Skip to Content
The Texas Observer Blog - The Latest on Texas Politics, News, and Culture

Not Everyone Loved It

September 5th, 2008 at 9:46 am

John McCain tried to unify his party with his prime time acceptance speech. “We’re going to fix Washington,” McCain said. “We’ve got a record that proves just that.”

Most delegates seemed pleased with his talk but not everyone was buying it. “I don’t believe there will be any change between McCain and Bush,” said Washington State delegate Stephen Hardy, a college student and small business owner. He said Bush campaigned in 2000 on “Republican ideals of a humble foreign policy, sound monetary policy, and getting back to the Constitution,” but never lived up to them while in office. “I don’t see what McCain champions regarding the Republican ideals.”

Hardy was wearing a “Goldwater ‘64″ button alongside a “The Old Right–Good Ideas Never Die” button. He’s a Ron Paul supporter and like dozens of other delegates, he had managed to find time to attend Paul’s counter-event in Minneapolis held at the same time as the RNC.

He said Sarah Palin is “an excellent choice” for Vice President, due to her stance on the Constitution. Ron Paul supporters “don’t think John McCain shares those values and that’s why we supported Ron Paul.”

I asked Hardy if he was disappointed about how little civil liberties were discussed during the RNC. “I think civil liberties were addressed, unfortunately,” he told me. “When Sarah Palin in her address talked about how unfortunate it was that Senator Obama was concerned about criminals being read their rights, I wondered why this crowd of 15,000 people cheered with abundant applause at the death of habeas corpus.”

by Elizabeth DiNovella

All Said and Done

September 4th, 2008 at 11:29 pm

stp.jpg

Tonight was John McCain’s star turn. This was his chance to show he could pull off some fancy stagecraft too. In fact, the stage itself had been broken down and reconstructed just for tonight’s speech to include a catwalk outlined in neon blue. When the time came, the lights dimmed. Then — like the intro to an old-school Chicago Bulls game — spotlights started roving the darkened arena. A booming voice spoke admirably of McCain. When the candidate entered stage left, all lights went out except one, bathing him in a bright halo.

This was McCain’s show.

However, the crowd — still buzzing from Sarah Palin’s speech last night — responded to McCain’s address with a bit of disappointment. The delegates were unquestioningly energized by a few key phrases such as “security,” “culture of life” and “school choice.” But the senator from Arizona got distinctly less appreciation — crickets, even — for his repeated acknowledgment of, and reaching out to, Democrats, independents and others outside the base. At times, it seemed as if McCain wasn’t speaking to the delegates at all, and they knew it.

The same thing happened when McCain expressed his respect for Obama, and when he stated his desire for peace. The tepid, obligatory applause that greeted him was reminiscent of an opera or a jazz show. The muted reaction was a stark contrast to the rest of the convention. Were these the same people who just last night beat their chests over Palin’s divisive tough talk and heartily whooped in response to Rudy Giuliani’s war cries?

Yet many delegates, when asked about McCain, stuck to their talking points: McCain is great, McCain is good. In a bit of a concession, one delegate from Houston said, “Even things I disagree with, I know where he’s coming from.”

As much as Palin’s speech last night sought to appease the right-wing base, McCain’s address was aimed squarely at independent voters watching on television.

McCain acknowledged more than once the struggles of working families. “Their lives should matter to the people they elect to office and they matter to me,” he said. He thanked undecided voters for their consideration. He said he would fill his administration with members of both parties. McCain sought to portray himself as a different kind of Republican, one less bound to partisanship and ideology — the anti-Bush. He stopped short of criticizing the Bush administration directly, however, except for his repeated references to “change.” He clearly tried to disown much of the record his party has compiled the past eight years.

The speech may not have wowed the delegates, but, lockstep as they are, it might not matter. What matters is how viewers around the country receive his words: as a sincere invitation to join him, or as shallow hucksterism at the 11th hour?
hat.jpg

by Jessica Chapman

Setting the Mood

September 4th, 2008 at 3:47 pm

At the Crowne Royal Plaza, where the Texas delegation is staying in downtown St. Paul, the garish Texas flag shirts have been donned. People are starting to head over to the Xcel Center for the RNC finale: Sen. John McCain’s acceptance speech, which is slated for tonight. Kansas Sen. Sam Brownback is signing cowboy hats for admiring Texans.

But people are still talking mostly about Sarah Palin. “That girl’s got ‘em on a run,” a Texas delegate said this afternoon in the lobby.

Outside, it’s a festive atmosphere. A “Terrorism in America” documentary by the Paul Revere Brigade is showing in a dimly lit bar. Young people are selling McCain/Palin paraphernalia on street corners.

And bored police in riot gear are smoking cigars and posing for photos with pages.

cigar.jpg

by Jessica Chapman

Maverick 2.0

September 4th, 2008 at 11:02 am

The Republican National Convention may be the place where John McCain officially accepts his party’s nomination. But it’s Sarah Palin’s show.

