GOP journal: Report from a county convention
Fair-weather Republicans drifted off as the day unfolded, and rules are rules: Without a quorum, King County's party didn't finish the business at hand.
The sunniest day of 2008 to date was a curse, not a blessing, for the 2008 King County Republican Convention earlier this month, on April 12. Held in Auburn at Green River Community College on the first decent day of weather seen by Puget Sound residents since before the memory of man, 954 credentialed delegates - just over 20 percent of the total eligible to attend (keep this in mind because it becomes critical later on) - gathered to elect representatives to several statewide Republican Party committees and approve a 2008 King County GOP platform.
It's best to get this bad news out of the way: The good weather resulted in people drifting off, and characteristic GOP reverence for the rules meant an early adjournment when a quorum evaporated. A lot of business was unfinished, including refinement of the King County version of the GOP platform.
But it was otherwise an upbeat day. The assembled mass was a composite of the middle class, mostly folks who pay the public's bills rather than run up the public tab - there wasn't a public employee or entitlement advocate in the bunch. You saw small business owners, retirees, hard working types, recent military veterans – in other words, a typical Republican gathering.
Shawn Burpee, a 30-year-old construction worker and delegate from Enumclaw, described himself as a conservative strong on the Second Amendment and self reliance. Sporting piercings and the longest hair of the day, this longtime activist, who cut his teeth supporting Sen. Bob Dole's 1996 run for the White House and former U.S. Rep. Randy Tate's re-election efforts, looked like he would be more at home at a Capitol Hill dance club than a GOP convention. Asked to distinguish between the two parties, he said, "Republican ideology is based upon logic, while Democratic Party ideology is based upon emotions."
Manning a table for delegates from Seattle's 43rd Legislative District - the most Democratic district in King County, if not the state - was Jim Nobles, the last Republican elected to anything in Seattle, albeit in a non-partisan capacity (Seattle Monorail Project board). His socially moderate, fiscally conservative opposition to over-regulation and over-taxation and support of smaller government and greater personal responsibility drew him to get involved in politics
Working the crowd was King County Council member Kathy Lambert, perhaps the hardest-working elected official in the region. As always, she could be found conferring with local activists on her latest ideas for governmental reform at the county level - ideas to improve efficiency, reduce unnecessary overlap between King County and the City of Seattle, and minimize political infighting. Unincorporated areas of King County are Republican strongholds, and she is looked to as an advocate for those citizens who often are ignored by Seattle-centric county government.
One of the most optimistic people at the event was Steve Beren. He is running what most would consider a hopeless campaign for Congress in the 7th District against incumbent Democrat Jim McDermott, who has been in his safe seat so long he's established squatter's rights. Beren, an operations director for an Internet marketing company and a former Democrat, has no illusions of success – no house-hunting trips to D.C. are on his calendar. But he is convinced - you could see it in his eyes - that just as he is a former Democrat, so too Seattle will one day be formerly Democratic. Beren's job is to plant seeds for the harvest and serve to turn out votes for Dino Rossi's race for governor.
But he looked lonely schlepping campaign material from his car all by himself.
And it wouldn't be a GOP gathering without the presence of initiative guru Tim Eyman. Immensely popular with grassroots Republicans, Eyman was there promoting his latest statewide measure, Initiative 985, which would open up carpool lanes, synchronize traffic lights, and dedicate red-light-camera money (a cash cow that causes salivation in the mouths of many in local government) to traffic relief.
Per Eyman, his proposal is ripped from the pages of a report produced by State Auditor Brian Sonntag's office on ways to reform the Department of Transportation and reduce traffic congestion. Interestingly, Eyman was scheduled to appear at the King County Democratic convention, to be held in West Seattle the following day. In post-conventions e-mail to supporters, Eyman noted that the reception he received there was just as warm and enthusiastic as the one he received from Republicans. Not surprising. Given the way his measures pass, he must be generating more support from Democrats than they are willing to acknowledge.
