A former organizer for the white supremacist group the Ku Klux Klan said Wednesday he is running as a Republican for Congress because he believes people will back him as part of a backlash to Barack Obama, the countrys first black president. But John Abarr, a 41-year-old night auditor at a Great Falls hotel who lost a local Republican legislative primary in 2002, could have a hard time getting any backing from Montana Republicans as he campaigns for the states lone seat in the U.S. House of Representatives in next years election.
His platform promises to legalize marijuana, increase mental health programs, keep abortion legal, abolish the death penalty because he argues it is unfair to poor people and save the White Race.
Abarr said Obamas 2008 election prompted him to get back into politics. Obama is running for re-election next year.
I think that the fact Obama got elected shows that the white people are starting to lose their political power, said Abarr, who last week filed the paperwork to let him start raising money. I am running to draw attention to the fact that white people are becoming a minority and losing our political power and way of life.
Abarr, who has previously backed the notion of deporting non-whites back to their homeland, said he no longer organizes for the KKK but is still on its mailing list. He wants a flat income tax and said he chose to run as a Republican because of the partys fiscal policies.
Republicans who actively undermined Abarrs 2002 campaign again rebuked him as a racist. Former Congressman Rick Hill said Republicans were founded on freedom, liberty and equal opportunity.
Theres no room for racism in our party, said Hill, who is considered a front-runner for governor in 2012. That is not what we are about, and we have never been about that.
Leading state Republicans have already rallied around Bozeman businessman Steve Daines in 2012 as the popular choice to replace Republican U.S. Rep. Denny Rehberg, who is running for U.S. Senate.
Democrats challenged Republicans for attracting a candidate with a racist message.
This is a relationship that the Klu Klux Klan and Montana Republican Party are going to have to explain to Montanans, said Chris Saeger, spokesman for the
Montana Democratic Party. Republicans should join with Democrats and the rest of Montana in rejecting the extreme, hateful agenda of the Klu Klux Klan.