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(s)Elections See other (s)Elections Articles Title: McCain Slams N.C. GOP for Anti-Obama Ad Raleigh, N.C. Republican presidential candidate John McCain on Wednesday asked the North Carolina Republican Party to pull a new ad that criticizes Democratic candidate Barack Obama as well as the two leading Democratic gubernatorial candidates. The ad, which the state GOP unveiled Wednesday morning, revives the link between Obama and his former minister in Chicago, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, who has been criticized for comments from the pulpit against the Iraq War and President George W. Bush. Obama later condemned the comments as divisive but said Wright's statements highlighted the racial divide in the country that needed to be bridged. He also said Wright was being treated unfairly because a few comments from a career as a minister were being highlighted. The ad shows Wright preaching and questions why Lt. Gov. Beverly Perdue and State Treasurer Richard Moore have endorsed Obama for president, calling him "too extreme for North Carolina." "The Democratic candidates ... show poor judgment and a lack of leadership by endorsing Barack Obama, a man too liberal for North Carolina, out of touch with North Carolinians' values and linked to extremist figures throughout his political career," state GOP Chairwoman Linda Daves said in a statement. McCain sent a letter to Daves, asking her not to run the ad, which he called "offensive." "I have been committed to running a respectful campaign based upon an honest debate about the great issues confronting America today. I expect all state parties to do so as well. The television advertisement you are planning to air degrades our civics and distracts us from the very real differences we have with the Democrats," McCain wrote. "We need to run a campaign that is worthy of the people we seek to serve. There is no doubt that we will draw sharp contrasts with the Democrats on fundamental issues critical to the future course of our country. But we need not engage in political tactics that only seek to divide the American people," he wrote. Despite the complaint, state GOP officials said they plan to run the ad. Meanwhile, a key adviser to former Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards threw his support behind Obama on Wednesday. Ed Turlington, a Raleigh lawyer and Edwards' former campaign manager, was among 49 Edwards supporters to endorse Obama. "Barack Obama and John Edwards share a commitment to taking on special interests and standing up for regular Americans. Along with Edwards supporters from across the state, I am honored to join Sen. Obama's movement for change, Turlington said in a statement. As president, he will bring together Democrats, Republicans and independents behind an agenda of change." Other Edwards supporters endorsing Obama include former state House Majority Leader Phil Baddour, state Secretary of Cultural Resources Lisbeth Evans, former state Supreme Court justices Henry Frye and Willis Whichard, former Charlotte mayor and U.S. Senate candidate Harvey Gantt and University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill board chairman Roger Perry.
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