Minnesota Republicans are scolding DFL Senate candidate Al Franken for a campaign fundraiser hosted Monday by Playboy CEO Christie Hef- ner at her Chicago-area home -- and taking him to task for a sexually explicit satire he wrote for that magazine eight years ago.
Meanwhile, DFLers are calling on Republican incumbent Norm Coleman to divest his reelection campaign of nearly $10,000 received from the political-action committee and employees of a lobbying firm that represented Myanmar's military regime.
With endorsing conventions for the U.S. Senate race rapidly approaching, the leading candidates are under attack by political opponents for taking contributions from controversial donors.
In Coleman's case, it's the oppressive face of Myanmar's junta that has been on display since the devastating cyclone this month that killed nearly 80,000 people.
With Franken, it's the magazine that made pornography in the United States big business and which has been accused of exploiting women under a veneer of sophistication.
Campaign donors may provide some clues on what's of interest or importance to a candidate, but studies show that very few voters actually cast their ballots based on where the candidate's money came from, said David Schultz, a Hamline University professor who specializes in government ethics and politics.
However, attacks such as those launched by the parties in the past few days put candidates on the defensive, Schultz said. And that's by design.
"It basically keeps you off message and distracts you from what you're doing," he said.