Skip to main content
Inside Politics
CNN Europe CNN Asia
On CNN TV Transcripts Headline News CNN International About CNN.com Preferences
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
SERVICES
 
 
 
SEARCH
Web CNN.com
powered by Yahoo!

Clinton calls GOP 'hypocritical' on Lott

Former president lashes out at Republicans

Former President Clinton says Republicans try to suppress black voters.
Former President Clinton says Republicans try to suppress black voters.

   Story Tools

more video VIDEO
Former U.S. President Bill Clinton says the Republican Party is being hypocritical in its handling of Sen. Trent Lott of Mississippi (December 18)
premium content

CNN's Jonathan Karl reports on embattled Sen. Trent Lott's vow to hold on to his job as majority leader (December 19)
premium content

On CNN's Crossfire, Democratic strategist and co-host James Carville forgives Lott (December 18)
premium content

Listen to the comment by Sen. Trent Lott in 2000 that is similar to the recent comments that may cost him his job (December 18)
premium content
RELATED

NEW YORK (CNN) -- Former President Clinton said Wednesday it is "pretty hypocritical" of Republicans to criticize incoming Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott for stating publicly what he said the GOP does "on the back roads every day."

"How do they think they got a majority in the South anyway?" Clinton told CNN outside a business luncheon he was attending. "I think what they are really upset about is that he made public their strategy."

He added: "They try to suppress black voting, they ran on the Confederate flag in Georgia and South Carolina, and from top to bottom the Republicans supported it."

Clinton's comments were strongly refuted by a Republican spokesman, who called on the former president to "check his facts."

Lott, a Mississippi Republican, has been fighting for his political life since he suggested that the United States would have been better off had it elected Strom Thurmond president on a segregationist ticket in 1948. Lott has since repeatedly apologized.

Many Republicans, including President Bush, have denounced Lott's comments, saying they don't reflect the party's spirit. Bush has called broadening the GOP's appeal to minorities one of his priorities.

Meanwhile former Clinton political adviser and Democratic strategist James Carville said he accepted Lott's apology.

Carville, also a co-host of CNN's "Crossfire," faxed a letter to Lott's office Wednesday in which he both accepted the senator's apology and pledged not to criticize him further for comments made recently or further in the past on the issue of race.

Carville said his decision to send the letter was influenced at least in part by the comments of Democratic Rep. John Lewis of Georgia, a former civil rights leader, who accepted Lott's apology this week. (Full Story)

Senate Republicans are to meet January 6 to discuss Lott's fate as the party's leader in the Senate.

Asked if Lott should be removed, Clinton said, "That's up to them, but I think they can't do it with a straight face."

The former president then said, "He just embarrassed them by saying in Washington what they do on the back roads every day."

He accused Republicans of "trying to run black voters away from the polls" in states such as Arkansas, Louisiana and Florida. Clinton also cited recent gubernatorial elections in Georgia and South Carolina, won by Republicans.

GOP spokesman points to minority outreach

Jim Dyke, press secretary for the Republican National Committee, disputed Clinton's characterization of the party's election gains.

"We worked hard to make sure that more people were registered to vote, more people went to the polls and more people voted for Republicans on Election Day. President Clinton should check his facts."

In Georgia, Democratic incumbent Roy Barnes was defeated by the GOP's Sonny Perdue, who promised voters a referendum on whether to return the Confederate emblem to a position of prominence on the state flag. In South Carolina, some political analysts have said Republican Mark Sanford's defeat of Gov. Jim Hodges could be attributed in part to Hodges' decision to remove the Confederate flag from atop the state capitol.

"I think the way the Republicans have treated Senator Lott is pretty hypocritical since right now their policy is, in my view, inimical to everything that this country stands for," Clinton said.



Story Tools

Top Stories
Panel: Spy agencies in dark about threats
Top Stories
CNN/Money: Security alert issued for 40 million credit cards
 
 
 
 
  SEARCH CNN.COM:
© 2004 Cable News Network LP, LLLP.
A Time Warner Company. All Rights Reserved.
Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines. Contact us.
external link
All external sites will open in a new browser.
CNN.com does not endorse external sites.