GOP convention chair John Boehner is urging delegates and voters to offer relief to hurricane victims if Gustav hits the Gulf Coast. (Mary Knox Merrill/Staff)
Hurricane Gustav causes GOP to tone down convention
McCain might skip the four-day gathering completely, says convention chair Boehner.
By Ariel Sabar | Staff writer/ August 31, 2008 edition
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House minority leader John Boehner, chairman of the Republican National Convention, was the guest at Sunday's Monitor luncheon in St. Paul, Minn.
St. Paul, Minn. – The Republican National Convention will scrap the marquee events of its opening night Monday out of respect for possible victims of a major hurricane expected to strike the Gulf Coast, the convention’s chairman said Sunday.
“The convention is going to be handled on a day to day basis,” House minority leader John Boehner announced at a lunch for news media here hosted by The Christian Science Monitor.
He raised the possibility of other cancellations at the four-day gathering, including the prospect that Sen. John McCain, the presumed Republican presidential nominee, would skip it altogether to keep the focus on the Gulf Coast as hurricane Gustav closes in.
“It’s kind of hard to talk about the message of the convention or the message of the fall campaign given what we’re dealing with,” said Representative Boehner, an Ohio Republican. “We’re all hopeful that Senator McCain will be here, will be able to address the delegates and the nation on Thursday night. But that call will be made later in the week.”
The announcement – with more details expected later Sunday – came just hours after the White House said that President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney had canceled speaking roles here Monday. The news was an early sign of just how much of a distraction the hurricane could become in a week meant to rally Republicans for a tough fight for the White House in November.
Boehner said that Republican leaders would ask delegates, voters, and other supporters to turn their attention to raising money and offering other relief to the Gulf Coast in the hurricane’s aftermath.
He said Republicans would still take up some housekeeping business Monday afternoon – such as the adoption of a platform and rules – but that the main speeches and other celebratory portions of the program would be set aside.
“There’s a disaster about to hit our country – our first concern ought to be with the people who are in the path of this potential disaster,” he said. “We can deal with our convention and deal with our message in a way that puts them first…. Everyone will have to modify their plans in terms of how we deliver our message about John McCain.”
In addition to its obvious capacity for human devastation, the hurricane injects a host of political complications into to what was supposed to be a week of celebrations and party-building. The sight of thousands of people fleeing New Orleans three years after hurricane Katrina is a searing reminder of what critics have said was the Bush administration’s failed response to the 2005 disaster.
By toning down the festivities this week, McCain, who has denounced the Katrina response, can further define himself against Bush as a leader who puts people before politics. But if the hurricane turns into a replay of Katrina, it could refocus national attention on the Republican administration’s shortcomings in 2005.
Boehner said that by driving up oil and gas prices, the hurricane would underscore the strengths of McCain’s so-called “all of the above” energy plan, with its mix of new offshore drilling, nuclear power, and market incentives for alternative fuels. “The energy issue is not going to go away,” he said.
Addressing concerns about McCain’s vice presidential pick, Boehner said that Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin had more executive experience than Sen. Barack Obama, the Democratic presidential nominee, and his running mate, Sen. Joseph Biden, combined.
Ms. Palin was elected Alaska’s governor in 2006 after two terms as a small-town mayor. Senator Obama was an Illinois state lawmaker for eight years before his election to the US Senate in 2004; Biden, of Delaware, was first elected to the Senate in 1972.
Boehner dismissed questions about Palin’s foreign-policy credentials and fitness for the White House as “elitist.”
“It’s this elitist attitude that … if you’re not a Washington insider, you can’t possibly know anything about what it’s going to take to be president,” he said.
He compared the readiness to lead the United States to the first day of anybody’s new job.
“When you got it, you thought, ‘… How am I going to do this?’ ” he said. “Nobody’s qualified on the first day. I don’t care whether it’s Barack Obama or whether it’s John McCain sitting in the White House.
“But like all of us, we grow into our new roles,” he added. “And I have no doubts that John McCain is going to grow into his new role as the president of the United States very well. I have no doubts that Sarah Palin can grow in her role as vice president and be entirely capable of being president.”
Asked about the significance of a party now led by its “mavericks,” Boehner said the “reformist streak” is an appropriate response to the party’s recent political troubles.
