A Winning Night

The weather tried to dampen it, the media tried to dismiss it, but the Republican National Convention went on last night undeterred and triumphant.

This morning’s analyses have their share of naysayers. That’s a given. But what did the peanut gallery think? We liked it. We more than liked it. It inspired us.

Rep. Artur Davis delivered a fantastic speech. The former Democrat excelled at delivery and content. Welcome to the party, pal. I mean that in all sincerity. He’s a great guy to have on our side.

Didn’t you want to stand up and cheer when he said this?

To those Democrats and independents whose minds are open to argument: listen closely to the Democratic party that will gather in Charlotte and ask yourself if you ever hear your voice in the clamor.

Ask yourself if these Democrats still speak for you.

When they say we have a duty to grow government even when we can’t afford it, does it sound like compassion to you — or recklessness?

When you hear the party that glorified Occupy Wall Street blast success, when you hear them minimize the genius of the men and women who make jobs out of nothing, is that what you teach your children about work?

When they tell you America is this unequal place where the powerful trample on the powerless, does that sound like the country your children or your spouse risked their lives for in Iraq or Afghanistan?

Do you even recognize the America they are talking about? And what can we say about a house that doesn’t honor the pictures on its walls?

John F. Kennedy asked us what we could do for America. This Democratic party asks what can government give you. Don’t worry about paying the bill; it’s on your kids and grandkids.

I also liked his reference to Denver 2008, when he introduced then Senator Barack Obama to the convention. He said the “phony columns didn’t wear well…This administration has been in the weeds on the economy for three years and counting.”

It was hard to tell if the audience was responding to him as forcefully as we at home. Former GOP Chairman Lang Wiseman tweeted, “Not sure if it came through on TV, but the energy in the convention hall during Artur Davis’ speech was incredible.”

Next, Nikki Haley, Republican governor of South Carolina, spoke. She had pointed things to say about the Obama administration’s attempt to stop non union work in her state. I marveled at her aplomb. She hasn’t been in the public spotlight long, but she looked like a natural.

When Ann Romney entered to speak, the enthusiasm for her came across. She spoke a little too fast for me, as did Chris Christie, but I imagine they were pushing to get in their complete speeches before the alphabet networks cut them off at 10.

“He was not handed success,” Ann said of Mitt. “He built it.” That brought the house down. Other good lines included this one about Romney’s helping others: “He doesn’t talk about it because it’s a privilege, not a politicized talking point.” I imagine anecdotes fleshing that out will be released in the near future. From my understanding, there are many examples to draw upon.

“Dreams fulfilled help others fulfill dreams,” Ann also said. When she insisted “This man will not fail,” you know she meant it.

Although many have criticized Chris Christie for not mentioning Mitt repeatedly, he did a very good job of drawing a picture of Republicans vs. Democrats. He also continued the narrative of the GOP and women that Mia Love, Nikki Haley and Ann Romney started.

“In the automobile of life, Dad was just the passenger, mom was the driver,” Christie said. He explained how many of his traits come from such a strong mother.

He noted there is “doubt and fear in every corner of the country.” How true! And I liked when he said, “the power of ideas is what attracts people to our party.” It’s something we forget or let the media disparage.

His finish, calling for a second American century, expressed the desire older Americans understand and care about. “We have never been victims of destiny. We have always been masters of our own.” Exactly.

It was a great start to a convention.

Paul Boyd Interviewed

Our favorite County probate clerk, Paul Boyd, was interviewed by the Tennessean at the RNC convention.

Here’s the article:

Paul Boyd concedes that winning minority voters for this year’s Republican presidential ticket might be tough. But he remains optimistic for his party.

“It’s difficult when you’re running against the very first African-American president,” the Tennessee delegate said. “But I think there will be a tremendous emphasis on outreach going forward.”

The GOP will try to showcase its diversity at this week’s Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., an effort cynics may call window dressing but that some Republicans hope signals greater strides in the future.

The effort will run throughout the week, and while the schedule has been scrambled by Tropical Storm Isaac, South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, Senate candidate Ted Cruz of Texas and U.S. Rep. Artur Davis of Alabama, who as a Democrat gave the introduction for President Barack Obama at that party’s convention four years ago, are all scheduled to give prime-time addresses.

Although the party is still overwhelmingly white, Republicans hope to demonstrate a widening tent in which racial and ethnic differences have taken a back seat to shared conservative ideology.

The prominence of African-American, Asian-American and Latino speakers is unlikely to persuade many minority voters to switch allegiance from the Democratic Party in the short term, say political observers and even some Republicans. But by putting diversity front and center throughout the convention, Republicans can signal to white independents that their differences with Democrats are not racially motivated.

Steps toward diversity in the Tennessee GOP have been halting. The state’s delegation will include at least one black member, Boyd, who holds elected office as Shelby County’s probate court clerk. Gov. Bill Haslam also has highlighted diversity within his cabinet, which includes commissioners who are African-American, Asian-American and Latino.

But the governor has come under fire for hiring a Tennessee-born Muslim to supervise the state’s overseas trade missions. And Republican lawmakers and candidates have gained national attention for opposing construction of a mosque in Rutherford County and supporting legislation that branded many Islamic organizations as “terrorist” groups subject to being shut down by the state.

“It’s a struggle for our party, when it comes to ethnic diversity,” Boyd said. “There are some in the party who absolutely understand that the party has to become a party for all Americans, and then there are some who don’t think it’s that important.”
Demographic riddle

The Republican Party has wrestled with the question of diversity for the past several election cycles. Prognosticators have predicted doom for the GOP if it cannot widen its base as the nation’s Asian and Latino bases explode.

California has been cited as an example of the party’s future. Democrats now dominate the state that produced Presidents Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon, as Republicans have struggled in recent years to appeal to California’s fast-growing immigrant and native-born minority populations.

The trend has run in the opposite direction in Tennessee and across the South, as Republicans have come to dominate statehouses and congressional delegations. Merle Black, a professor of political science at Emory University who studies the GOP’s rise in the South, says the Republican Party’s lack of diversity owes less to its failure to appeal to minorities than to Democrats’ inability to attract white voters.

“Democrats have a majority problem in Tennessee,” Black said. “This is not Bill Clinton’s Democratic Party.”

Meanwhile, two children of Indian immigrants — Haley in South Carolina and Bobby Jindal in Louisiana — have been elected as Republican governors of Southern states. Republicans also have sent two African-American members to Congress from the South for the first time since Reconstruction — Rep. Tim Scott of South Carolina and Rep. Allen West of Florida — and they are poised to send a second Latino to the Senate, Cruz.

Cruz, who will face Democrat Paul Sadler in November in a state that leans heavily Republican, would join Florida Sen. Marco Rubio.

Rubio is scheduled to formally introduce Mitt Romney before he accepts the presidential nomination Thursday night.

Haley and Cruz also have been given prominent speaking slots at the convention. They will be joined in prime time by other people of color, including New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez, Puerto Rico Gov. Luis Fortuño and former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice. Jindal was scheduled to speak but canceled his plans to attend the convention as forecasters indicated Tropical Storm Isaac could hit Louisiana.

The lineup takes in practically every minority Republican who holds a prominent office. But it does not necessarily demonstrate that Republicans are becoming more diverse, said Efrén Pérez, a Vanderbilt University political scientist who studies bias.

“It’s open to minorities of a certain type,” he said of the GOP. “The types of minority candidates for office that they’re recruiting, they’re not prototypes of the groups that they ascribe to.”
Subtle attacks

The subject of race has bubbled beneath the surface throughout this year’s campaign, most recently as Romney has attacked the Obama administration’s record on welfare reform. Commentators have said such attacks subtly play to white voters’ biases without turning off moderates by overtly bringing up Obama’s race.

Meanwhile, Republican activists last week proposed a campaign platform that calls for ending federal challenges to state-level immigration measures, building a double-layer fence at the U.S. border with Mexico and implementing policies to encourage undocumented immigrants to leave the country.

Such political positioning undermines any goodwill built up among minorities by the selection of convention speakers, said Pérez.

“If you were to look at the last 25 years of Republican messaging and platform, I don’t think you’d find it to be something friendly to non-white voters,” he said. “It’s very hard to undo that messaging.”

Diversity at the convention is most effective in winning over white independents, said Monique Lyle, also a Vanderbilt University political scientist who specializes in studying racial attitudes. Although white themselves, these voters may believe it’s important to vote for a party that is open to non-whites.

“At the end of the day, who they’re really trying to send this message to is independents, because that’s who they’re more likely to move,” she said.

The prominence of minority Republicans such as Haley, Cruz and Scott could signal a subtle shift in the psychology of conservative voters. Both won the Republican nomination in hard-fought primaries.

Tennessee Republican races have featured few minority candidates. And with no black Republicans and only one Hispanic, state Sen. Dolores Gresham, in the General Assembly, Tennessee appears far from producing the next Republican superstar of color.

But Richard Garvin, a Smyrna business manager who ran unsuccessfully for the state legislature this summer, said he nonetheless believes Tennessee Republicans are willing to embrace black conservatives. Garvin, who is black, attributed his loss to Dawn White, who is white, to her longer involvement in Rutherford County politics.

“They’ve been very accepting of me,” Garvin said. “There was a point where people were assuming, ‘He’s just a Democrat running on a Republican platform.’ … But I got a lot of support.”

Boyd, the Republican delegate from Memphis, was unchallenged in the GOP primary and rode a Republican sweep of Shelby County offices in 2010. Afterward, Boyd was asked by the Romney campaign to help it recruit Shelby County office holders, which resulted in his being placed on the March ballot as a Romney delegate.

Boyd said he gravitated to Republican politics a decade ago as a student at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. Describing himself as a conservative and evangelical Christian, Boyd said the party’s platform probably appeals to more blacks than many might think.

Boyd said he dislikes it when commentators attempt to dismiss black Republicans as being atypical of African-Americans.

“When they say we don’t count, it sounds to me like they’re saying, ‘He’s not really black,’ ” Boyd said.

He added that he does not doubt some white Republicans quietly refuse to vote for candidates like him because he is black. But he said he suspects many white Democrats feel the same way and that many black Democrats similarly will not cast their ballots for white candidates.

“When it comes down to it, I’m not going to say racism doesn’t exist, because it does,” he said. “What I’m trying to say is that it does not happen nearly as often as some people would like to say it happens, and it happens on both sides.

“Race is out there.”

A Call to Action

Edgar Babian, Shelby County Republican, sent this note out to Memphians:

Six of the state house districts do not have Republicans running in these districts (84,85,87,91,93,98). The deadline for turning in an application to run is Thursday at noon. We need people to pick up a petition to run for these offices to take valuable money from the Democratic party at the November election. They will have paid candidate workers at each of the locations and will probably spend $20,000 for each of these districts. It could be great impact in the upcoming election.

I ran for State house district 85 last time but have been moved out of that district and am now in District 83 held by Mark White who is doing a great Job for each of us. Please consider pulling a petition and turning one in if you live in one of those districts. We need to dominate all of the offices in the state. If you know a republican that can run please have them run for the office we are running out of time.

If you feel strongly about the schools the new school board positions for the new county school district also closes Thursday this is our chance to put good people into office on the board I am running for Position 5 the Germantown, Colierville area.

A Daley Departure

Yesterday’s announcement that White House Chief of Staff Bill Daley was leaving was not really a surprise. He had already announced that he would leave at the end of 2012.

But, yesterday he moved that date up quite a bit. Why?

Months back, a certain White House Insider predicted it, saying Daley’s resignation that will further the growing perception that the Obama White House is a place of internal disarray– which it absolutely is. And this event will also be a signal to those in the Democratic Party that Barack Obama’s re-election is not in their best future interests. It is time we cut our losses and begin the rebuilding process sooner rather than later.

Otherwise how would you account for his leaving just as the campaign season begins to heat up. At the Daily Caller, the reporter says:

The choice of Lew puts a veteran staffer of the White House, Capitol Hill and State Department in a critical position at a difficult time for the president. Obama hopes he can work through tough budget and economic issues with Congress this year despite fierce opposition from Republicans in the GOP-led House. Having a strong team captain who can deal with lawmakers, staffers and business leaders is considered crucial to their strategy.

But aides say Obama had faith in Daley to lead that effort, and that he had not been discussing making any changes prior to last week. Daley’s letter took the president by surprise, said three officials familiar with the personnel discussions that followed. They requested anonymity to speak about the internal talks in advance of the public announcement.The choice of Lew puts a veteran staffer of the White House, Capitol Hill and State Department in a critical position at a difficult time for the president. Obama hopes he can work through tough budget and economic issues with Congress this year despite fierce opposition from Republicans in the GOP-led House. Having a strong team captain who can deal with lawmakers, staffers and business leaders is considered crucial to their strategy.

It would seem Daley has had enough of the Obamas. In the past, Michelle Obama has voiced her opinion that Chicago was run too much by “white, Irish Catholics.” Certainly Daley is one. He is also a part of a dynamic political machine, so he definitely is signaling something by getting out now.

When first appointed, Daley was touted as the “adult in the room.” Pundits were nodding as to how the Obama administration would now be paying more attention to business. They saw it as a palliative or peace offering and were happy to have Daley’s negotiating skills on the side of most Americans.

Good News on Intrade

Intrade, the unofficial poll that has proved correct in most political races, now shows the Democrats’ chances of keeping the Senate at 41%! It moved down 7 points yesterday. Many like Intrade because people have to put their money where their mouth is. In 2006 pundits claimed that how the House goes, so goes the Senate. It was true then, will it be true now?

Sweep predicted in reverse

Sweep“It will be a long time before Republicans are elected in significant numbers countywide,” was the last quote in a front page story in The Commercial Appeal on Sunday, June 27.

You probably remember the story and the headline: “Democrats talk of election sweep in Shelby County.”

It caused quite a bit of queasiness  and fear on the part of  Shelby County Republicans.

Author Zack McMillin went on to say “In 2010, admit even the area’s most optimistic Republicans, conservatives should be afraid, very afraid. Because it is possible, perhaps even likely, that the Aug. 5 elections will create a county government run almost completely by Democrats beholden to a voting base that will expect greater attention to Memphis concerns.

“Shelby County’s demographics – low median income, large African-American voting base, urban white voters – have made it reliably Democratic in presidential elections, with Barack Obama in 2008 getting 63 percent of the vote and 100,000 more votes than Republican John McCain.”

“We have the numbers and the numbers don’t lie, as the rapper said,” said Van Turner, the county’s Democratic party chairman. “We all win if you vote for 10.”

Flash forward to the night of August 5.

There was a sweep, all right, but not in the direction they wanted or predicted. The headline the next morning read: “Republicans sweep all 9 of the contested Shelby County races.”

So what happened?

Hard work by a galvanized Shelby GOP won the day.

To those breast beating when the story came out, I remember saying the story was a good thing. If this was true, the predictions would light a fire under all hesitant Republicans and get them to the polls.

And the more likely case, that the newspaper wanted to dispirit Republicans and funnel perceptions in the direction they wanted, seemed closer to the truth. With all the activity I saw coming from the Shelby GOP, I just couldn’t believe we wouldn’t get our voters out.

Now I wonder what the political geniuses see for November 2? I suggest you print out the story, as I did, and refer to it any time you have some doubts. Plus, it will always provide me with a laugh when I need one.