| About Us | Contact | Donate | User Blogs | Login |
Not All Meetings are a Useless Waste of Time
When I read that RNC member Gary Emineth, the North Dakota GOP Chairman, organized a coalition to demand an unprecedented "special" RNC meeting before the RNC Chairman's election, I had my usual reaction: "Another meeting?...ugh...what a waste."
On campaign after campaign, I've bemoaned the fact that too much time, out of a typical 14-hour workday, goes to useless time-wasters. No, I'm not referring to staffers who surf the Web, look at their friend's pics on Facebook, or play practical jokes on the guy or gal in the next cube over. Those serve an important purpose compared to the biggest, most useless, waste of time on most campaigns: the never-ending, often unfocused meetings where little, if anything gets accomplished, except teeth grinding, nail chewing and overeating.
Thus, I've come to hate the word "meeting." "Let's get together on," or "rendezvous about" or "discuss over coffee," are preferable. Meeting sounds so official, institutional, excessive.
But then I read on, and opened my mind...and sipped some coffee.
This special RNC meeting, which RNC Chairman Mike Duncan has now called, has made an impact even before being held. It has traveled a road that most other meetings never dare travel. RNC members have successfully coalesced around an idea, a plan, and quickly put it into action. They have been pro-active. They have shown leadership. They have provided much hope for the future of the Party. They have already taken a step towards accomplishing their goal -- a more open forum for major party decisions.
Just as important, the RNC members have built on the ideas of others, even more low-down in the totem pole of official Party power: grassoots organizations outside the official Party heirarchy. Since Election Day, several organizations, old and new, have pushed and prodded open the RNC Chairman's race.
Americans for Tax Reform has held meetings and is planning a debate of their own. Rebuild the Party, an organization I'm particularly proud of, has secured the endorsement of 5 out of 6 candidates for RNC Chairman and built an organization of over 10,000 people who want a stake in the future of the RNC. ChooseYourChairman.com allows regular people to contact the RNC members in their state expressing support for one of the candidates for Chairman.
These and similar organizations share a common goal, the best interest of the Party as it seeks to revive itself. They might differ in their approach, but that's what debates are for; debating the specific tactics and approaches our next RNC Chairman should take should drive the agenda at the (cough, cough) meeting on January 7th at a currently undiclosed location.
Emineth was beaten up at first by the blogosphere for this apparently heinous quote in The Hill, 'At the end of the day, it doesn't matter what the public thinks; it matters what 168 of us think.' Yet, when put in context (which he provided for us via blog post and in a follow-up Hill article) one understands that this quote resulted from the same frustration shared by many Republican activists. Emineth, a sitting RNC Chairman, has felt powerless to make a different within the RNC power structure. This powerless feeling has permeated Republican activists and organizations as they've felt obliged to cater to the will of a Republican White House, and at times, a Republican majority in Congress.
Emineth, and the coalition that called for the (cough, cough) meeting see the opportunity at hand: an open field, the lack of a mandate. In such a situation, the RNC members play an important role, electing the next Chairman. In the past, most of these same RNC members have merely had the chance to approve the RNC Chairman for cosmetic purposes.
If our elected RNC members don't even have real power in the Party, should we expect the grassroots to be empowered?
Emineth and the coalition behind his effort have taken a baby step that shows real promise for a more open, productive and innovative Republican Party. Even if they had to call a meeting to do it.


Comments
I brutalized Emineth...
...after his initial comment. Here on this website. Took no prisoners. But his continued advocacy on behalf of "us - out here" has made me realize that his "at end of the day...." comment did exactly what it was designed to do! It was, in my opinion, a warning shot over the bow of the RNC to turn about. And a message to the "public" that this was no time for complacency. In the same way we, the Base, roared in June 07 and we stopped McCain/Kennedy dead in its tracks, we now need to make sure that the RNC inside hierarchy doesn't go behind locked doors and push "us" out of the process.
Kudo's to Gary Emineth. We all need to encourage him to be our advocate. Be our "window" so that we may peer in and observe the process. I have contacted both of my state senators and my congressman. All GOP. And let them know that I hold them responsible if we, the Base, are locked/blocked out of the process. DD
Meeting of RNC
I am thankful the bloggers jumped on my comment - it actually helped rally the support of the blog world to hold Republican members accountable. It is my hope the pressure stays on the members from around the country to attend this important meeting to discuss the tough questions and that the members show enough interest to actually show up and speak their mind as the blog world has.
RNC Revolutionaries on the March...
...if you haven't read this Ralph Hallow exclussive this morning: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2008/dec/30/rnc-pushes-unprecedented-criticism-of-bailouts/?page=2
mandatory reading. We've got to get behind these courageous guys. The cream is rising to the top. NextRight /Rightroots - we need to back these guys - maximum support.
