Vince Gray’s Campaign Plays Defense for Andy Shallal to Attack Muriel Bowser
Gray’s campaign manager says Bowser is using Tea Party rhetoric. Bowser’s campaign says this means she’s mounting a serious challenge to the incumbent.
The DC mayoral race descended into the utterly bizarre Friday morning when Mayor Vince Gray’s campaign manager, Chuck Thies, blasted out a fundraising e-mail, press release, blog post, and string of tweets suggesting that Council member Muriel Bowser is taking up with the likes of Sarah Palin and Rush Limbaugh.
“I never thought I’d see this in a Democratic election in the District of Columbia,” Thies writes in the e-mail, which includes photos of the former Alaska governor and the blustery radio host.
But Thies’s outburst is reacting to a two-month-old quote about Andy Shallal reprinted in this week’s Washington City Papercover story in which Bowser jokingly refers to the Busboys and Poets restaurateur as a “rich socialist.”
“There is no place for Tea Party rhetoric in our Democratic Primary,” Thies writes.
It might seem curious that the campaign manager for the incumbent and frontrunner would defend Shallal against another candidate, but Shallal spokesman Dwight Kirk explains it this way: Thies, he says, “is trying to say Muriel is engaging in dirty politics. Andy’s about elevating the dialogue.”
Thies says today’s argument is not about playing defense for another candidate, but trying to keep a sense of decorum in the race. “We’re policing this election,” says Thies, who earlier this week prompted hurt feelings from the Bowser campaign when he referred to Gray’s rivals as “smurfs.” (The resulting fundraising e-mail from Bowser opened with “Feeling blue?”)
Then Thies doubled down against Bowser.
“Who has spent every year since President Obama was elected screaming ‘Socialist!’?” Thies says. “Sarah Palin, Rush Limbaugh, Rand Paul.”
Bowser has won straw polls in Ward 4 in Northwest, her home turf, and Ward 8 in Southeast, considered Gray’s stronghold. She also came in a distant second in a recent Washington Post poll.
“The only thing that makes Muriel Bowser a frontrunner is her imagination,” Thies says. “When she is forced to talk about substantive issues there is no substance, just a smokescreen of shrill finger-pointing.”
But Bowser’s people are enjoying the Gray campaign’s Tea Party panic. “It shows there’s only one campaign that can take on the mayor, and that’s us,” says Bowser’s campaign manager, Bo Shuff.
As for Bowser’s “rich socialist” comment about Shallal, Shuff says it flowed out of a “casual conversation” Bowser had with City Paper about December’s fundraising report showing that Shallal had given his campaign $45,000 of his own money. (He has since put in another $50,000.)
“He is a wealthy individual,” Shuff says of Shallal, who is worth an estimated $12 million to $15 million and has never publicly responded to Bowser’s comment. “And he is probably the most left of the candidates running for mayor. And I don’t think he’d disagree with that.”
Benjamin Freed joined Washingtonian in August 2013 and covers politics, business, and media. He was previously the editor of DCist and has also written for Washington City Paper, the New York Times, the New Republic, Slate, and BuzzFeed. He lives in Adams Morgan.
Vince Gray’s Campaign Plays Defense for Andy Shallal to Attack Muriel Bowser
Gray’s campaign manager says Bowser is using Tea Party rhetoric. Bowser’s campaign says this means she’s mounting a serious challenge to the incumbent.
The DC mayoral race descended into the utterly bizarre Friday morning when Mayor Vince Gray’s campaign manager, Chuck Thies, blasted out a fundraising e-mail, press release, blog post, and string of tweets suggesting that Council member Muriel Bowser is taking up with the likes of Sarah Palin and Rush Limbaugh.
“I never thought I’d see this in a Democratic election in the District of Columbia,” Thies writes in the e-mail, which includes photos of the former Alaska governor and the blustery radio host.
But Thies’s outburst is reacting to a two-month-old quote about Andy Shallal reprinted in this week’s Washington City Paper cover story in which Bowser jokingly refers to the Busboys and Poets restaurateur as a “rich socialist.”
