form of a fat punk named Harvey Weinstein and as he tries to destroy the NRA it will backfire on him.”

Nugent’s rant was so over-the-top stupid that it even beat out his comments on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day for admission to this list (spoiler alert: they were offensive).

And for those of you still keeping score at home, the Ted Nugent “dead or in jail” clock is now at negative nine months.

3. Tim Donnelly

The 2014 campaign cycle has already seen no shortage of ridiculous ads, but this effort from California assemblyman Tim Donnelly is going to be hard to top.

Donnelly, who is a co-founder of the nativist Minuteman movement in California, is running a Tea Party-backed campaign for governor in 2014. According to his new campaign ad, his main qualifications appear to be his dog (a chihuahua named “Tequila”), his wife (the “sexiest woman in California”), and his huge testicles.

With crazy ads like this, Donnelly could have a bright future in Republican politics (as long as he gets rid of all the Spanish, of course).

2. Glenn Beck

Glenn Beck makes his triumphant return to the list at number two, for yet another prediction of our imminent, Terminator-fueled demise.

This time, according to Beck, it’s Google that is going to destroy the world — evidently by ignoring God, and ripping off the plot of Attack of the Clones:

Apparently the Star Wars movies have now joined The Terminator in Beck’s library of science fact. And no, I still haven’t read The Singularity.

1. Gordon Klingenschmitt

This week’s “winner” is Colorado legislature candidate and militant gay-fearer Gordon Klingenschmitt.

It may not shock you to learn that Klingenschmitt is not a big fan of his home state’s decision to legalize the recreational use of marijuana. Klingenschmitt’s concerns are twofold: First, he’s worried that poor people can buy weed with food stamps (they can’t). Second, he fears that demons are getting you high. Seriously.

“There is a demonic spirit of drunkenness and it’s not just alcohol,” Klingenschmitt warned. “Why do you think you have hallucinations? These spiritual visions that you have are not just biological; they’re actually demonic.”

Now that weed has apparently joined gay people and Madonna on the list of things that demons control, it’s probably only a matter of time before a militant breaks into Klingenschmitt’s house and lights up.

Check out previous editions of This Week In Crazy here. Think we missed something? Let us know in the comments!