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Reid has a history of sparking controversy with off-the-cuff remarks, and possibly as a result, he rarely makes appearances on television interview programs. Increasingly, he speaks from a script when he addresses reporters in the Capitol. In 2004, he called President George W. Bush a liar for actions relating to a proposed nuclear waste dump in Nevada, then said he would not back off. Several months later, in comments to high school students in Nevada, Reid said the president was a loser, then called the White House swiftly to apologize. While Democrats quickly coalesced around Reid, Republicans sought political gain in the controversy. The National Republican Senatorial Committee said in a statement "voters are reminded" of when then-Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., said in 2002 the country would have been better off if Dixiecrats had won the presidential election in 1948. Lott spoke at a 100th birthday party for Sen. Strom Thurmond, who sought the White House a half-century earlier on a platform of racial segregation. Michael Steele, who is black and the chairman of the Republican Party, accused Democrats of trying to have it both ways. "There is this standard where the Democrats feel that they can say these things and they can apologize when it comes from the mouths of their own. But if it comes from anyone else, it's racism," Steele said. Steele did not mention that it was Bush's White House and fellow Republicans, embarrassed by the comments, who ultimately pushed Lott from his leadership position. Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the GOP leader, refrained from criticism.
[Associated
Press;
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