You can bet that there will be a well financed, well organized and "brutal" counrterattack. This is a battle for the heart/soul of the Republican Party. Let's take it back. Darvin Dowdy
The RNC has Time and Integrity on it's side
Mindy, I am so glad to see the people of the RNC are on top-of, and recognize we have some serious changes to make in our party. As a conservative hard-core right winger who was just a University freshman during the Carter administration I can remember so vividly how weak our country became under the democrats. Although, I am concerned, I want to warn against any knee-jerk reactions that may take away from our prudence, leaving us in four years wishing we had some sort of clairvoyance gift or a crystal ball. Right now we are all suffering from the loss to the liberals who basically just stepped in it with a brewing recession, a charismatic candidate who can appear to be very articulate with his soap box speeches and had no problem selling a fictitious, but unattainable utopian life to the majority of the country using the old and famous class warfare tactic against us. So as we change our fund raising tactics, increase our Web and internet coverage, maybe swing a little more right, or center, campaign more on campuses and possibly find our own younger charismatic candidate who can charm the skin off a snake, we still have something the DNC doesn’t have. We have the truth, real integrity and time on our side, (4 Years). With these virtues our party holds so precious, Mr. President Obama will give us plenty of ammunition to counter all his campaign promises, and what I deeply believe will be a failed first term. His teleprompted speeches that appeared so articulate and point-concise will be replaced by hard questions from a news hungry press, and his answers will be littered with none dictionized words UM, HMM and UMMMs of a not-so-sure of himself leader that took on way more than he should have or is equipped to handle. As unemployment and the economy continue its demise in his fist year, he will blame the previous leader, but after his second year with no real fixes and many still poor and out of work Americans that were once his most enthusiastic supporters will scatter, his words will then fall on deaf ears. And because of his stand-off attitude on world issues and violence from countries like Iran, Russia, and Syria the threats to our country will grow to very dangerous and almost unheard of level, causing even more doubt in the minds of the public. His ill conceived tax brakes for the poor and increases on the rich will only drive the National Debt up trillions in just a few years while dropping the GDP dramatically. Because crime and hardship work hand in hand, many states will be faced with an overwhelming number of criminals and political corruption causing more and more lack of support for our new Democratic leader. Leaving the door wide open for us. The synopsis for all this is; let’s make some vigilant changes to the RNC, but play this one mostly by ear, and watch from the mountain like the wise monk who metaphorically is just letting out the rope a little at a time. The DNC and President Obama will do the rest. Thomas JeffersonHamilton, NJ
Nice game plan coach.
TJ in NJ is far from the first I've heard express a version of what the next few years will bring. I group it under the heading of magical thinking along with other GOP prescriptions that basically amount to, "There is no problem and nothing needs to be done."
Fact is the last two elections have been thumpin's of embarrassing magnitude. And all the "structurals" for the next two favor Democrats. Party afilliation percentages, demograpic shifts, number of vulnerable incumbent seats to defend, difficulty of defeating an incumbent prez, money imbalance, etc.
Depending on Obama and Congress to screw up and make the GOP the alternative to incompetence is like a coach who tells his team, "Practice is cancelled for the week because I'm sure the other team will fumble enough for us to win on Saturday."
The GOP has to address two basic areas. First, how do we quit doing all the wrong things that hurt us in the last two cycles.? Second, what did they do right ,and how do we copy it or counter it effectively by doing our own new things right?
But the answers to those questions will not come from Republicans or Democrats. You have to sit down with a large and representative group of true independents who voted Democrat in the last two cycles, and find out why. Whether you agree with them or not matters not one bit. They are right because only they know why they cast their votes the way they did.
Football Training is not for Basketball
Artigiano,
You are sort of right, and I like your sports reference, but training your star college football team for an NCAA basketball Championship, and then showing up to play, only to find out its a Bowl game, isnt a great Idea either. So as I said in my post, we need to make some changes with the RNC, but lets be carefull about them, because the truth is, many voters, Republican, Democrats and independents vote for who they like and feel most comfortable with at the time.
Thomas Jefferson
Likeability, for our Next President is Key
Artigiano,
One more I almost forgot, in 2004 when Bush won with 51% of the vote the main stream papers read the next morning "Bush wins,Country Divided" when Obama won with 52%, the papers read, "Obama wins by Landslide" So again, it has very much to do with likeability and who we feel comfortable with. (Media Included) what makes this so sad is many voters never really look at the facts, and many others just like to blame someone else for their own weaknesses.
Thomas Jefferson
Agreed on likability, but also trust.
TJ
You are right that Obama is one likable guy. And people even said that W won in part because more people would rather have a beer with him than with Kerry. You are also correct that the RNC needs to make changes. It seemed that the RNC and the MCcain team were never on the same page.
The DNC, on the other hand, turned itself over, lock stock and barrel to the Obama operatives. As soon as Obama clenched the nomination, the DNC moved their headquarters and staff to the same building in Chicago that Team Obama used. The DNC took all of their directives from Team Obama whether they agreed or not. It was all about sharing one vision and one strategy. In a word they trusted him, and it paid off.
As far as how the media reported the victory. Bush beat Kerry by 2.4% of the popular vote. Which is just on the cusp between squeaker and solid victory. Obama beat McCain by 6.8% which is definately in the low end of lanslide territory. I believe it might be the largest "non-incumbent" victory margin ever. In electoral college terms the Bush margin and the Obama margin are worlds apart. But that is the purpose of the EC, to turn small victory into mandate.