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A Fiery Ex-Congresswoman Hopes to Make a Comeback
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS / April 11, 2004
STONE MOUNTAIN, Ga., April 10 (AP) —
Cynthia A. McKinney, Georgia's
first black congresswoman, is trying to regain the seat she held for
10 years but
lost, largely because of fallout from incendiary remarks about the Mideast
and terrorism.
Winning will not be easy, even some of Ms. McKinney's fellow Democrats say.
For one thing, her past statements may be hard for voters to forget.
"
It's going to be a real battle," said Representative John Lewis, Democrat
of Georgia. "Even if Cynthia gets the nomination, I don't think it'll
be a cakewalk."
Before her ouster, Ms. McKinney received national attention for her
bold comments and conspiracy theories, particularly after the terrorist attacks
of Sept.
11, 2001. She claimed the Bush administration had done
nothing to stop the attacks because the president's friends stood to
profit. She scolded Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani
of New York for turning down a $10 million gift for the victims' families
from Prince Alwaleed bin Talal of Saudi Arabia, after the prince suggested
that
American policies toward the Mideast were partly to blame for the attacks.
(She then asked the prince to give the money to her home district instead.)
Ms. McKinney also drew criticism for speaking out in support of Palestinian
causes and against American sanctions on Iraq before the war.
She lost the 2002 Democratic primary to Denise Majette, a former state judge
who said in her campaign that she would not embarrass her suburban Atlanta
district as she claimed Ms. McKinney had. Ms. Majette is now seeking the United
States Senate seat being vacated by former Gov. Zell Miller.
Ms. McKinney, 49, and officials of her campaign did not return telephone calls
and an e-mail message seeking comment.
Some voters say Ms. McKinney's past remarks are too outlandish for a member
of Congress, while others say Washington can use a voice like hers.
"
That's the kind of people you need, who's not afraid to go against the grain," said
Grace Young, 52, after buying lunch at a Jamaican bakery on
Cynthia McKinney Parkway in Ms. McKinney's old district.
Virginia Houghtaling, 51, a resident of Stone Mountain Village, said
she had serious doubts about what Ms. McKinney could accomplish
because of
her stances. "I
don't know if I'd vote for her or not," Ms. Houghtaling
said.
Charles S. Bullock III, a political scientist at the University
of Georgia, said Ms. McKinney's comments would definitely
harm her. "She's such a
well-known quantity now, it would be difficult to redefine herself," he
said.
Professor Bullock said Ms. McKinney was also hurt by off-the-cuff
comments by her father, Billy McKinney, who himself is
trying to regain a seat
in the State Legislature that he lost in 2002 after 30
years. Before his daughter's
defeat, Mr. McKinney spelled out on television the reason
he believed she faced
such a tough battle: "J-E-W-S."
Ms. McKinney attributed her 2002 loss to "malicious crossover voting" by
Republicans in her district, which is heavily black and
Democratic. A federal judge rejected a lawsuit filed by
supporters of
Ms. McKinney charging a
violation of the Voting Rights Act. Professor Bullock said
white voters were the key to the easy 2002 primary victory of Ms. Majette,
who is black.
This year, Ms. McKinney's likely competition in the July 20 primary includes
Nadine Thomas, a state senator, and Cathy Woolard, the president of the Atlanta
City Council. Ms. Woolard is white and Ms. Thomas is black.
Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company