“You know, they threw us out and frankly, we should have lost,” he said, alluding to the 2006 elections that cost Republicans control of Congress. “And the only way we can get back is if we earn our way back. And that means showing people we’ve learned our lessons.”
Comments
2. Mary Porter | 08.31.08
I’m sorry, but it looks like the Republican party is taking advantage of the emergency to run away from themselves. Are they really planning to use a natural disaster as a campaign event, with photo-ops and staged speeches? The big payoff is, they’ll be able to keep Bush and Cheney away from St. Paul. In fact, I’m waiting for a FEMA order for the evacuation of the whole Twin Cities area.
Their spokesmen have been saying the party is “energized” by the hope of running as some other party, rather than as itself. Demoralized and (rightly) shamed over the administration they inflicted on the country, they are showing shallowness and cowardice in refusing responsibility for their party’s dismal record.
This convention (if it happens) is a cynical effort to put a fresh “new” face on the same morally bankrupt party. The hard-right base are the same people who brought us George Bush as the Nascar-watching, sports-loving, good-buddy, low intellectual accomplishment, born again president. Look where that got us.
Bush, McCain and Palin have this in common: none of them has shown any interest, in their whole lives, in the kind of mental heavy-lifting needed to actually lead the executive branch of the greatest power on earth. McCain rode his Admiral’s-son ticket to the Naval Academy, where his performance showed nothing but contempt for the opportunity. Bush did the same in an ivy league college. Sarah at least trained in journalism, but to be a sportscaster. Under cover of light-weights such as these, the far-right neocons have pursued policies that have wasted, killed, maimed, crippled, and disgraced our country and its people.
They are looking forward to a fantasy of inventing a clean, new identity, under cover of belated concern for the Gulf Coast.
3. FellowRepublican | 08.31.08
Hey guys, I backed McCain for some time until his desperation started to shine through with his transparent pandering to Hillary supporters by signing up some airhead bimbo.
Come on! Hillary? She’s the devil. Why are we trying to attract HER voters? Is that the best strategy we have?!
Maybe it’s time to take a breather. We’ve had a pretty good run, but the writing is on the wall. Instead of expending all this energy trying to back a mediocre compromise candidate, let’s rebuild our base and get ready for 2012. There is no shame in losing with dignity but I worry what it will do to the party if we put all our eggs in this one basket, and get defeated.
4. mamacita | 08.31.08
Yup, talk about mental heavy-lifting…
I heard Palin’s hubby say “She’s wired different”. You forgot to mention her hubby, the potential new First Dude of the United States of America.
I can see them riding in now, on Snow Machine 1, complete with the presidential seal, slingin’ guns and chain saws. She’ll be pregnant again and the country will be MUCH safer.
Oh and yeah, the Republicans are going to exploit this hurricane ’til the cows come home.
5. Alan | 08.31.08
Okay, God is a Republican. He didn’t cause the rain to fall on Obama’s acceptance speech, but He has sent Gustav to save the Republicans the embarrassment of having Bush and Cheney show up at their convention. In fact, He’s saved them the embarrassment of having their convention compared to the Democrats’ convention. He has also delayed the showcasing of Sarah Palin, kowing in His infinite wisdom that the less Americans hear from her, the better for McCain. And so the divine plan unfolds.
6. Wally Cleaver | 09.01.08
In what way are the GOP supposed to be exploiting the hurricane? Since these posts demonstrate a reverence for “mental heavy lifting,” lets hear a valid explanation. Most of your kind are thrilled about the fact that the hurricane’s timing is an opportunity to make the GOP look bad by recalling Bush’s poor response and forgetting all about Nagin and Blanco’s performances.
McCain and Obama both took stands of saying they wanted to help.
7. Paul | 09.01.08
Shouldn’t Boehner have said that Gov. Palin has more executive experience than all three–Obama, Biden, and McCain–combined?
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1. Dan Rains | 08.31.08
Today McCain said: “I pledge that tomorrow night, and if necessary throughout our convention, we will act as Americans and not as Republicans because America needs us now.” Well thank God for that! The last thing this country needs is for anyone to act like a Republican. All that has got us is eight years of a tanked economy, 100,000 dead Iraqis and 4,300 dead American soldiers with no benefits. You said it well, McCain, the last thing America needs is for you to act like a Republican.