She dazzled the crowd at the Xcel Center Wednesday night, which had been subdued during the first two evenings. Palin generated excitement with her digs at the Democratic ticket. “A small-town mayor is sort of like a community organizer, except that you have actual responsibilities,” she said. A small group of elderly women in the Kansas delegation started chanting “Yes, We Can,” when Palin talked about shattering the glass ceiling.

She didn’t say anything that we haven’t heard before from Republicans. She criticized the media and Washington elites, made Democrats out to be soft on terrorism, and spoke romantically of her small-town roots. She got two Obamas with one quip when she said that people in small towns “are always proud of America.” She made herself seem oh so normal.

But not everyone goes from the PTA to the Governor’s mansion. What’s new about Palin is the packaging. She’s giving the GOP and McCain a chance to re-brand: Maverick 2.0.

The Christian conservatives are thrilled about her and will probably motivate their base to get out the vote. Fiscal conservatives are happy. (Grover Norquist of Americans for Tax Reform calls her “a solid Reagan Republican.”) And she might manage to rouse young people inside and outside the party.

Trey Stinnett, the youngest delegate in the Texas delegation, was “ecstatic” after Palin’s speech. “I think Sarah absolutely rocked the house,” he said. He was wearing a cowboy hat that had “Palin is hot” scribbled in a black marker on the top.

His girlfriend, 21- year-old Paula Stang (and alternate delegate) called Palin “refreshing.”

“There’s a palpable feeling of ‘we can do this,’ ” former Maryland Lt. Gov. Michael Steele said after Palin’s performance. “Folks in the party are now ready to win this race.”

by Elizabeth DiNovella

Hook, Line & Sinker

September 3rd, 2008 at 11:31 pm

If anyone had any hesitation — and some members of the Texas delegation seemed to have some concerns — about Sarah Palin’s suitability to be vice president, that doubt was more than swept away by the fiery rhetoric and firm confidence of the Alaska governor during her speech tonight at the RNC. The lady came out swinging, and the Texans were thrilled.

In the immediate aftermath, delegates on the floor went wild. They hugged. They used words like “ecstatic,” “pumped” and “out of sight.” “I can’t contain my excitement,” one delegate said.

“I teach communication, and she was the essence of it,” said an Arizona alternate delegate, a communications instructor who described himself as an old friend of Sen. John McCain.

And that pit bull lipstick joke? Major mileage for Palin, a Tina Fey lookalike.

The only lingering doubts seemed to come from the Texas delegation’s outliers: the dozen or so supporters of Libertarian-leaning Congressman Ron Paul, the presidential candidate who was refused a place at the convention podium.

But even some Paul supporters were wooed by Palin. One alternate delegate from Mineral Wells, an Iraq war veteran, said he thought Palin would be an even better candidate for president than McCain. (Attending his first national convention, he kept running out to see if any votes had been cast for Paul during the official delegate roll call at the end of the evening’s events.)

If the Democrats had any illusions that they were dealing with a light-weight, Palin certainly smashed those tonight. No wonder the grass-roots loved it.

crowd.jpg

by Jessica Chapman

The Chosen Ones

September 3rd, 2008 at 1:05 pm

There was some serious business worship at the Texas delegation breakfast this morning.

First came the worship. The opening prayer thanked God for the party’s nominees, John McCain and Sarah Palin, “whom you selected to be our next leaders.”

Then they got down with business. After Anita Perry talked about Hurricane Gustav relief efforts (what would people have been talking about if not Gustav these last few days?), the delegation heard from reps from two major corporations — BNSF Railway and the energy company, Koch Industries.

Matt Schlapp, of Koch, openly thanked the delegation for helping to create a friendly business environment in Texas. Schlapp is a former Bush White House aide who joined Koch’s Washington office as a lobbyist in 2005. (Schlapp also served as a Bush campaign aide in 2000 and took part in the infamous “Brooks Brothers” riot during the Florida recount.)

Matt Rose, chairman, president and CEO of BNSF, offered more platitudes for the business environment in Texas. The railroad was once based in Minnesota, but moved to the more friendly confines of Fort Worth.

But the belle of the breakfast ball was U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison. She may have been snubbed for V.P., but she’s still a hit with this crowd. In brief, stately remarks, Hutchison reminded the delegation that future generations just won’t be safe without a Republican in the White House. Hutchison also pledged her ongoing support for offshore drilling (while admonishing restrictions on speculators, investigation of price gouging or buying a fuel-efficient car). She added that by remaining present in Iraq and Afghanistan, and showing our persistence, we are showing a good example to the world.

Meanwhile, the woman who did win the V.P. stakes, the embattled Palin, is slated to address the convention this evening.

(We should add — because you were wondering, and because the TO just doesn’t talk enough fashion — the Texas delegation last night was a vision in resplendently Republican red, monogrammed polos, topped off with cream-colored cowboy hats.)

