Updated at 9:52 a.m. Thursday: Revised to include comment from the Trump campaign.

Dallas County Commissioner John Wiley Price is playing the Nazi card.

In a mail ad sent to his constituents, Price juxtaposed pictures of Adolf Hitler and President Donald Trump, comparing the two point by point. The ad, which features Price’s smiling face on the back and a list of polling places, calls on people to vote for Democrats in the Nov. 6 election.

Dallas County Republican Party chairwoman Missy Shorey, who is married to a Jewish man, called the mailer "pathetic and disgusting" and called on Price to apologize.

"I'm trying not to throw up in my mouth," she said. "This is a perfect example of the lies, deceit and depth of how low elected Democrats will go to scare and deceive voters."

She added: "What if I put Hitler next to him? How would he like it? It's wrong on every level."

Price, who has served as a commissioner for 33 years, is one of the most prominent black politicians in North Texas.

He said Wednesday that his ad "speaks for itself.”

Under the images of the U.S. president and the German fuhrer, Price used nearly the same bullet points to describe each, such as "used racism to rise to power” and “proposed mass deportations."

The bottom of the ad proclaims "TRUMPITIZED!" — a play on the word "traumatized," Price said.

1 / 2A mailer sent out by the John Wiley Price Campaign. (John Wiley Price Campaign) 2 / 2A mailer sent out by the John Wiley Price Campaign. (John Wiley Price Campaign)

A White House spokesman referred a reporter to the Trump campaign, which denounced the mailer in a statement issued Thursday.

"This mailer reflects a cynical new reality — the Democrats are truly the party of socialism, violence, character assassination, and crime," the statement reads. "As we approach Election Day, voters should take note of examples of extreme radicalism from the Democrats — they are plentiful — and side with the party of growth and freedom over the party that enables violence and intimidation."

The political ad, paid for by Price’s campaign, was sent out to his constituents. Price is not up for re-election until 2020.

Carol Donovan, chairwoman of the Dallas County Democratic Party, said Price’s mailer will be a Rorschach test for recipients.

“I can see some people being offended, and I can also see some people believing that there are similarities to a dictator in the Trump administration,” she said.

Donovan said she “personally would not compare any current leader to Adolf Hitler.”

Price said the mailer was not a blanket comparison of Republicans to Nazis.

"According to Trump, there's some good people on both sides," Price said with a laugh, referencing the president's statement that there were "very fine people on both sides" of a 2017 white supremacist rally in Virginia where a counterprotester was killed.

Price has a cordial relationship with the lone Republican on the Commissioners Court, Mike Cantrell, who is retiring in December. Cantrell didn't return a call seeking comment.

County Judge Clay Jenkins, a fellow Democrat who often clashes with Price, also declined to comment, saying he only wanted to talk about his own campaign.

Price regularly makes caustic and controversial remarks about political issues and race. A year ago, he compared Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones to a slave master because Jones had ordered his players to stand during the national anthem.

Shorey, the local GOP leader, said the ad should also call into question Price’s reputation after his high-profile federal corruption trial last year. A jury acquitted Price on seven counts and failed to reach a verdict on four others.

Shorey said Price is sowing dissension "at a time when Dallas is trying to heal." She declined to elaborate on what she meant.

"If I have to explain that to anyone, then that shows how out of touch folks are," she said.