King County GOP Chair Lori Sotelo formally gaveled the proceedings to order, followed by King County Prosecuting Attorney Dan Satterberg leading the crowd in the Pledge of Allegiance. No question of whether to put it to a vote of the assembly, as did a certain Democratic legislative district caucus, which shall remain nameless to avoid embarrassing the speaker of the state House of Representatives and further annoying Jim Nobles and his 40 delegates from that same district. Instead, GOP county convention delegates enthusiastically recited the pledge - with special emphasis on the phrase, "under God!"
Permanent convention officers were then elected, with former state Sen. and former candidate for state Supreme Court Steve Johnson getting the nod to chair the proceedings.
As the credentials report was being tabulated, delegates were regaled with speeches from elected officials: Attorney General Rob McKenna (major statewide reductions in meth labs, ID theft, and sex offender threats to children and protections against governmental abuse of the condemnation process); Secretary of State Sam Reed (purging voter registration rolls of felons and the deceased and aggressive efforts against voter-registration activist organization ACORN for submitting fraudulent voter registrations); King County Prosecuting Attorney Dan Satterberg (50 percent reduction in car thefts); and 8th District U.S. Rep. Dave Reichert (expansion of free trade, support for troops in Iraq and Afghanistan).
Terry Rossi also spoke on behalf of her husband, Dino, who most in attendance addressed as Gov. Rossi.
KVI-AM talk show host John Carlson offered some moving remarks about the late former state Sen. Ellen Craswell. He followed them by encouraging Democrats to continue beating each other up at the presidential level, bringing the crowd to cheers by asking, "Who do you think the troops want picking up the phone at 3 a.m.?" – a clear reference to recent campaign ads by Sen. Hillary Clinton.
The answer was obvious and unanimous.
He then drew stark contrasts between Democratic presidential candidates Sen. Barack Obama and Clinton and the Republican soon-to-be-official nominee, Sen. John McCain, noting especially that McCain, in 25 years in the U.S. Senate, has never earmarked an appropriation.
Other speakers included Fawn and Jim Spady of Dick's Drive In Restaurant fame (a deluxe, two fries, and a vanilla shake!), who promoted their Countywide Community Forums as a venue where Republicans need to have their voices heard, and Kathy Lambert, who reminded the crowd that they were "the salt of the earth."
Particularly moving, though, was an address by Bob Williams, head of the Evergreen Freedom Foundation, who articulated better than anyone that day why freedom matters - that Republicans should believe in and act on the principles that historically carried them to national success: a constitutionally limited government; equality of opportunity, not equality of results; removing barriers to success, not erecting them; fidelity to God, family, duty, and country; that ours must be a government of ordinary citizens, not "elites."
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Comments:
Posted Mon, Apr 28, 11:44 a.m. Inappropriate
3324 No Shows: From 4278 authorized delegates to 954 credentialed delegates means that 3324 authorized delegates never showed up. To drop down to get below the 856 number, 99 would have had to wander out of the meeting. Stunning reality numbers for a minority party in King County.
Posted Mon, Apr 28, 12:11 p.m. Inappropriate
Your experience at the GOP county convention must be disheartening. You describe the patriotic, hardworking, principled Republicans who attended, yet, apparently, for all their fine values, a warm sun trumped all. I think your experience is indicative of the disenchantment that swells among the ranks of GOP regulars. While the Democrats are registering record numbers of new voters across the country, the GOP acts like an arthritic and hungover old man with early signs of dementia. Prepare, my friend, for a truly bleak Election Day, both here and across the nation.
Posted Mon, Apr 28, 12:34 p.m. Inappropriate
Why battle the nutcases?: So people left, why should they stay when it was obvious the loons were out playing their usual games.
Posted Mon, Apr 28, 1:15 p.m. Inappropriate
And I reported what I saw - would you have me do anything less?
The Piper
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