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Attacks fly fast in 13th debate

Miller, Robinson to meet twice more

- Staff Writer

Published: Wed, Oct. 18, 2006 12:00AM

Modified Wed, Oct. 18, 2006 06:49AM

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WINSTON-SALEM -- The rowdy 13th Congressional District race entered a more intense phase Tuesday, with a debate that had the flavor of a supermarket tabloid.

Acting as a cultural warrior, Republican challenger Vernon Robinson tried to tie Democratic U.S. Rep. Brad Miller to French homosexuals, a study of how college women respond physically to pornography and bilingual ballots for Hispanics, among other things.

"My opponent has San Francisco values and repeatedly votes against the institutions of this great nation," Robinson said.

Lively exchanges

Here's more of what Miller and Robinson had to say.

ON IRAQ

MILLER: "It's obvious the Bush administration had no idea what they were getting us into in Iraq, and they have no idea, still, how to get us out of there. The Iraqi people want us to go. ... We need to make it clear that we are there for a limited time, and there needs to be at least a flexible timetable to get us out of there and so the Iraqi people know we do not intend to stay."

ROBINSON: "We have to have strategy: We win, and the terrorists lose. We have to train the Iraqi troops as quickly as possible so they can crush the Saddamists and Jihadists because if we don't, one of them is going to show up with an atomic bomb in New York or Washington and kill a million Americans."

ON CHILD MOLESTERS

ROBINSON charged that Miller voted to "allow convicted child molesters to come into this country." He cited Miller's vote against the House Republican immigration plan, which the White House opposed. It would allow the government to detain immigrants deemed dangerous, such as murderers and sex offenders.

MILLER said he never voted to let convicted child molesters into the country.

ON GAY PARTNERS

ROBINSON said Miller supports what Robinson called "The Homosexual Importation Act" so that "a homosexual can go to France, find a male lover and bring him back to this country on a marriage immigration visa." The Permanent Partners Immigration Act would set up a mechanism to allow same-sex partners to bring their partners to the United States -- something now allowed for unmarried heterosexual partners.

MILLER did not respond. Gay-rights groups support Miller and the bill.

ON BODY ARMOR

ROBINSON said Miller missed a vote to provide funds for body armor for U.S. troops. "Brad was on a junket in Iraq when he missed the body armor vote. He took the photo op with great young men and women who unlike himself served in uniform in time of war. And then he came back and stabbed them in the back by voting against military funding bills."

MILLER: "Wearing body armor, riding in a black helicopter hugging the rooftops to avoid small-arms fire, and Mr. Robinson thinks I was on a junket?"

COMPILED BY ROB CHRISTENSEN

Miller alternately laughed or shrugged at the gibes and said voters had grown tired of Robinson's attacks in mailings, automatic telephone calls and television commercials.

"I think we are back from that quick trip to Planet Robinson and back here on Planet Earth," Miller said -- a line he used several times during the debate.

The debate at WXII-TV in Winston-Salem was the first of three this week between the candidates. With the election three weeks away, voters can expect to see plenty of these charges.

The 30-minute debate was not televised but can be seen at WXII's Web site, www.WXII12.com.

Despite the exchanges, both candidates kept their composure and shook hands before and after the debate, which featured enough attacks for a dozen debates. Robinson sought to link Miller with flag-burning, illegal immigrants and "a junket" to Iraq as a congressman while not serving in the military himself.

Then the debate got personal.

"Mr. Robinson," Miller said, "most people think I'm most offended by your insinuations about my sexual orientation or your saying that my wife and I can't have children shows we are out of the mainstream, but what offends me the most is the contempt you have shown for my religious faith."

"I reject out of hand the insinuation that I ever mentioned your wife," Robinson said. "I know nothing about your sexual orientation."

But he said he was concerned that Miller's church, the Church of the Good Shepherd, an old Episcopal church in downtown Raleigh, "has led the state in the promotion of the ordination of homosexual clergy, and I don't agree with that. I don't think voters of the 13th District agree with that."

Replied Miller, "Mr. Robinson just said he never showed contempt for my faith and then proceeded to say it."

In his campaign literature, Robinson does not mention Miller's wife but does note that the couple is childless. He also ties Miller to a married man who operates a well-known Internet site, calling him "Brad Miller's San Francisco soul Mate" and describing the man as "a militant homosexual rights advocate."

Robinson repeatedly tried to tie Miller to controversial votes. At least four times during the debate, he mentioned Miller's vote to fund a grant to test the sexual arousal of college women.

"My opponent is clearly out of touch with the values of the voters," Robinson said. "A great example of that is when he voted for sex studies to pay college girls to watch porn movies and be measured for their arousal."

The study was one of thousands that were part of a National Institutes of Health budget. In 2003, a Republican congressman proposed an amendment to delete funding of five grants dealing with sexuality, saying they were inappropriate uses of federal funds. The amendment was defeated, 212-210, with Miller voting in the majority. Miller said researchers, rather than politicians, should decide what grants should be funded.

Robinson said he was not invited to join President Bush during his stop in Greensboro today at a school in the 13th District. Robinson said he preferred to campaign among voters anyway.

Miller and Robinson are scheduled to debate Friday on WRAL-TV and on WTVD-TV.

Staff writer Rob Christensen can be reached at 829-4532 or robc@newsobserver.com.

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