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WASHINGTON—Republicans heading to
their party convention are eager to hear an earful about the shortcomings of
President Barack Obama's record, the woeful U.S. economy and the competing
visions of the two presidential candidates. What they aren't looking for is
any mention of compromise, which most Americans say is necessary to get the
nation back on track. The
Republicans want a party like in 1980, when the GOP ousted a Democratic
president after one term. Delegates
from around the country have big dreams for the Aug. 27-30 gathering in
Tampa, Fla., where Mitt Romney will accept the party's nomination and
Republicans will kick off their final push to defeat Obama. They sketched out
a sharp message they want to hear from speaker after speaker—onetime White House
hopefuls, GOP governors, congressional leaders and the party's top recruits
angling to win a job in Washington. Conventions
are four-day slugfests directed at the opposing party and its candidate. The
rhetoric is brutal, vitriolic and far from conciliatory. Some lines are
memorable. "Poor
George, he can't help it—he was born with a silver foot in his mouth,"
quipped Texas state treasurer Ann Richards to laughs and applause at the
Democratic National Convention in Atlanta in 1988. Her target was the well-heeled
GOP nominee, Vice President George H.W. Bush. Twenty
years later, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin accepted the Republican vice
presidential nomination at the GOP convention in St. Paul, Minn., and
compared her mayoral experience in Wasilla, Alaska, to that of nominee Obama. "I
guess a small-town mayor is sort of like a community organizer, except that
you have actual responsibilities," she said. The
crowd roared. Ed
Cox, the chairman of the Republican Party in New York, wants speakers at the
convention to echo the message that Romney delivered after he won the
Wisconsin primary in April. Romney cast the election as a choice between what
he called Obama's "government-centered society" and the
"opportunity society" the former businessman said he would pursue
as president. "This
is the crux of our message, that we are for an opportunity society of free
people and free enterprise," Cox said in an interview with The
Associated Press. "America has always been about people having dreams,
going out and working to make them. To do that they don't want the heavy hand
of government on top of them, whether it's in taxes or regulations." The
Obama administration in its first year "ignored what they were elected
to do, which was to pay attention to jobs and the economy," said Cox,
who has seen his share of conventions as the son-in-law of President Richard
M. Nixon. Jim
McErlane, a lawyer from Chester County, Pa., said
convention speakers should keep it simple. "The
economy, the economy, the economy," he said in an interview. "Jobs,
jobs, jobs." Shawn
Steel, a lawyer from Palos Verdes, Calif., wants the convention to remind
Americans of 1980, when Ronald Reagan accepted the nomination in Detroit and
then scored a landslide victory that knocked out President Jimmy Carter and
helped Republicans seize control of the Senate. "In
1980, there was not much interest in moderating, with inflation, the state of
the world, foreign policy and just the general decline of the American
economy," Steel said in an interview. "People don't want to
moderate. They want some really crisp answers and alternatives because this
is the worst post-World War II economy in our history. It should not have
gone this long. And one promise after another by this president has been
broken." The
tough talk is a sharp contrast to what most Americans envision from elected
leaders. A
CBS-New York Times poll from January found that 85 percent of adults think it
is better for the country if Democrats and Republicans "compromise some
of their positions in order to get things done," while just 11 percent
said it's better if they "stick to their positions even if it means not
getting as much done." The
preference for compromise held across party lines, with 80 percent of
Republicans, 84 percent of independents and 89 percent of Democrats saying a
little give is good for the country. But
the tough talk and division reflect how Americans vote. In
the Indiana GOP primary in May, voters rejected six-term Sen. Richard Lugar,
a conservative willing to work with Democrats on foreign policy, for Richard Mourdock, who famously said: "I don't think there's
going to be a lot of successful compromise. I hope to build a conservative
majority in the U.S. Senate so bipartisanship becomes Democrats joining
Republicans to roll back the size of government." Moderate
Republicans and Democrats in the Senate have decided to retire, with Maine's
Olympia Snowe decrying the "atmosphere of
polarization." This will be the last year in the Senate for Nebraska's
Ben Nelson, North Dakota's Kent Conrad, Virginia's Jim Webb and Connecticut
independent Joe Lieberman.
Those
are the Republicans unlikely to attend the convention in Tampa. |
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Welcome to the Party Conventions 2012 Blog, associated with Kennesaw State University's POLS 4490 Party Conventions Field Study and COM 4490 Reporting at the Party Conventions courses
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
GOP delegates want tough talk at convention
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