By Michael D. Bates on 4.19.07 @ 12:08AM
Tom Coburn and Jim Inhofe showcase Oklahama's Republican Convention in conservative style.
OKLAHOMA CITY -- Delivering his post mortem for the 2006
mid-term elections, Sen. Tom Coburn told delegates at Saturday's
Oklahoma Republican Convention that the voters lost confidence in
Republican integrity, not Republican ideas:
"If Republicans will stand on ideas and have courage to back up
those ideas, the courage to challenge the status quo, then the
Republican Party both in Oklahoma and this country will be very
successful in the future."
As Coburn took a breath, a woman in the crowd cried out, "Tom
for President!" It was the biggest applause line of the day.
Oklahoma boasts the most conservative Senate delegation in the
nation -- both Coburn and his senior colleague Jim Inhofe have a
perfect score from the American Conservative Union -- and every
county went red in 2004.
Most of the convention's 900 delegates are waiting to find a
candidate like Coburn to back in a bid for the White House --
someone with integrity who can confidently articulate conservative
ideas. None of the candidates already in the race has captured
their hearts.
Two non-candidates topped a straw poll conducted by the Oklahoma
Republican Assembly. Fred Thompson led with 38%; Newt Gingrich
finished a distant second with 15%. Other candidates were in the
single digits, led by Rudy Giuliani at 9%.
Thompson's straight-shooting radio commentaries -- he filled in
recently for Tulsa native Paul Harvey -- bring back happy memories
of Ronald Reagan's daily broadcasts which served as a prelude to
his 1980 triumph. On social, economic, and foreign policy issues,
Thompson lines up with these conservative grassroots activists, who
like the fact that they wouldn't have to apologize for his
substance or his style.
Delegates gave second-choice Gingrich high marks as an idea man,
but they always coupled his name with the word "baggage."
Thompson's deliberate pace isn't a problem for his supporters
here, who are accustomed to waiting patiently for their dream
candidate to come along. In the 2004 Senate race, big-money donors
and elected officials made early commitments to Oklahoma City Mayor
Kirk Humphreys. But conservative foot-soldiers kept their powder
dry, hoping Coburn would enter the race, and fell in behind him
when he did.
Mitt Romney passed on his chance to win over Oklahoma delegates.
Months ago he had committed to be the keynote speaker, but 10 days
before the convention he backed out, citing a schedule conflict.
Instead, Romney spent Saturday making the rounds of several GOP
county conventions in South Carolina.
Romney's cancellation came a day after the death of a bill that
would have leapfrogged Oklahoma ahead of South Carolina and made
the Sooner State primary the second in the nation, one week after
New Hampshire.
Even without the move, Oklahoma's February 5 primary is among
the earliest, offering, with Arkansas, Missouri, and Alabama, a
virtual south-central regional primary with as many delegates at
stake as California but much cheaper ad rates.
None of the presidential campaigns had an official presence at
Saturday's convention. A Rudy Giuliani table was manned by three
young men from the University of Oklahoma. Some anonymous supporter
of John McCain set out a few bumper stickers, and an energetic Mike
Huckabee fan put a photocopied issues paper on every seat in the
hall.
At one booth, a male, middle-aged admirer of the Secretary of
State urged passers-by to "Think Condi!" A sign behind him advised,
"Rice Wants It--But in Draft Form."
Of the candidates already in the race, Giuliani had the most
support among delegates, even though his views clash with the
platform they unanimously adopted.
Some support Giuliani more out of resignation than enthusiasm.
Only Rudy can beat Hillary, they say. They fear that the same
blight that makes the Northeast politically inhospitable to social
conservatives has spread to key swing states in the Midwest and the
Sun Belt.
Without a presidential candidate there to rally the troops on
Saturday, the job fell to Coburn and Inhofe, who announced he will
seek a third full Senate term next year. He isn't counting on
coattails from the presidential nominee but is already working to
energize his core voters and enlist them as volunteers and
donors.
Environmentalist groups have targeted Inhofe for his vocal
skepticism about man-made global warming. Not intimidated in the
least, Inhofe fired up the crowd with video clips of his clashes
with CNN's Miles O'Brien -- Inhofe called him "the Rush Limbaugh of
the liberals" -- and Sen. Barbara Boxer, his successor as chairman
of the Senate Environment Committee.
No Democratic challenger to Inhofe has emerged. Gov. Brad Henry,
re-elected in a landslide last fall, says he isn't interested. The
most serious threat to Inhofe could come from a public official
wealthy enough to self-finance -- someone like Tulsa Mayor Kathy
Taylor, the wife of Vanguard Car Rental CEO Bill Lobeck, or Sonic
CEO Cliff Hudson, who also serves as chairman of the Oklahoma City
school board.
The state isn't a lock for the GOP, which suffered a
near-shutout in statewide races last fall, even as the party
consolidated its 2004 takeover of the State House and fought to a
draw in the State Senate for the first time since statehood.
But Jim Inhofe is the kind of outspoken, uncompromising
politician that Oklahoma Republicans love to follow into battle.
Inhofe will give these red state activists plenty of the red meat
they crave, however unappetizing the top of the ticket may be.
topics:
Foreign Policy, John McCain, Environment, Global Warming