Soon after Richard Mourdock defeated Sen. Dick Lugar in a Republican primary in Indiana, the political world started coming to grips with just how right-wing the guy really is.
Late last week, the U.S. Senate hopeful offered another reminder, delivering a deeply strange speech to a FreedomWorks audience in Dallas.
Of particular interest was Mourdock’s take on the Obama administration rescuing the American auto industry — by saving Chrysler, the policy saved more than 100,000 jobs in the Hoosier state — which has become a key issue in Mourdock’s race against Rep. Joe Donnelly, his Democratic challenger.
About eight minutes into the clip, Mourdock argues there’s a parallel between Chrysler’s bankruptcy process, which he fought to stop in his capacity as Indiana state Treasurer, and slavery.
And as Mourdock sees it, he’s on the side of Abraham Lincoln.
The argument rests on the process as it relates to creditors. When the Obama administration intervened to prevent Chrysler from collapsing, it also took steps to force concessions from industry creditors. For Moudock, that puts the president in the role of … Stephen Douglas.








