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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Bush critic suddenly world-famous


Taylor
 (The Spokesman-Review)
Jim Morrill Knight Ridder

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Friday was not a normal day for Harry Taylor.

He did two national TV interviews. His phone rang all day. E-mails flooded his inbox. People he never met called him a hero and a patriot. He became a darling of Internet blogs, including one called simply: thankyouharrytaylor.org.

“It’s like I’ve got 10,000 butterflies jumping up and down in my stomach,” he said in an afternoon interview. “It’s been that way for 27 hours now.”

A day before, President Bush called on Taylor during a question session after a speech at Central Piedmont Community College in Charlotte. “I have never felt more ashamed of, nor more frightened, by my leadership in Washington, including the presidency,” Taylor told Bush. “And I would hope from time to time that you have the humility and the grace to be ashamed of yourself.”

“I’m not your favorite guy,” Bush interrupted at one point, waving off boos directed at the Charlotte businessman and giving him a chance to speak.

Even Taylor lauded the president’s gracious response. But his comments made waves way beyond CPCC’s Halton Theatre.

His public scolding was picked up by media from around the country and as far away as South Africa. Even the official Chinese news agency reported it. The media reaction began when a flock of reporters mobbed him right after he left his seat Thursday.

“I felt like I had just hit the home run to win the World Series,” he told CNN’s Soledad O’Brien on Friday morning. When she asked if he’d spent a lot of time thinking about what to say if given a chance, Taylor had a ready answer.

“Yes, about six years worth,” he said.

Taylor, 61, is a slender, soft-spoken man with a mop of wavy, salt-and-pepper hair. He runs a commercial real estate business out of a one-room office.

A divorced New Jersey native, he has lived in Charlotte for almost 20 years. He’s president of the Charlotte Folk Society and has spent more time playing the banjo and mandolin than in political activism.

He’s an unaffiliated voter and says he hasn’t belonged to a political party for three decades. His political involvement began a few years ago through his membership in the Sierra Club, and he has spoken out about environmental and other issues.

It was through his membership in the Charlotte World Affairs Council that he scored an invitation to the president’s appearance. A few minutes with a microphone brought an avalanche of response. He said he has gotten calls from servicemen and their families, almost all positive. E-mails to the Charlotte Observer ran 4-1 in support, though reactions were mixed on charlotte.com.

“He wasn’t a raging liberal just spewing out accusations,” said Stephen Demetriou, a commercial photographer from Maine who read about Taylor on a blog. “There’s a lot of people who share his views.”

Critics, however, called Taylor rude, embarrassing and misguided.

“I thought it was very out of place,” said Dean Davidson, a real estate broker from Waxhaw, N.C. “I could hear the pacifism in his voice. To me it’s just the same old, same old you hear every day; criticism of the administration’s policies but never a new idea.”