<<http://www.dallasobserver.com/issues/2004-03-04/news.html/1/index.html>>


Congressional candidate Mike Murphy feels the strong arm of the GOP  
BY JOHN GONZALEZ

Mike Murphy's run for the District 4 congressional seat has ruffled
feathers in the national GOP. He just can't figure out why.  
  
 
About a year ago, Mike Murphy and his pal J.J. Miller were at his pad in
Frisco shooting pool over a few cold beers and lamenting the state of
politics. Murphy, who is now 30, and Miller, 33, couldn't find a
candidate whose ideas and values meshed with theirs, and the two young
Republicans thought their party needed better guidance. 
"That's when I said he should run for Congress," Miller recalls. "I told
him he'd be perfect." 

The idea grew on Murphy, despite a few obstacles to his candidacy. For
instance, the finance manager and Texas native had no political
experience. 

And no money. 

And, when you get right down to it, not much of a chance, really. 

But political hope springs eternal--witness Ralph Nader, Al Sharpton, et
al. --so with help from other politically interested friends and
volunteers, in January Murphy filed as a GOP candidate for the U.S. House
in District 4, which includes parts of Dallas and Collin counties, among
others. He went to a candidates' school, where he learned basic campaign
strategy on a tight budget. He went door-to-door and talked to people
about issues. He hasn't run any television or radio ads; his is a
grassroots campaign. 

So it seemed a bit strange when Murphy received a phone call on January
13 from New York Congressman Tom Reynolds, chairman of the National
Republican Congressional Committee. Reynolds advised the novice to get
out of the race. 

The suggestion itself was not too unusual, though hearing it from someone
as high in the party as Reynolds seemed odd. Incumbent Ralph Hall had
represented the district as a Democrat for more than 20 years until
January, when he switched parties and joined the GOP. "I think I can get
re-elected much easier if I run as a Republican," Hall told The
Associated Press at the time. The GOP, naturally concerned that their
newest member could be attacked in a primary for his defection and his
comments to the AP, wanted to make the race easier for Hall. According to
Murphy, before getting the call from Reynolds, he was twice contacted by
the Republican Party of Texas, which also advised him to drop out. He
didn't, which is when the NRCC took over the "get-Murphy-out" push. 

According to Murphy, Reynolds urged him to leave the race because the
party was throwing its full weight behind Hall. What sense did it make to
run against "an 80-year-old man who is a longtime friend of the
president?" Murphy said that Reynolds dropped plenty of big names,
including Karl Rove, chief political strategist for the president.
Reynolds promised that, should Murphy put his party first, House Majority
Leader Tom DeLay would be made aware and that he "wouldn't forget it." 

Murphy still didn't drop out. 

A few days later, Murphy received another phone call, this time from
Larry Telford, whom the NRCC calls its "incumbent retention director."
Murphy said Telford told him that running would make Murphy an enemy of
the White House and ruin his political career. 

"The party is always very hardball," says Harvey Kronberg, editor of
Quorum Report, a respected nonpartisan political Web site and
subscription newsletter based in Austin. "They really only have two
switches, on and off. They don't think it's overkill. That's not the way
they view things from the Potomac when they start drinking that water.
They think everyone has desires to move up the food chain, and since they
don't know this fellow, they probably figured they'd better come out guns
blazing. Intimidation works in so many other parts of their world that
they're probably mystified that it didn't work this time." 

Carl Forti, the NRCC's communication director, denied that the party
tried to squash District 4's grassroots challenger with bluster. Forti
confirmed that Reynolds and Telford had been in contact with Murphy, but
said that Karl Rove's name had not been dropped in either conversation.
He also denied that either caller had in any way suggested that running
might ruin Murphy's political career and make him an enemy of the White
House. 

Unfortunately for Forti, Murphy owns a tape recorder. He taped his
conversations with Telford and Reynolds, and he shared them with the
Dallas Observer. 

On the tapes, Reynolds can be heard clearly: "Normally with a party
switcher, I'd deal with it myself or take it to the speaker, but I took
this one directly to Karl Rove because of the unique relationship the
White House has with Ralph. That's what started this whole thing."
Reynolds also acknowledged that the Republicans don't want "party
switchers" in the South getting beat up too badly, because they'd like
more to follow Hall's example. 

Telford was recorded saying that the relationship between Hall and the
president "goes back a long way--they've helped each other for forever
and a day, and the White House won't rest until he wins." Then, later:
"Just consider what you're doing now. You don't want to have the freakin'
president of the United States mad at you for the rest of your life."
And, finally: "It will help you immensely to not do something that won't
take you anywhere in a practical manner and that will really screw up
your chances down the road...If you step off this cliff, gravity never
goes up, it goes down." 

----
Death Threat: "You don't want to have the freakin' president of the
United States mad at you for the rest of your life."
----

After hearing the tapes, the Observer called Forti back. He said he
hadn't fibbed; the talks between Murphy and the party honchos had been
incorrectly "characterized," which led to a "misunderstanding." "Look,
that's the reality of the race," Forti said. "That's the bottom line. The
NRCC needs to help as many Republicans as possible." 

Maybe. But according to the NRCC, which says it often contacts
challengers on behalf of vulnerable incumbents, no other calls of that
kind were made to any challenger in Texas. Oddly, the NRCC failed to
contact Mike Mosher, the other Republican candidate in District 4. Mosher
could be seen as a bigger threat to Hall than Murphy because he's been
running radio ads and plans to continue doing so until the March 9
primary, not to mention that he was recently endorsed by The Dallas
Morning News. (Forti said that the NRCC was unaware of Mosher's candidacy
until after the filing deadline.) 

"I just want to run a strong race, you know, fight the fight, and if I
lose, at least I tried," Murphy says. "Texas would be the Republic of
Mexico if we'd just given up at the Alamo. I thought it was a little odd
that they'd called me. And when they were going on about the White House
and ruining my career, all I could think was, 'I don't have a career.'" 

"You know, I've heard of a lot of ways to handle situations in politics,
but that's one of the best--it's like a Saturday Night Live skit," says
Bill Miller, an Austin-based political consultant for HillCo Partners.
"On the NRCC's part, that's what you call ham-handed amateur hour. Do
people have bad days? Yeah. Are people stupid? Absolutely. And I think
this is more of latter than the former. 

"The fact that people get threatened in politics is nothing new. But
using Karl Rove's name and saying that he would be an enemy of the
president for life if he didn't get out--that's a different situation
because of the context. I mean, here's a kid, Murphy, who is an amateur,
but he acts like a pro. And the party, they're pros, but they act like
amateurs. It speaks to how capable, or incapable, they are. We should all
tip our hat to him because he caught them on tape and let them talk
themselves into a disaster." 
 


-----
I Pledge Impertinence to the Flag-Waving of the Unindicted
Co-Conspirators of America
and to the Republicans for which I can't stand
one Abomination, Underhanded Fraud
Indefensible
with Liberty and Justice Forget it.

 -Life in Hell (Matt Groening)

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