 
 
Bill Hudak, Republican congressional candidate in John Tierney's 
district, has not been universally embraced by mainstream Massachusetts Republicans 
-- in fact, when Hudak announced that Scott Brown had endorsed him, 
Brown quickly denied it and forced a retraction. 
That cold 
shoulder is due to some rather disturbing and, some might say, nutty 
opinions Hudak has expressed, such as once suggesting to journalists 
that he had documentation proving that Barack Obama was born in Kenya. 
But
 Charlie Baker has no problem appearing with the guy. A couple of weeks 
ago, Baker accepted an invitation to speak at a large Hudak event; he 
came, took the stage with Hudak, and briefly addressed the audience. The photo above, obtained by the Phoenix, shows Baker speaking at the event, gesturing to the bow-tied Hudak.
"Charlie
 was speaking to voters," campaign spokesperson Rick Gorka told me, when
 I asked about Baker choosing to associate with Hudak. "We're going to 
talk to voters everywhere." 
Dan Kennedy has done 
yeoman's work cataloguing Hudak's extremism, some of which was originally
 reported by Tri-Town Transcript.Among the highlights: Hudak, in 
2008, proudly displayed on his Boxford lawn an array of anti-Obama 
signs, one of which depicted
 Barack Obama as Osama bin Laden. He showed reporters documents 
that, he claimed, proved that Obama was born in Kenya. (He has admitted 
showing the documents, but now denies that he believed them.) He claimed
 that Obama had ties to the Muslim faith. He referred to Obama as "Barry
 Soetoro," as is common on so-called "birther" web sites. 
Asked whether Baker personally considers Hudak's questioning of 
Obama's citizenship, or comparing Obama to bin Laden, offensive, Gorka 
replied: "They're not things Charlie agrees with." Pressed again, Gorka 
termed those things "outrageous," but would not accept the 
characterization of "offensive." 
(As an aside, I'm not sure why the Baker campaign brought in Gorka 
from the Republican National Committee to be its press secretary -- not 
only is he alien to Massachusetts, but his resume of working for folks 
like Katherine Harris, Michael Steele, and the now-defunct Freedom's 
Watch may not make him a great fit for our poitical-media landscape.)  
The
 event Baker appeared at was a Hudak campaign fundraiser/rally at the 
North Shore Music Theater in Beverly -- "Stand Up For America: A 
Celebration of Freedom." Todd Feinburg, Jeff Katz, and Barbara Anderson 
participated, and Hudak claims that 500 people attended. Among those on 
hand were former Congressman Peter Torkildsen, state representatives 
Brad Hill and Brad Jones, and a host of area legislative candidates.
Gorka
 insists that Baker's on-stage appearance did not suggest an endorsement
 of, or support for, Hudak. But Wicked Local 
Topsfield, for one, came away with a different impression; a photo caption accompanying their story about
 the event included the line: "Also on hand to support Hudak’s candidacy
 for the 6th district seat were Charlie 
Baker...."
And, while Hudak is clear that Baker has not endorsed 
him, he did suggest, at the least, a camaraderie between the campaigns, 
when I asked him about Baker's appearance. "We're all in this working 
together," Hudak says. 
I've spoken with Hudak a couple of 
times, and he comes across as a nice enough guy. But, his rabid, 
conspiratorial, admittedly 
Internet-researched attacks on Obama are about all we have to assess 
him; he had never been politically active prior to his late- 2008 
outburst of anti-Obamaism. Pretty much all we know is that he believes, and acts 
upon, crazy, offensive things he reads on the Internet. 
I can't imagine that it helps Baker to associate himself with that fringe of the Republican Party. 
It 
baffles me that institutional Republicans, like Torkildsen and Jones, 
would legitimize Hudak as a candidate for high public office. But it's 
especially significant when the standard-bearer of the state party legitimates a 
candidate, which makes it incumbent upon Baker to avoid doing so -- unless he intends to embrace the fringe.