Archive for the ‘Convention Coverage’ Category

Day Two Roundup

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

After the challenges that delayed the start of the Convention yesterday, I was interested in seeing what the mood would be today. I wondered what the reaction of the crowd would be to the ridiculous stream of smears that the Left and the media have been slinging toward Sarah Palin. I was curious which Fred Thompson we’d see – the energized Federalist who teased us during the summer or the drab one that showed up during the fall. And I wondered whether or not Joe Lieberman could actually hold a Republican crowd.

To answer the first question, the crowd was ready.

To answer the second, everyone in the building was 100% behind Sarah Palin. Granted, the Republican National Convention isn’t exactly the most unbiased crowd, but I have yet to see or hear anyone speak out against Governor Palin and her family outside of the media.

Third, Fred brought his A-Game. If you didn’t see him, here’s the full speech.

He had the entire crowd in the palm of his hand as he told the tale of John McCain’s life and character. Fred made a magnificent case for a McCain presidency, and took the opportunity to defend Sarah Palin, attack Barack Obama, and take shots at the country’s media – all worthy causes, I must say.

And to the fourth, I never thought that Joe Lieberman could enthrall a Republican crowd quite like he did. Joe isn’t the speaker that Fred is, but he came out and made an impassioned plea to his fellow Democrats and independents to cross the aisle for the good of the country. I would hope that a lot of undecided voters were watching tonight, because between Fred and Joe, I can’t imagine a better case being made to vote McCain.

Highlights of the day for me: pre-dinner drinks with Amanda Carpenter of Townhall.com (pictured above); the hugely positive reception Karl Rove received when he appeared in the Fox News booth; the unexpected arrival of President George H.W. Bush and his wife Barbara, which received a standing ovation; video presentations tying great Republican presidents, including Roosevelt, Reagan, and Bush I, to John McCain through the overarching theme of “Country First”; a testimony by a friend of John McCain who adopted a girl that Cindy McCain found in the custody of Mother Teresa; and most movingly, a tribute to Medal of Honor winner Michael Monsoor, who threw himself on a grenade in Iraq to save the life of two fellow soldiers, that had the entire arena in tears.

Tomorrow’s schedule is still fluid, but everyone is anticipating Governor Palin’s address. Given the nature of the media coverage on Palin since the announcement last Friday that she is McCain’s running mate, everyone is hoping to see her walk through the curtain with confidence and tell the American people who she is.

(On a personal note, and I covered this yesterday and then again this morning, I continue to be absolutely disgusted with the sheer malice of the mainstream media and the attacks that they are employing to not only discredit but destroy Sarah Palin and her family. These people are insulted that neither Governor Palin nor her daughter would abort a child, and have decided that it is their civic responsibility as Obama supporters to destroy Sarah Palin and all that she represents – that is, they have decided to try to destroy the image of a woman who can have both career and family. Liberals have finally and definitively forfeited the moral high ground with their shameless assaults on Palin and her family, and I hope that it comes back and bites them hard this November.)

I’ll be in attendance tomorrow to hear Palin’s speech, and I’ll report back with scattered thoughts tomorrow morning.

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Class!

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

Says Fatimah Ali of the Philadelphia Daily News: “If McCain wins, look for a full-fledged race and class war.”

But only conservatives play the Politics of Fear™.

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Day Two Begins

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

Points to ponder over morning coffee…

Why does Team Obama continue to refer to Sarah Palin as a “small town mayor” and ignore her term as governor? It’s the equivalent of calling Obama an Illinois state senator.

Has anyone – ANYONE – outside of the media blowhards unleashed on Sarah Palin over her daughter’s pregnancy?

What does it say about some people that they believe that someone’s child getting pregnant disqualifies the grandparent-to-be from a high office?

Furthermore, what does it say about some people that they take glee in brutally slandering a seventeen year-old facing a serious situation with tact and grace?

Does Barack Obama really think running for president qualifies him to be president more than running a state qualifies Sarah Palin to be vice president?

If people’s intimately personal issues are now fair game for the media, why haven’t we seen more stories about Obama’s radical ties, such as those documented at BarackBook.com?

I’m no Pat Buchanan fan, but is calling him a Nazi sympathizer in a press release for the purpose to sullying Sarah Palin, who once as mayor welcomed Buchanan when he made a stop in her home town, really wise strategy for the Obama campaign?

Point of note: the response to Hurricane Gustav has been light-years ahead of what was done during Katrina. How much of that is coincidence and how much of that is Bobby Jindal?

And could any right-winger get away with anything coming close to the blatant sexism that the entire leftist media has shown toward Sarah Palin?

Today’s confirmed speakers include Senator Joe Lieberman and former Senator Fred Thompson. A more complete schedule will be released later today.

More updates as the day goes on. Adios!

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Thoughts on Day One

Monday, September 1st, 2008

Well, there wasn’t much of a day one to tell you the truth. With the arrival of Hurricane Gustav and the Bristol Palin hullabaloo, the limited activities of the convention got drowned out. I did get to take a trip around the Xcel Energy Center, and thought that the crew has done a bang-up job with the set-up. It’s a fundamentally different look that we’ve come to expect from national conventions – very simple and clean, and a far cry from the cluttered, overly-theatrical style that the Democrats employed in Denver. I did give in and buy my first bits of merch – a McCain-Palin hat, a McCain-Palin shirt, and a McCain-Palin button.

Obviously every candidate leaves his or her mark on the convention, but John McCain’s fingerprints are particularly noticeable. There is a simplicity and a directness to everything here – in many ways, the convention’s design is the embodiment of McCain’s crusade against waste and extravagance in government.

Highlights: meeting Karl Rove.  Sharing a cab with Rep. Heather Wilson. Seeing all the press areas at the convention.

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Day One Photos

Monday, September 1st, 2008

Click here to see them.

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