A DFL leader on Saturday urged Sen. Norm Coleman to denounce a telephone call campaign aimed at Sen. Barack Obama and cut his ties with the prominent Minnesota Republican whose firm is conducting the effort.
The calls on behalf of Sen. John McCain's presidential campaign, target voters in swing states and blasts Obama for his association with "domestic terrorist" William Ayers and for putting "Hollywood above America" by attending a fundraiser during the financial crisis.
The calls are apparently conducted by FLS Connect, a company run by businessman Jeff Larson. Larson has close financial and personal ties with Coleman and rents Coleman a room in Washington.
State DFL chair Brian Melendez called on Coleman to denounce Larson and the calls, noting that Coleman had just pledged an end to negative advertising in his Senate reelection bid against DFLer Al Franken.
Although it is against a 1987 Minnesota law to use recorded campaign calls, the recordings in calls made by the McCain campaign have been preceded by a live operator, as required by Minnesota law.
Ben Golnik, McCain's regional campaign manager, said the campaign would continue placing the calls, but he wouldn't discuss the frequency or other strategic elements of the calling program. "We didn't break any laws, and everything we said was accurate," he said.
Melendez admitted that, taken literally, there are no mistruths in the calls, but he called them "sneaky, dirty and underhanded."
Reached Saturday, Larson declined to comment on the calls or the accusations made by Melendez.