By John Tabin on 9.3.04 @ 1:58AM
The view from inside Madison Square Garden.
NEW YORK - Almost as if his time here had been less than
pleasant Shawn Macomber bolted town yesterday afternoon and
left me with TAS's press credentials, and thus a seat in
Madison Square Garden for the President's acceptance speech last
night.
The energy in the air when George W. Bush walks into a stadium
packed with Republicans is hard to overstate. It was palpable even
in the zone of maximum blasé -- or, if you happen to be
sitting next to a couple of bitter Village Voicers,
outright hostility -- known as the periodical press stand.
Just as Democratic delegates' enthusiasm with the pro-military
gestures in Boston often seemed
muted, the preferences of the GOP faithful, during the
President's domestic agenda laundry list, was clear: Tax reform,
tort reform, health savings accounts -- huge cheers. Increased
funding for community colleges, a "health center" for every poor
county in America -- polite applause. (Many in the crowd, no doubt,
wondered about the bill as they hesitated to cheer.) Among the
loudest cheers came when the social conservative agenda --
"mak[ing] "a place for the unborn child" and "the protection of
marriage against activists judges" -- made a rare primetime
appearance.
But the meat of the speech was the suitably long foreign policy
passage. Bush defended his foreign policy record, restating his
argument on Iraq:
After more than a decade of diplomacy, we gave Saddam
Hussein another chance, a final chance, to meet his
responsibilities to the civilized world. He again refused, and I
faced the kind of decision that comes only to the Oval Office -- a
decision no president would ask for, but must be prepared to make.
Do I forget the lessons of Sept. 11th and take the word of a
madman, or do I take action to defend our country? Faced with that
choice, I will defend America every time.
He took pointed shots at John Kerry:
… and wise counsel of leaders like Prime Minister
Howard, and President Kwasniewski, and Prime Minister Berlusconi --
and, of course, Prime Minister Tony Blair. Again, my opponent takes
a different approach. In the midst of war, he has called America's
allies, quote, a "coalition of the coerced and the bribed." That
would be nations like Great Britain, Poland, Italy, Japan, the
Netherlands, Denmark, El Salvador , Australia, and others -- allies
that deserve the respect of all Americans, not the scorn of a
politician.
Most importantly, he emphasized his strategic outlook for the
future, albeit in softer focus than Rudy Giuliani did on
Monday:
I believe in the transformational power of liberty: The
wisest use of American strength is to advance freedom. As the
citizens of Afghanistan and Iraq seize the moment, their example
will send a message of hope throughout a vital region. Palestinians
will hear the message that democracy and reform are within their
reach, and so is peace with our good friend Israel. Young women
across the Middle East will hear the message that their day of
equality and justice is coming. Young men will hear the message
that national progress and dignity are found in liberty, not
tyranny and terror. Reformers, and political prisoners, and exiles
will hear the message that their dream of freedom cannot be denied
forever. And as freedom advances -- heart by heart, and nation by
nation -- America will be more secure and the world more
peaceful.
It's not easy to tell, sitting in the hall, how a speech plays
on television: I can't quite gauge how well the speech held the
attention of a non-captive audience (it did seem to drag a bit in
the middle), and I don't know how much of a distraction the
security disturbances were. (In the hall they were a big
distraction-- it's hard to ignore a woman being dragged away next
to you wearing an undergarment labeled as a "pink slip" for the
president -- which was exacerbated by delegates shouting at the
infiltrators.) But my sense is that this should leave Republicans
relatively optimistic, especially when compared to Kerry's
acceptance speech in Boston: a candidate who can tell a joke
("People sometimes have to correct my English -- I knew I had a
problem when Arnold Schwarzenegger started doing it") always has a
leg up on a candidate who can't ("I'm not kidding, I was born in
the west wing!"). Bush hit all the important points, and hit them
well. Is it time to declare certain victory? Not quite. But from
where I sat, this certainly looked like a successful end to a
successful convention.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Television, Military, Iraq, Israel, Energy