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  • Cohen Out To Strong Lead In Early Voting

    COHEN OUT TO STRONG LEAD IN EARLY VOTING

    Memphis Commercial Appeal
    http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2008/a ug/07/cohen-takes-early-lead-over-tinker-towns-jr/
    Aug 7 2008
    TN

    By Trevor Aaronson (Contact) and Zack McMillin (Contact) and
    Bartholomew Sullivan (Contact), Memphis Commercial Appeal

    In a contentious primary that garnered national attention this week,
    U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen took a substantial early lead over his Democratic
    rivals.

    Based on early votes and absentee ballots results, Cohen leads with
    80.56 percent of the votes. His main challengers, attorney Nikki
    Tinker and state Rep. Joe Towns Jr., trail with 17.22 percent and
    1.44 percent, respectively.

    The escalating political clash between Cohen and Tinker, who first
    faced each other in the crowded 2006 Democratic Congressional primary,
    reached the national level today. Presumptive Democratic presidential
    nominee Sen. Barack Obama and former Rep. Harold Ford Jr. denounced
    Tinker's recent TV ads.

    One featured a Ku Klux Klan rally. Another criticized Cohen, who is
    Jewish, for attending "our churches" and voting in 1997 against a
    measure that Tinker's campaign contends would have permitted prayer
    in public schools.

    "These incendiary and personal attacks have no place in our politics,
    and will do nothing to help the good people of Tennessee. It's time
    to turn the page on a politics driven by negativity and division so
    that we can come together to lift up our communities and our country,"
    Obama said in a statement.

    Ford, who held the Congressional seat for 10 years before Cohen won
    it in 2006, was similarly critical of Tinker, his protege and former
    campaign manager.

    "Whenever race, religion or gender is invoked in a political contest,
    it generally means the candidate has run out of legitimate arguments
    for why he/she should be elected," Ford said in a prepared statement
    e-mailed to The Commercial Appeal.

    Ford, now chairman of the Democratic Leadership Council, did not
    endorse a candidate for the Ninth Congressional District. However,
    his wife, Emily Threlkeld Ford, contributed $3,300, the legal maximum,
    to Tinker's campaign.

    Cohen said today he believed Memphis voters would see the ads as
    nothing more than acts of political desperation.

    "The Memphis voter is much more sophisticated than the Tinker camp
    thought," he said. "They're going to vote on issues and character
    and achievement, and not on race."

    In recent days, Cohen has been forced to mount a two-front defense
    as he vies for a second term in Washington, D.C.

    In addition to Tinker's assaults, Cohen told news media he'd been
    harassed by an American-American activist angered by the congressman's
    opposition to a resolution that would have condemned Turkey for
    genocide against Armenians after World War I.

    On Wednesday, during a press conference at his Overton Park home,
    Cohen refused to allow the activist, documentarian Peter Musurlian,
    to participate in the event. The congressman's staff said only invited
    local media were allowed the home.

    Cohen eventually intervened by saying he would grant an interview
    outside. When Musurlian retreated to the door, Cohen grabbed his
    forearms with both hands and shoved him out. "Outta here," the
    politician said.

    Musurlian, from Glendale, Calif., said he is in town producing a
    documentary on the race. Armenian-Americans from around the country
    have donated as much as $30,000 to Tinker.

    Cohen said his opposition to the resolution was related to a request
    from Gen. David Petraus, who told the congressman passing the
    resolution would result in Turkey cutting off aid to American forces
    in Iraq. That stance is in agreement with all U.S. presidents going
    back to Jimmy Carter and many former secretaries of state.
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