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Sunday,10/08/2006 © Bristol Herald Courier)
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -- Republican Senate candidate Bob Corker on Saturday called his Democratic opponent, Harold Ford Jr., a member of a family engaged in "machine-type politics," while Ford accused Corker of doing nothing about illegal immigrants working on his job site years ago.
Ford, a Memphis congressman who would be the first black U.S. senator from the South since Reconstruction, and Corker, a former Chattanooga mayor, are vying to replace Bill Frist, the Republican Senate majority leader, who is retiring. The Nov. 7 election's outcome could determine whether Democrats can take control of the Senate.
In the first of three scheduled debates, Corker said it is unusual that a Ford has held the 9th District congressional seat for more than three decades and noted that the Ford family has long been active in area politics.
"Let me be clear: I love them," Ford said of his family. But he urged Corker to stick to the debate.
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