Nude video latest scandal turning Republicans against U.S. Rep. Cawthorn
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[May 06, 2022] By
David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A grainy 28-second
video showing a naked young man gyrating against someone in bed amid
squeals and laughter was the latest in a string of episodes that has
turned Republicans against one of their own: the brash U.S.
Representative Madison Cawthorn of North Carolina.
The group that released the video online said it depicted Cawthorn, who
did not dispute the claim. The 26-year-old political novice on Thursday
slammed the video's release as a "hit" and "blackmail" against him and
said it showed him joking with a friend years ago.
It followed other episodes that have led powerful Republicans such as
Kevin McCarthy, the top Republican in the House of Representatives, to
break with him.
These included Cawthorn's claim of being invited to a cocaine-fueled
Washington sex orgy by leaders he respected, two attempts to carry a gun
onto an airplane and calling Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy a
"thug" in the midst of a Russian invasion.
"It isn't any one thing. It's the totality," North Carolina U.S. Senator
Tom Tillis, who is actively working against Cawthorn ahead of a May 17
primary, told Reuters.
Tillis, who has endorsed state Senator Chuck Edwards' challenge of
Cawthorn, added: "I just want better representation, better results for
people out in the district."
Cawthorn beat a Donald Trump-endorsed Republican in 2020 on his way to
Congress. As the youngest member of Congress, he has adopted the former
president's pugilistic style and won his 2022 reelection endorsement.
But a poll conducted for the Republican GOPAC Election Fund showed
Cawthorn's lead among likely primary voters dropping to 38% in late
April from 49% in March, while support for Edwards advanced to 21% from
14%. The poll has a 4.9% margin of error.
Cawthorn's campaign finances are in the red three weeks ahead of the
primary, with debts and obligations more than twice as large as his cash
position as of April 27, according to documents filed with the Federal
Election Commission on Thursday.
The American Muckrakers PAC, dedicated to opposing
Cawthorn, released the video this week on the website FireMadison.com.
In addition to the two individuals in the bed, the scene included a
wheelchair, which Cawthorn uses, nearby.
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U.S. Representative Madison Cawthorn (R-NC) arrives to the State of
the Union address at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, DC, U.S, March
1, 2022. Saul Loeb/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
Tillis described the video as "absurd to embarrassing."
Cawthorn brushed it off on Twitter.
"A new hit against me just dropped. Years ago, in this video, I was
being crass with a friend, trying to be funny. We were acting
foolish, and joking. That's it," Cawthorn tweeted. "I'm NOT backing
down. I told you there would be a drip drip campaign. Blackmail
won't win. We will."
Cawthorn would be forced into a June runoff election if he failed to
garner more than 30% of the vote in the primary. Polling data showed
that 31% of voters had a very favorable opinion of him last month.
Jim Davis, a former Republican state senator who ran against
Cawthorn in 2020 and ended up voting for him in a runoff election,
said: "A lot of Republicans think that he's an embarrassment, given
the things that he's saying and the things that he's done. And I'm
one of them."
But pollsters and strategists said there is a chance the attacks
could backfire on his opponents by galvanizing support for Cawthorn,
a populist who opposes the Republican establishment.
Some Republican voters have embraced the combative styles of extreme
personalities such as Trump, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and U.S.
Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene as an antidote to what they
view as the excesses of liberal Democrats.
"It's going to be a very close election," said Republican pollster
Glen Bolger, whose firm Public Opinion Strategies has also conducted
two surveys for the Edwards campaign. "It's possible that he could
survive his self-inflicted political wounds. But he's put himself in
grave political danger."
(Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Scott Malone, Cynthia
Osterman and Lincoln Feast.)
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