Pubdate: Sat, 23 Sep 2006 Source: Washington Post (DC) Page: A06 Copyright: 2006 The Washington Post Company Contact: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491 Author: Jim VandeHei and Chris Cillizza, Washington Post Staff Writers Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) A DAY OF THRUST AND PARRY Incumbent Cites Old Writings; Democrat's Defense Is Offense LOUISVILLE -- Rep. Anne M. Northup looked pleasant and motherly in her honeydew-green blazer, her smile as sweet as iced tea. "It's good to see all my friends here," the Kentucky Republican said in greeting the handful of reporters who braved strong wind and rain for an early-morning news conference. Dead silence. Then it was down to business. Friday's business for Northup was the attempted disembowelment of Democratic challenger John Yarmuth. Her weapon was Yarmuth's own words, preserved in a stack of newspaper columns that Northup brandished at the podium. Voters, she warned, should know that the Democrat wanted to punish SUV owners, endorsed the legalization of marijuana and was all in favor of teenage drinking. "Parents should be concerned," she said, and so should everyone else. "He has a lot of goofy ideas." Northup perhaps did not provide the most fair-minded interpretation of what Yarmuth had written as a columnist for the Louisville Eccentric Observer. But nor were her descriptions necessarily so far afield. The Democrat did once back taxes on gas-guzzling vehicles, some of which are manufactured in the district. He wrote a column about prison crowding that praised Canada for decriminalizing pot, and he suggested that lowering the drinking age to 18 is "something we should consider." The GOP strategy in this competitive race is to shower Yarmuth's newspaper musings with a lot more attention in 2006 than they got when he penned them years ago. The Democrat is the founder of the Eccentric Observer, an alternative newspaper that may prove to be a tad too alternative for the Kentucky 3rd's conservative voters. The day offered a vivid -- and at times bizarre -- window into the not-so-subtle art of the political attack. Northup and her campaign team have been sitting on the columns since early in the summer, savoring their possibilities and waiting for the right moment to drop them for maximum impact. That moment came 46 days before Election Day. The first blow was the news conference at Northup headquarters, which is sandwiched between a laser-tag playground and a comic-book store. This was followed by the biggest television-advertising buy of her campaign. Northup plans to make the columns the centerpiece of her campaign from now to Nov. 7. The strategy's launch made for an emotional day. As the news conference continued, Northup took on an agitated, apparently angry demeanor. Her voice rose as she recited her charges and parried skeptical questions from reporters. She looked through her stack of columns, looking for the one in which Yarmuth said voters like to be "misled or spat on." The House campaign here has only recently resumed. Northup's 30-year-old son died this summer from a heart problem, and both candidates suspended most campaign activities until a few weeks ago. At the news conference, Northup's eyes looked heavy and tired. Usually, politicians drop their most damaging "opposition research" without fingerprints, leaking it to a reporter or airing it through a third party. Northup, by contrast, hurled her charge like an anvil through glass. The purpose is to make Yarmuth, an antiwar liberal who disagrees with her on virtually every issue, an unacceptable alternative -- even to many Democrats. They outnumber Republicans almost 2 to 1 here, which has made Northup a prime target since her first victory in 1996. Northup's aides were proud of their handiwork. Campaign manager Patrick Neely encouraged Washington Post reporters to make a detour on a nine-day tour of the region to be present for the news conference, where, he promised, there would be a spectacle too good to miss. There was a 27-inch TV to play a new attack ad and a flat-screen monitor showing the new Web site that will walk voters through controversial things Yarmuth has written and said. The event lacked one key ingredient for a classic political knockout hit: the element of surprise. Yarmuth, of course, knew he had written the columns. He said he had spent six weeks mulling the consequences of his columns before deciding to run for the seat. And he also knew that Northup wanted to use them. In July, the representative staged a news conference outside the Eccentric Observer. She demanded access to the only existing copies of Yarmuth's writings in 800 editions of the paper. In a symbolic gesture, she handed over her voting record, copies of which sit on a chair in the editor's office to this day. The paper's editors agreed to allow the Northup campaign to copy the columns, in the presence of a security guard paid for by the GOP campaign. Yarmuth no longer has day-to-day involvement with the paper, and the editor said he saw no reason not to comply. Neely spent the next two months reading thousands of pages of what Yarmuth had written and published. Yarmuth also had an inkling that Northup was about to unveil the fruits of her research. The night before Northup's news conference, a Yarmuth spokesman warned reporters that things could "blow up." The episode offered Yarmuth a chance to show his skill at one of the least-appreciated moves in politics: self-defense. This requires candidates to identify their weak spots before their opponents do. Some candidates hire people to examine their pasts for any potential vulnerability, be it a messy divorce, controversial votes in local government or, as in this case, columns written at a time when a political career was not an immediate concern. Yarmuth and campaign manager Jason Burke spent lots of time preparing their defense. Coincidentally, one of the controversial columns Northup cited included advice for politicians in a similar pickle. In January 2004, he said the first principle of damage control is, "Under no circumstance, admit you were wrong." By lunchtime, a few hours after the Northup broadside, Yarmuth was heeding his own advice. It was Burke -- not the candidate -- who headlined a hastily arranged news conference inside the Democratic candidate's office. Yarmuth was sequestered nearby. Burke took to a makeshift lectern facing the same group of reporters who had attended the Northup attack. He said he did not want to dignify most of the charges with a response, even though "no one wants to smack around people as much as I do." He then spent most of the conference bashing Northup and ignoring the specifics of her accusations. Did the candidate advocate legalizing pot? "Ridiculous," he said. What about lowering the drinking age? "Silliest thing I have ever heard." He resorted to a form of political jujitsu popular among politicians under siege: Attack the attacker. He said Northup backs President Bush 91 percent of the time. He implored reporters to ask her: "What are you proud of?" Burke said the candidate would not stoop to answering Northup's charges himself, but the campaign manager did not seem entirely confident in this strategy: "This might backfire, and people might think he is ducking," he said. "But this is not your grandfather's campaign." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake