RNC Activities Curtailed.

Status
Not open for further replies.
yes




If you recall from other threads - you were saying that the lines extended 6+ miles for Obama show but RNC was trouble trying to fill up the convention and had to bus in people. And I made comment that it's because of hurricane. You dismissed me that hurricane is way off the course and will not affect RNC.

ANYWAY....... while it MAY looks bad for RNC but this could turn into positive thing for McCain.... IF he handles this situation well and not politicize it. Who knows.


When I was at Fuddrucker today - I saw this newspaper on the table... something about RNC and Gustav - "POLITIC? NOT NOW!!" McCain was making announcement - "This is a time when we have to do away with our party politics, and we have to act as Americans."

Actually, what I said was the hurricane had nothing to do with McCain's difficulty in filling an arena in Dayton, OH. It was prior to the decision to postpone the opening of the RNC. I said nothing about the RNC.
 
If you recall from other threads - you were saying that the lines extended 6+ miles for Obama show but RNC was trouble trying to fill up the convention and had to bus in people. And I made comment that it's because of hurricane. You dismissed me that hurricane is way off the course and will not affect RNC.

ANYWAY....... while it MAY looks bad for RNC but this could turn into positive thing for McCain.... IF he handles this situation well and not politicize it. Who knows.

Do you have the link?
 
By Alan Silverleib
CNN


ST. PAUL, Minnesota (CNN) -- Tonight, it starts for real.


Sen. John McCain will accept his party's nomination for president this week.

After a day of watching updates on Hurricane Gustav and taking care of some mundane procedural affairs, the 39th Republican National Convention will get down to the serious business of politics Tuesday evening in the midst of what may be the most inhospitable climate for the GOP since the Great Depression.

Gustav's domination of the news cycle is only the latest in a series of daunting obstacles for Sen. John McCain and the Republican Party this year.

With only nine weeks to go before voters head to the polls, President Bush is mired in Watergate-level approval ratings. Most people believe that the economy is in tatters. The war in Iraq remains deeply unpopular. Fewer than one in five voters believes that the country is on the right track.

Democrats are far more enthusiastic about voting this fall than Republicans. The GOP's congressional candidates appear headed for a shellacking in November.

Retiring Republican Rep. Tom Davis of Virginia may have put it best in a reference he made about the House GOP caucus this year: The "Republican brand is so bad right now that if it were a dog food, they'd take it off the shelf."

And yet, in spite of that bleak backdrop, McCain is nearly tied with Democratic nominee Barack Obama in most national polls. Watch Bill Schneider's polling analysis »

The latest CNN poll of polls -- an average of the most recent national surveys -- shows Obama leading McCain by 5 points, 49 percent to 44 percent. A clear majority of voters does not appear to be sold on Obama, and McCain's maverick reputation is keeping the race close.


So what exactly does McCain need to accomplish in what is, at least at the start, a subdued convention partly overshadowed by a hurricane? There are four key items on his convention to-do list.

First, reintroduce the public to war hero John McCain.

Democratic strategists want voters to think of McCain as an out-of-touch Beltway insider who doesn't know how many houses he owns.

Republican strategists want voters to think of McCain as the fighter pilot who spent more than five years in one house: the Hanoi Hilton.

The spotlight was initially going to shine most brightly on McCain's military record on Monday, a day convention organizers planned to focus on the theme of national service. Expect that to now be pushed back to Tuesday or later.

Second, McCain needs to make it clear that his first term will not be Bush's third term.

After watching the Democratic Convention last week, a casual political observer could be excused for confusing McCain with Dick Cheney. Speaker after speaker referred to an endless litany of failed "Bush-McCain" policies, a simple but potentially devastating strategy in a year in which most voters are hungry for change.

According to the August 23-24 CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll, 50 percent of voters believe that McCain's policy positions and Bush's policy positions are indistinguishable; 49 percent believe they are different. McCain will have an exceedingly hard time finding 270 electoral votes in November if half of the electorate thinks he's the next Bush.

Over the past year, McCain has steadily shifted to the right in order to capture his party's nomination and placate the GOP base.

The Gov. Sarah Palin pick not only sealed the deal with conservatives; it fired them up. At this point, McCain may need to remind the larger general election electorate of the maverick senator who more than once has been willing to break with the Republican establishment on issues such as taxes, global warming, campaign finance, immigration, torture and the execution of the war.

Does this mean that McCain has to unveil a new moderate or even liberal policy agenda? No. But independents need to know that McCain is an independent thinker. They need to know he is willing to put the country ahead of his unpopular party.

In that vein, Bush's decision to skip the convention and instead travel to Texas to monitor Hurricane Gustav was a plus for McCain. While Bush will appear before the convention via satellite Tuesday night, the last thing McCain needed was a Democratic ad showing the unpopular president endorsing him in person in front of cheering delegates in St. Paul. iReport.com: Are you at the RNC? Share your story

Third, the McCain campaign can't afford to bungle Palin's rollout. You never get a second chance to make a first impression. Just ask Dan Quayle.

McCain has taken a huge gamble by tapping the unknown, largely untested governor of Alaska. His hope is that she will continue to energize the GOP's economic and social conservative base while simultaneously closing the gender gap and buttressing his pro-reform image.

Palin currently has an approval rating of over 80 percent in her home state, in part due to her willingness to take on corruption in the Alaska GOP. Watch more on Palin's policies »

The downside? The McCain campaign has now undermined its argument that Obama is too inexperienced to sit in the Oval Office.

It's tough to argue that voters shouldn't support someone because he's been in the Senate less than four years when you're willing to entrust the presidency to someone who has been governor of a small state (in terms of population) for only twenty months. Before serving as governor, Palin was the mayor of Wasilla, an Anchorage suburb with a population of less than 7,000.

Obama's supporters are moving fast to label Palin as a dangerously inexperienced extremist. Palin is also struggling with the revelation of her 17-year old daughter's pregnancy, as well as allegations relating to a potential abuse of power tied to her firing of the state's public safety commissioner in July. Watch more on the Palin pregnancy announcement »

The convention will provide a critical opportunity for the McCain camp to put the best possible spin on these issues and instead ensure that voters see Palin as a fresh, energetic voice of change.

The fourth and final item on McCain's convention agenda: attack.

If the election of 2008 is indeed about the need for change, the easiest and most obvious option for voters is to change the party in the White House.


It's up to McCain to convince enough voters that Obama is too liberal, too inexperienced and too risky to sit in the Oval Office. McCain needs to use the convention to chip away at the public's largely positive image of the Democratic nominee. It will be awkward to do so right after asking Americans to put aside partisanship in the wake of Hurricane Gustav.

Getting all of these things done in three short days won't be easy. But if you're a Republican in this election cycle, nothing ever is.


Analysis: Four things McCain needs to accomplish this week - CNN.com

*Don't forget to add that McCain was involved in the Savings & Loan scandal in the 1980's--remember the Keating Five?

*While staying at the Hanoi Hilton--he dreamt of his wife who was disfigured horribly in an auto accident and when he returned home to her--he divorced her because she wasn't that beautiful model anymore. Show America how much you believe in 'Family values" when you can't hold up your own marriage vows. :roll:
 
MCain's character?????

ST. PAUL, Minnesota (CNN) -- Republicans launched their first night of full-scale conventioneering Tuesday by praising party standard-bearer John McCain's experience and attacking Democratic rival Barack Obama.


Fred Thompson on Tuesday night lauded John McCain's career as a naval officer and politician.

1 of 3 more photos » Republican leaders also strongly defended vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, the Alaska governor who was McCain's surprise addition to the ticket last week over better-known contenders like former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty.

Palin has won plaudits from many influential conservatives for her opposition to abortion and her pro-business record.

But Palin has also grabbed headlines for Monday's revelation that her unmarried teenaged daughter is pregnant.

Actor and former Sen. Fred Thompson, who briefly ran for president himself before dropping out in January, gave the speech that most roused the tens of thousands of Republican faithful at the convention. iReport.com: What do you think of the speeches?

"John McCain's character has been tested like no other presidential candidate in the history of this nation," Thompson said, contrasting him with Obama, whom he labeled the "most liberal, most inexperienced nominee to ever run for president."

Of McCain, he said: "It's pretty clear there are two questions we will never have to ask ourselves, 'Who is this man?' and 'Can we trust this man with the Presidency?'"

He recounted McCain's years as a prisoner of war in Vietnam, telling the story of the downed Navy flier's fortitude in the face of physical and mental abuse.

"We hear a lot of talk about hope," Thompson said, a reference to Obama's main campaign theme. "John McCain knows about hope. That's all he had to survive on."

Don't Miss
Full text of Bush's Tuesday night speech
Full text of Lieberman's speech
Full text of Thompson's speech
Videos from Tuesday's session
He praised McCain for advocating an increase in the number of U.S. troops in Iraq "at a point when the war in Iraq was going badly and the public lost confidence ... and now we are winning," he said, prompting chants of "USA! USA!" from the crowd.

Thompson dismissed Obama as all talk, saying, "the Senate has always had more than its share of smooth talkers. And big talkers. And obviously, it still has." Watch Thompson criticize Obama »

McCain, by contrast, had earned his place in the world, Thompson said.

"The respect he is given around the world is not because of a teleprompter speech designed to appeal to American critics abroad but because of decades of clearly demonstrated character and statesmanship."

Thompson never mentioned Obama by name. The only speaker who did was independent Sen. Joseph Lieberman, a former Democrat who was Al Gore's running mate in 2000 and who has been an vocal backer of his friend McCain this cycle. iReport.com: 'I was moved'

Lieberman, speaking last on the program, prompted boos from the crowd by contrasting McCain and Obama's positions on Iraq, the issue that most separates Lieberman from his former party.

"When others were silent, John McCain had the judgment to sound the alarm about the mistakes we were making in Iraq," Lieberman said. "Colleagues like Barack Obama were voting to cut off funding for our American troops on the ground."

Conventioneers responded with their loudest boos of the night.

Lieberman also argued that Obama did not have McCain's record of working with members of the opposing party.

"In the Senate, during the three-and-a-half years that Sen. Obama has been a member, he has not reached across party lines to accomplish anything significant, nor has he been willing to take on powerful interest groups in the Democratic Party to get something done," Lieberman said.

Harry Reid, the Democratic leader in the Senate, bristled at the tone of the convention address.

"Sen. Reid was very disappointed in Sen. Lieberman's speech tonight," Reid spokesman Jim Manley told CNN. "As the American people have made very clear, the last thing this country needs is another four years of the same old failed Bush-McCain policies of the past."

Lieberman said McCain "is the best choice to bring our country together and lead our country forward." Watch Lieberman ask voters to "come together for McCain" »

"God only made one John McCain, and he is his own man," Lieberman said to cheers.

First lady Laura Bush undercut Obama's campaign slogan as she praised her husband, President Bush.

"Thanks to the president's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, [the] number [of Africans receiving AIDS medication] is now nearly 2 million. You might call that 'change you can really believe in,' " the first lady said.

President Bush spoke to the convention by video link from the White House, where he said he was monitoring the aftermath of Hurricane Gustav.

He mentioned the September 11 terrorist attacks in his endorsement of McCain. Watch Bush tell delegates McCain is ready to lead »

"We need a president who understands the lessons of September 11, 2001: that to protect America, we must stay on the offense, stop attacks before they happen and not wait to be hit again. The man we need is John McCain," he said.

