I stopped by the RNC meeting last night as well, and it was
interesting to see the candidates buttonholing every voting
member they could.
As Stacy noted, everyone there has an ulterior motive, and
with a no-drop-off multiple ballot, it would be silly to presume
that you know who has most of the support. Unless, as I’ve said,
you’ve got a DeLorian in your garage.
According to some that were in the room, Mike Duncan gave as good
a speech as they “had ever heard from him,” defending his record
and so on. But when it came time to answer questions, Duncan got
testy and only gave canned responses. Members were not
enthusiastic. A vocal portion of the audience made it clear they
were also upset in that he didn’t offer numbers or a plan to
reach out to blacks.
One funny anecdote related to me was when Katon Dawson was lobbed
an easy softball question so that he could address the whites
only country club issue. Dawson responded that he had resigned
from the club, that it was behind him, and that he’s done plenty
of work to be inclusive. It appeared genuine, and obviously,
calling Dawson a racist on this charge is unfair — if anything,
he may be tin-eared on race. As Katon stepped aside, his luck
must have run out. The next speaker in line introduced himself as
a pastor of a 20,000 member black church. He noted that Dawson
may think it’s behind him, but in his own experience, this will
be a big problem when it comes to attracting blacks to the party.
One person brought up to me that Dawson didn’t fight to have the
confederate flag removed from the South Carolina state house.
That may be bad on an image level, but many in South Carolina
feel strongly about the confederate flag, and Katon might not
have been in a position to lead on the issue. The candidate, not
the party chair, should lead the fight. But it does present yet
another thing for the press to add to Dawson’s bioline.
Speaking to the candidates, you get the sense that everyone is
saying they’re up against the candidate they’d most like to be up
against. But they’re also giving you their vote counts, which
frequently include “secret votes.” That is, the members don’t
want to come out publicly for them, but they’re promising their
vote. Chris Rock, if you’ve been dating a man for four months,
and you haven’t met any of his friends, you are not his
girlfriend. If you’ve been courting an RNC member for three
months, and he hasn’t publicly endorsed you, he is not going
to vote for you.
I agree with Stacy. This will take at least 5 or 6 ballots. Mike
Duncan didn’t make a good enough case, and it looks like members
want to grab someone with “change” on the mind. No one I spoke to
sounded bullish on Katon. While Steele is tied to moderates like
Christie Todd Whittman, some members I spoke to didn’t
even mind, believing that the RNC needs to broaden the base.
Interesting to me is that Steele and Anuzis are similar on this
point, yet no one mentions that Anuzis would be willing to pull
more moderates into the party as well. I don’t know if it’s a
positive for him that he’s been able to get so far without this
becoming his defining issue, but it’s strange that it hasn’t come
up. Steele has also been saying he’s picked up a certain number
of votes, but everyone I speak to says that they think it’s a
load of horse droppings.
I thought an interesting lens to look through was the question of
who has the least enemies — who people wouldn’t mind voting for
if their own candidate didn’t make it. Blackwell certainly has
the support of conservatives in the room, but will the moderates
swing to him to get him 85? It’s a question of whether they buy
his fundraising ability and the ability of his coalition to
create a smooth-running organization. Steele has the moderates,
but would the conservatives ever hold their noses and go for him?
It depends on how his pitch on “inclusiveness” goes over, and
whether he can claim his GOPAC work as a positive. Because Anuzis
has been a friendly guy who’s been talking tech and philosophy,
members may find it easier to go for him than to be caught
between moderates and conservatives. But he has to talk about his
successes as an organizer, which are few, and spin them as
positive learning experiences. Yet he has a groundgame: quite a
number of volunteers wandering around the hotel lobby wearing
t-shirts. For those members who only became voting members on
account of connections, and they are really just tourists with
voting privileges, I can imagine this might actually help.
It’s going to be a long day.
sidnee| 12.12.09 @ 12:40PM
jack wills
ugg new arrivals