Finally, the Democrats are trying to get their message out, at least a little, in St. Paul. Sign on a bus shelter several blocks from the Xcel Center:

busstop.jpg

by Jessica Chapman

The Base Likes Palin

September 3rd, 2008 at 12:14 pm

I wasn’t sure what to expect at this year’s Republican National Convention. I attended the 2004 RNC in New York and back then the party was full of swagger. The Republicans dominated both houses and the executive branch. Four long years later, things are bit more subdued. But just a bit.

Despite the so-called “enthusiasm gap,” delegates here are pretty fired up about McCain and Palin. The mainstream media and even some McCain advisers have been saying McCain’s pick was an attempt to woo Hillary supporters. But it’s McCain attempt to court the Christian conservatives within the party.

Regardless of the criticism Palin is getting, you can argue that McCain made a politically savvy choice. She’s not well known but has the conservative bona fides that make her acceptable to various factions within the party. And she won’t scare off moderates.

“I am now more confident about a John McCain presidency than I am about a George Bush presidency,” Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, told the New York Times. “The campaign has courted conservatives aggressively, and it has turned around remarkably in just the last few weeks.”

On the convention floor on Tuesday night, I spoke to Texas delegate Sandra Ojeda Medina, an assistant principal at Crockett elementary in San Antonio. She was whipping up the delegates, getting them to whoop, holler, and clap. Her long black hair was pulled back in a ponytail, and like most of the Texas delegation, she was wearing a red polo and jeans.

“We are so excited and energized about our ticket,” she said. “Palin is going to do a lot of good for us. I think a lot of women can identify with her as a mother now and certainly the issues she’s having to deal with at this time. Her compassion has already been seen in what she said about her daughter’s situation. She’s going to love her unconditionally.”

Ojeda Median’s top election issue is to “beat Obama.” I asked her to name a specific issue. “We want to maintain our conservative values. We are pro-life. We are fiscal conservatives,” she said. “We want what’s right and good. We want people to take responsibility and initiate to succeed in America.”

And as for having a politician from another oil state on the ticket? “It’s fabulous because we know about conserving our natural resources,” she said.

David Savage works in the oil refinery industry. “Big Oil,” he said. He lives in Cady, Texas, and said Hurricane Gustav was a bit unnerving, but “the Republican governors down there seem to have planned and minimized the impact.”

Savage thinks it’s a good idea to have another politician from an oil state on the GOP ticket. “It’s extremely important because she knows what’s going on up there. She supports drilling in ANWR,” he said. “People talk about Big Oil, but Americans have a big appetite, and we have to meet that need.”

The economy is Savage’s top priority. “I’m in the energy business,” he said. “Like the Boone Pickins ad say, we’re exporting out wealth to our enemies. So we need a mix of nuclear, coal, oil and gas, winds, solar, to be more energy independent.” He added, “Sarah Palin on the ticket is going to be a big plus.”

Savage was not concerned about Palin’s thin foreign policy experience. “As vice president, don’t really get that involved. They attend funerals, that sort of thing. It’s a developmental position for someone who will be a future leader,” he said. “I think she really resonates with people.”

Ann Mazone is a delegate from Navasota who works as a special education aide. Mazone’s number one issue for the election is the economy. She’s concerned about the high cost of gasoline, even though she doesn’t drive. “We’ve got to do something about it. We let it go too long,” she said. “This should have been straightened out in other administrations. It should have never have gotten to here. We’ve got to stop playing politics and come together and solve this problem.”

Palin may be from another oil state, but Mazone said that Palin “a little bit different because she wants to drill. She will bring a better perspective because she lives there in Alaska. Palin might be able to guide and make sure they don’t have another Valdez.”

Palin’s “independent spirit” is something Mazone finds appealing. “I really like that she has a daughter and I understand that. Her daughter is pregnant and she rallied around her. I’ve been there and that endeared me to her,” Mazone said.

Similarly, Mazone likes McCain’s maverick stance. “I like the fact that he just did not follow the party line all the time,” she said. “He did what he felt was best for the country first, before party. And that’s the way it should be.”

Like everyone else I spoke to, Mazone thinks McCain-Palin makes a great ticket. “Both are independent spirits. It’s going to be interesting, the next four years,” she said.

After leaving the Texas delegation, I saw former Speaker of the House Denny Hastert of Illinois. “I’ve known Obama for a while,” Hastert said. “He’s become a rock star even though he hasn’t really produced anything. We’ll see what he can do if he gets elected.”

Hastert said “Palin demonstrates what McCain is. She’s a maverick.” He also pointed out that she’s the “only person on ticket on both sides with executive experience.”

And what does Hastert think is the number issue in this election? “We need to get something done for this country: energy policy, economic policy, solving some of the fiscal things we are in too.”

by Elizabeth DiNovella

Subscribe Now

Authors

Archives

Categories

Receive Observer blog posts via e-mail

Skip to Main Navigation