“There is no place for Tea Party rhetoric in our Democratic Primary,” Thies writes.
It might seem curious that the campaign manager for the incumbent and frontrunner would defend Shallal against another candidate, but Shallal spokesman Dwight Kirk explains it this way: Thies, he says, “is trying to say Muriel is engaging in dirty politics. Andy’s about elevating the dialogue.”
Thies says today’s argument is not about playing defense for another candidate, but trying to keep a sense of decorum in the race. “We’re policing this election,” says Thies, who earlier this week prompted hurt feelings from the Bowser campaign when he referred to Gray’s rivals as “smurfs.” (The resulting fundraising e-mail from Bowser opened with “Feeling blue?”)
Then Thies doubled down against Bowser.
“Who has spent every year since President Obama was elected screaming ‘Socialist!’?” Thies says. “Sarah Palin, Rush Limbaugh, Rand Paul.”
Bowser has won straw polls in Ward 4 in Northwest, her home turf, and Ward 8 in Southeast, considered Gray’s stronghold. She also came in a distant second in a recent Washington Post poll.
“The only thing that makes Muriel Bowser a frontrunner is her imagination,” Thies says. “When she is forced to talk about substantive issues there is no substance, just a smokescreen of shrill finger-pointing.”
But Bowser’s people are enjoying the Gray campaign’s Tea Party panic. “It shows there’s only one campaign that can take on the mayor, and that’s us,” says Bowser’s campaign manager, Bo Shuff.
As for Bowser’s “rich socialist” comment about Shallal, Shuff says it flowed out of a “casual conversation” Bowser had with City Paper about December’s fundraising report showing that Shallal had given his campaign $45,000 of his own money. (He has since put in another $50,000.)
“He is a wealthy individual,” Shuff says of Shallal, who is worth an estimated $12 million to $15 million and has never publicly responded to Bowser’s comment. “And he is probably the most left of the candidates running for mayor. And I don’t think he’d disagree with that.”
Benjamin Freed joined Washingtonian in August 2013 and covers politics, business, and media. He was previously the editor of DCist and has also written for Washington City Paper, the New York Times, the New Republic, Slate, and BuzzFeed. He lives in Adams Morgan.
Most Popular in News & Politics
Slugging Makes a Comeback for DC Area Commuters
Please Stop Joking That JD Vance Killed the Pope
DC and Commanders Will Announce Stadium Deal Today, Virginia GOP Candidate Accuses Virginia Governor’s Team of Extortion, and Trump Says He Runs the Entire World
Elon Musk Got in a Shouting Match at the White House, a Teen Was Stabbed in Fairfax, and Pete Hegseth Decided the Pentagon Needed a Makeup Studio
“I’m Angry at Elon Musk”: Former US Digital Service Workers on DOGE, the “Fork in the Road,” and Trump’s First 100 Days
Washingtonian Magazine
May Issue: 52 Perfect Saturdays
View IssueSubscribe
Follow Us on Social
Follow Us on Social
Related
Viral DC-Area Food Truck Flavor Hive Has It in the Bag
Slugging Makes a Comeback for DC Area Commuters
The Smithsonian’s Surprisingly Dangerous Early Days
An Unusual DC Novel Turns Out to Have an Interesting Explanation
More from News & Politics
Amazon Avoids President’s Wrath Over Tariff Price Hikes, DC Budget Fix May Be Doomed, and Trump Would Like to Be Pope
“Pointed Cruelty”: A Former USAID Worker on Cuts, Life After Layoffs, and Trump’s First 100 Days
Is Ed Martin’s Denunciation of a J6 Rioter Sincere? A Reporter Who Covers Him Is Skeptical.
DC Takes Maryland and Virginia Drivers to Court
Both of Washington’s Cardinals Will Vote at the Conclave
“I’m Angry at Elon Musk”: Former US Digital Service Workers on DOGE, the “Fork in the Road,” and Trump’s First 100 Days
Trump Marks 100 Very Weird Days in DC, Wharf Sold to Canadians, and We Round Up Capitals Watch Parties
Slugging Makes a Comeback for DC Area Commuters