http://www.kypost.com/2004/04/03/bunn040304.html
State Rep. Daniel Mongiardo's campaign is asking Sen. Jim Bunning for a personal apology for a personal insult.
And it wants a copy of the videotape of the program at which Bunning uttered the slight.
The campaign staff of the Hazard Democrat hand-delivered a letter to Bunning's campaign office in Louisville Friday. The letter asked Bunning to personally apologize to the Italian-American for saying that he looked like "Saddam Hussein's sons -- before they were dead."
The Mongiardo letter, signed by Campaign Manager Jody Lassiter, said "Senator Bunning should do the right thing and personally apologize to Dan Mongiardo. To compare Dr. Mongiardo with the sons of Saddam Hussein was not only offensive, but was an insult to Italian-Americans and an insult to the people of Kentucky."
It's unclear whether Bunning's campaign received the letter Friday. Mongiardo campaign workers said the letter, which asked Bunning to use a Lexington dinner speech to address the issue Friday night, was slipped under the door of the locked Louisville campaign office, and also faxed.
Bunning's campaign and his official spokesman could not be reached for comment Friday night.
Bunning and Mongiardo each face nominal opposition in the May primary and are expected to square off in the November election.
The comment, initially denied by Bunning's office, was uttered and taped at the Lincoln/Reagan dinner March 20 in Florence. The incident has gotten the attention of national media -- a brief item on it appeared on the front page of Friday's Wall Street Journal.
Bunning's campaign office told The Post early this week that no such comment was made. But Bunning's campaign issued a terse release Wednesday -- to the media, not Mongiardo -- that said the comment, which "got a lot of laughs," was meant to be a joke.
The Bunning campaign has refused to release copies of the videotape that was made of the event.
Several Northern Kentucky Republicans have confirmed that they heard the comment at the dinner.
Asked Wednesday why he had denied earlier that Bunning had made the statements, campaign manager David Young said ,"I was shopped a quote last week about what was said and it was not a true quote."
Mongiardo is the descendant of Italian immigrants.
His grandfather was a coal miner and stone mason who came to eastern Kentucky during the wave of Southern European immigration to the region as mining expanded just after the turn of the 20th century.
State Rep. Daniel Mongiardo's campaign is asking Sen. Jim Bunning for a personal apology for a personal insult.
And it wants a copy of the videotape of the program at which Bunning uttered the slight.
The campaign staff of the Hazard Democrat hand-delivered a letter to Bunning's campaign office in Louisville Friday. The letter asked Bunning to personally apologize to the Italian-American for saying that he looked like "Saddam Hussein's sons -- before they were dead."
The Mongiardo letter, signed by Campaign Manager Jody Lassiter, said "Senator Bunning should do the right thing and personally apologize to Dan Mongiardo. To compare Dr. Mongiardo with the sons of Saddam Hussein was not only offensive, but was an insult to Italian-Americans and an insult to the people of Kentucky."
It's unclear whether Bunning's campaign received the letter Friday. Mongiardo campaign workers said the letter, which asked Bunning to use a Lexington dinner speech to address the issue Friday night, was slipped under the door of the locked Louisville campaign office, and also faxed.
Bunning's campaign and his official spokesman could not be reached for comment Friday night.
Bunning and Mongiardo each face nominal opposition in the May primary and are expected to square off in the November election.
The comment, initially denied by Bunning's office, was uttered and taped at the Lincoln/Reagan dinner March 20 in Florence. The incident has gotten the attention of national media -- a brief item on it appeared on the front page of Friday's Wall Street Journal.
Bunning's campaign office told The Post early this week that no such comment was made. But Bunning's campaign issued a terse release Wednesday -- to the media, not Mongiardo -- that said the comment, which "got a lot of laughs," was meant to be a joke.
The Bunning campaign has refused to release copies of the videotape that was made of the event.
Several Northern Kentucky Republicans have confirmed that they heard the comment at the dinner.
Asked Wednesday why he had denied earlier that Bunning had made the statements, campaign manager David Young said ,"I was shopped a quote last week about what was said and it was not a true quote."
Mongiardo is the descendant of Italian immigrants.
His grandfather was a coal miner and stone mason who came to eastern Kentucky during the wave of Southern European immigration to the region as mining expanded just after the turn of the 20th century.
