Calif. GOP wants own candidate to withdraw
Demand linked to letter meant to intimidate Hispanic immigrant voters
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GARDEN GROVE, Calif. - Orange County Republican leaders on Thursday called for the withdrawal of a GOP congressional candidate they believe sent a letter threatening Hispanic immigrant voters with arrest.
Tan D. Nguyen denied knowing anything about the letter in an interview Thursday with The Associated Press but said he fired a campaign staffer who may have been responsible for it.
County Republican Chairman Scott Baugh, however, said that after speaking with state investigators and the company that distributed the mailer, he believes Nguyen had direct knowledge of the “obnoxious and reprehensible” letter. He told the AP that the party’s executive committee voted unanimously to Nguyen to drop out of the race against Democratic U.S. Rep. Loretta Sanchez.
“I learned information that allows me to draw the conclusion that not only was Mr. Nguyen’s campaign involved in this, but that Mr. Nguyen was personally involved in expediting the mailer,” Baugh said in a telephone interview.
State and federal officials were investigating the letter, which was written in Spanish and mailed to an estimated 14,000 Democratic voters in central Orange County. It warns, “You are advised that if your residence in this country is illegal or you are an immigrant, voting in a federal election is a crime that could result in jail time.”
Immigrants who are adult naturalized citizens are eligible to vote.
‘I did not do this’
Nguyen, a Vietnamese immigrant whose opposition to illegal immigration has figured heavily in his underdog campaign, was not immediately available to react to the committee’s vote. A staffer at his campaign headquarters said he was meeting with investigators.
Earlier Thursday, he said in an interview, “I did not do this. I did not approve of any letter.”
Nguyen said he has fired an employee in his office who he believes might have used his campaign’s voter database to send the letter without his knowledge. He said he was cooperating with authorities and planned to continue his campaign.
“I will do whatever I can do to encourage all citizens in this district to vote,” he said.
Orange County is an immigration battleground. One founder of the Minuteman civilian border patrol group ran for Congress here and cities have debated issues such as the value of public centers for day laborers and the use of local police to arrest illegal immigrants.
Justice Department investigating
Complaints about the letters this week prompted a state probe, and a spokesman for California’s attorney general said investigators had been questioning people in Orange County. U.S. Justice Department spokeswoman Cynthia Magnuson said the department’s civil rights division was investigating in coordination with the state attorney general’s office.
Numerous political leaders denounced the letter, including Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.
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In an interview Thursday morning, Sanchez said she had never spoken to Nguyen because her campaign didn’t see him as a threat to her re-election.
“If it is in fact this guy (who sent the letter), the most disgusting and saddest thing about it is that it comes from another immigrant,” said Sanchez, a congresswoman born in the U.S. to Mexican parents whose 1996 election signaled Orange County’s increasing diversification. “These communities have spent years trying to get naturalized immigrants to vote.”
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