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Classified Section
In a kind of political summer
rerun, former Klansman
David Duke announced that
he will run in the September c.—\
primary for the Senate
seat being vacated by Sen. J.
Bennett Johnston, D-La., who
is retiring.
In his 1990 battle against Mr.
Johnston, Mr. Duke, a Republi-
can, won 44 percent of the to-
tal vote and more than 60
percent of the white vote.
Last week, anti-Duke forces
were worried about the possible
entry into the race of Rep. Cleo
Fields, a black Democrat. That
could have divided the anti-
Duke vote in the state's unusu-
al open primary.
But Mr. Fields decided not to
run; the front-runners now are
former state Treasurer Mary
Landrieu on the Democratic side
and Rep. Jimmy Hayes for the
GOP.
Mr. Duke's platform is sim-
plicity itself; his 10-point pro-
gram includes a halt to "forced
integration" and both legal and
illegal immigration and an "end c\
to discrimination against white
people."
The federal government, he
writes in his home page on the
World Wide Web, "has become
our greatest enemy. It discrim-
inates against the very heritage
of Americans who founded our
nation. It promotes racial dis-
crimination against whites in
jobs, promotions, scholarships
and student aid, and union ad-
mittance."
Just in case he didn't make
his point, he adds this: "I'll fight
for our American traditions, our
Christian traditions and our
Southern honor."
He predicted that he would
be vigorously opposed by
"the liberal media ... and a
host of New York City ultra-lib-
erals."
Jewish politicos, having been
through serious Duke scares be-
fore, once again are scrambling
for an effective political re- (--\
sponse.
"The problem is a familiar
one," said an official with one
major Jewish group. "Once he
declares his candidacy, most
Jewish organizations are effec-
tively prohibited from attacking
him because of our nonprofit
status. We have to rely on the
grass-roots groups in Louisiana
that have mobilized against him
in the past, and we have to hope
that the Republican Party does
everything in its power to make
sure he's not seen as a 'legiti-
mate' candidate."
But Louisiana politics are un- (_/
predictable, this source said, and
the mood of voters remains ex-
plosive.