He also mentioned McCain's time as a prisoner of war, linking it to an explicitly partisan argument.

"Fellow citizens: If the Hanoi Hilton could not break John McCain's resolve to do what is best for his country, you can be sure the angry left never will," he said.

Democrats worked hard during their own convention last week to link McCain to Bush, who has historically low approval ratings. Some pundits have suggested it was a stroke of luck for McCain that Bush was unable to appear in person at the convention.

There were never plans for the two men to appear together.

The last time an incumbent president skipped his party's convention was in 1968, when President Lyndon Johnson stayed at his Texas Ranch while Democrats met in Chicago.

But the Minnesota event was a reminder that Bush remains popular among the Republican faithful.

Kathi Thompson, the wife of a retired Army officer from Hawaii, said whatever you think of President Bush's administration: "He never wavered, and what you see is what you get. You can like it or not, but at least he is a man of conviction."

Liz Tait from Houston, Texas, said "We're extremely proud of him. He kept us safe, and he fought for the values we believe in," she said.

Bush and his wife both praised Palin as well as McCain.

Laura Bush hailed her as "a strong executive and a proven reformer."

"I am proud that America's first female vice president will be a Republican woman," she said.

Fred Thompson called her "a breath of fresh air."

"She is a courageous, successful reformer, who is not afraid to take on the establishment. Sound like anyone else we know?" he said.

"She has run a municipality and she has run a state," he said, an apparent attempt to rebut claims that the 44-year-old, who has been governor for less than two years, did not have enough experience for the White House.

Since her unexpected elevation to McCain's running mate, Palin has won plaudits from many influential conservatives for her opposition to abortion, her pro-business record and her reputation as a reformer.

But she has also grabbed headlines for Monday's revelation that her unmarried teenaged daughter is pregnant, as well as accusations she improperly used her position as governor to dismiss an underling, and the suggestion that she lobbied for pork-barrel spending to benefit the small town she led as mayor.

A gaffe from party leader did underscore Palin's newcomer status, even among Republicans.

Republican National Committee co-chair Jo Ann Davidson mistakenly referred to the vice-presidential candidate as "Sarah Pawlenty," merging her name with the Minnesota governor, who had been considered one of the front-runners for the slot.

Talking about how a woman first addressed a Republican Convention in 1892, Davidson said: "Today, 116 years later, we are holding a convention that will nominate Republican woman Governor Sarah Pawlenty to be the next vice president."

The Obama campaign criticized Republicans more for what they did not say in St. Paul than what they did say. Watch highlights from the convention »

"At a time when millions of Americans are struggling like never before to pay their mortgage, their medical bills, and their gas bills, tonight's speakers at John McCain's Republican convention proved how out of touch their candidate is by saying not one word about his plans to put our economy back on track and provide real relief to middle-class families.

Apparently, John McCain's belief that we've made 'great progress' economically over the last eight years means he doesn't have to offer any plans at all to fix our ailing economy," said Obama campaign spokesman Tommy Vietor.


The convention roared to life on its second day after a muted start. Planners thought it best to remain low-key on Monday as Hurricane Gustav was ripping across Louisiana.

McCain is due to speak on Thursday, the last night of the convention, to accept the party's nomination

GOP points to McCain's character, derides Obama - CNN.com

Any one else see the absurdity in Laura Bush's statement? Citing 2 million people in Africa who are receiving meds, while ignoring the fact that 47 million Americans are uninsured and not receiving any medical care as a result.
 
*Don't forget to add that McCain was involved in the Savings & Loan scandal in the 1980's--remember the Keating Five?

*While staying at the Hanoi Hilton--he dreamt of his wife who was disfigured horribly in an auto accident and when he returned home to her--he divorced her because she wasn't that beautiful model anymore. Show America how much you believe in 'Family values" when you can't hold up your own marriage vows. :roll:

Absolutely. That's the testiment to his true character.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top