Laid-Off Workers Told to Vote For GOP Rep Who Wouldn't Fight Plant Closure

Laid-Off Workers Told to Vote For GOP Rep Who Wouldn't Fight Plant Closure
FILE - In this June 2012 file photo, Rep. Chip Cravaack talks during an interview with The Associated Press in Minneapolis. National Republicans and Democrats are focused on the race for Congress between Republican Cravaack and Democrat Rick Nolan and are among the groups reserving TV ad time on Twin Cities airwaves leading up to the Nov. 6, election. (AP Photo/Doug Glass,File)
FILE - In this June 2012 file photo, Rep. Chip Cravaack talks during an interview with The Associated Press in Minneapolis. National Republicans and Democrats are focused on the race for Congress between Republican Cravaack and Democrat Rick Nolan and are among the groups reserving TV ad time on Twin Cities airwaves leading up to the Nov. 6, election. (AP Photo/Doug Glass,File)

At the beginning of October, Glenn Jackson got an unusual packet in the mail from Georgia Pacific, the company that had employed him in its thin wood-manufacturing plant in Duluth, Minn., for 21 years. In a letter attached to a list of Republican candidates, Jackson was informed by David Robertson, president and CEO of Koch Industries, which owns Georgia Pacific, that:

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