A scalding new TV spot by Honolulu Mayor Kirk Caldwell attacks former Congressman Charles Djou for not supporting a bill funding benefits for 9/11 first responders 鈥斅燼 charge that Djou calls 鈥渄isgusting鈥 and a 鈥渃lear misrepresentation of my record.鈥

Here’s the ad:

鈥淎fter 9/11, first responders toiled in the toxic rubble of Ground Zero to find the remains of those who perished. Thousands of them became seriously ill. Hundreds have died.”

Familiar scenes of massive World Trade Center destruction play under a bed of plaintive piano music. 鈥淔or years, they sought needed health care coverage from Congress, but were denied.”

鈥淰oting against benefits for 9/11 first responders was Charles Djou. Djou chose party over principal and politics over people. We need a mayor who puts people first.鈥

Caldwell is correct. Djou did indeed vote against the benefits bill for 9/11 first responders 鈥 twice, and of 2010.

He says now that he supported a 鈥渞esolution to recommit,鈥 so that it would be sent back to committee. Djou says he felt the benefits ought to be funded through spending cuts rather than through closure of a tax loophole, as the bill specified. He joined with the bill鈥檚 chief sponsor, then-GOP Rep. Chris Lee of New York, in calling for the resolution.

The bill survived a Republican filibuster and finally t, and was signed into law Jan. 2, 2011 鈥 the day before Djou left office.

鈥淚 was not opposed to the bill,鈥 Djou told Civil Beat on Wednesday. 鈥淚ndeed, I supported it.鈥

What rankles Djou about the ad is both personal and political. First, he enlisted in the Army Reserves right after the 9/11 attack, and served in the 3rd聽Brigade, 10th聽Mountain Infantry Division in Kandahar, Afghanistan, for six months 鈥斅燼n area often described as ground zero of the Taliban insurgency.

Djou characterized聽that tour on Wednesday as 鈥渁bout as tough an assignment as anything you might describe.鈥 He takes umbrage at Caldwell hitting him on invoking the terror attacks that were his personal catalyst for that service.

The Caldwell campaign isn’t backing down. Spokesperson Glenna Wong said the “First Responders” spot is one of several new ads that focus on aspects of Djou’s voting record during his brief stint in Congress 鈥 less than eight聽months. Two others highlight votes on measures aimed at supporting recovery from the recession of the late 2000s and early 2010s: Djou voted against extending unemployment benefits for those who lost jobs and against aid for states to help them rehire teachers who were let go during the recession.

“A candidate runs on his record, and it is legitimate to look at that record and determine why he voted and acted the way he did,” Wong said. “We believe Charles Djou is doing everything he can to avoid answering for his voting record.”

But Djou argues the ads echo attacks on former Gov. Ben Cayetano four years ago that helped Caldwell win the mayor鈥檚 office in a runoff with Cayetano.聽“Those ads compelled (Caldwell) to the mayor鈥檚 office, and he鈥檚 trying to do the same thing again,” Djou said.

The political action committee behind the 2012 ads 鈥 Pacific Resource Partnership 鈥 ended up聽paying $125,000 and making a public apology to settle a libel case brought by Cayetano.

On Wednesday, Djou’s campaign sent out an email that decried 鈥渁ttempts to politicize 9/11 with a misleading ad implying Charles doesn’t care about first responders or our serviceman and women.鈥

鈥淲e want to know: if Kirk is willing to stoop so low just to get elected, what happens when he is in office,鈥 the piece asks.

Wong said while all three ads in this series will run throughout September, the “First Responders” piece won’t air during the three-day 15th anniversary observance of 9/11.

Responding to Djou’s criticisms, she added, “If there is anything ‘disingenuous and disgusting,’ it is Charles Djou’s voting record on this issue (and others), that he refuses take any responsibility to voters for his actions and that he in fact is now lying about it.

Support Independent, Unbiased News

Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in 贬补飞补颈驶颈. When you give, your donation is combined with gifts from thousands of your fellow readers, and together you help power the strongest team of investigative journalists in the state.

 

About the Author