ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: MONDAY, October 31, 1994                   TAG: 9411010046
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: C-4   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: MARGARET EDDS AND ROBERT LITTLE STAFF WRITERS
DATELINE: RICHMOND                                LENGTH: Medium


GOP CHAIRMAN: MINISTERS' BACKING A DOUBLE STANDARD

State Republican Party Chairman Patrick McSweeney charged Sunday that a double standard allows black ministers to endorse political candidates over the airwaves, while white ministers likely would be investigated by the Internal Revenue Service for doing the same thing.

Citing a U.S. Senate race endorsement of Democrat Charles Robb during a televised Sunday service in Richmond last week, McSweeney asked: "Can you imagine what would have happened if that had been a white church?

"The IRS would be down checking on their tax-exempt status. All their books would have been pored over."

McSweeney, whose comments came in an interview at the close of a rally for GOP Senate nominee Oliver North, said he is not accusing the Trinity Baptist Church minister of violating any law by urging his congregation to back North's opponent.

But the statement was "a paid commercial as far as I was concerned ... I guarantee you we would have been pounded if it had happened on our side."

McSweeney's remarks continued an assault launched Friday at a news conference. Asked at the event why North was not attending a state NAACP convention that night, the chairman voiced frustration over the inability of Republicans to win substantial black support.

McSweeney attributed the failure to Democratic distortions, "walking-around money" and the influence of a few powerful black leaders. He said it was not cost-effective for Republicans to campaign for black support, particularly in the final days of an election.

"Walking-around money" refers to cash paid on Election Day to workers who knock on doors, distribute literature and drive people to the polls.

McSweeney said that, since Friday, he's heard from a dozen or more black ministers and political activists who agree with him that the practice should be stopped. They are planning a news conference this week, he said.

"I'm fed up," he said, calling the planned news conference "a wedge we might finally be able to use to get through" to black voters.

Robb spent Sunday morning in Richmond at the state's largest black church.

Robb and Rep. Robert Scott spoke to the congregation of the Cedar Street Baptist Church of God during a rousing service that included a sermon aimed at inspiring church members to vote.

Robb did not mention his opponents specifically or ask members for support.

``I hope we will continue to vote tolerance over intolerance. I hope we will continue to vote our hopes instead of our fears,'' Robb said.

North had addressed the same congregation a week earlier.

Asked how North was received, the Rev. Dr. Benjamin W. Robertson, the church's pastor, smiled and said: ``We're Christians. We receive everyone with open arms.''

Like Robb, Robertson did not try to make a plea for the support of any one candidate.

But he did praise Robb for his service in office, and told church members: ``Don't stay home because the persons who are running are not perfect. Those of you who look for a perfect candidate won't find him.''

At the North rally, held on a Civil War munitions site along the James River in downtown Richmond, police estimated the crowd at up to 1,700 people. It was the last of five such events held by North over the weekend to fire up his troops for the Nov. 8 election.

A similar rally earlier in the day in Roanoke produced a comparable crowd, making the events the largest for a single candidate in recent memory.

Many Richmond supporters wore small yellow lapel stickers reading: "Get-Even Day - November 8."

Keywords:
POLITICS



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