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2012 Republican National Convention – Wikipedia

Sites of the 2012 national party conventions.

The 2012 Republican National Convention was a gathering held by the U.S. Republican Party during which delegates officially nominated former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney and Representative Paul Ryan of Wisconsin for President and Vice President, respectively, for the 2012 election. Prominent members of the party delivered speeches and discussed the convention theme, "A Better Future."[3] The convention was held during the week of August 27, 2012, in Tampa, Florida[4] at the Tampa Bay Times Forum. The city, which expected demonstrations and possible vandalism, used a federal grant to bolster its police force in preparation. Due to the approach of Hurricane Isaac, convention officials changed the convention schedule on August 26, 2012; the convention came to order on August 27, 2012 and then immediately recessed until the following afternoon because of the risk of Isaac hitting Tampa.[5]

On August 14, 2009, the Republican National Committee named an eight-member Site Selection Committee to start the process of selecting a host city for the 2012 convention.[6] News reports in early 2010 indicated that Tampa, as well as Salt Lake City, Utah and Phoenix, Arizona, had been selected as finalist candidates for the convention site.[4][7][8] The decision was announced on May 12, 2010, when Tampa was selected as the host city.[9] The 2012 Tampa Bay Host Committee, a 501(c)(3) non-profit, was the official and federally designated presidential convention host committee for the convention, charged with the task of raising the necessary funds to hold the convention.[10] The Host Committee was composed of 10 prominent Florida business executives, civic leaders, and other community leaders. Al Austin was chairman and Ken Jones served as the President and Chief Executive Officer.[11][12] The Host Committee achieved its fundraising goal as of August 27, 2012, having raised more than $55,000,000 to host the 2012 Republican National Convention.

The convention theme was "A Better Future".[13] Each day also had its own theme: Monday's was "We Can Do Better"; Tuesday's was "We Built It"; Wednesday's was "We Can Change It"; and Thursday's was "We Believe in America." In addition to these daily themes, the Republican National Committee announced that it would present a series of policy workshops to be hosted by former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich called "Newt University".[14] A primary objective of the convention, described both as Romney's "biggest election hurdle" and as Romney's "most urgent task" of concern by top Republicans, was to counter efforts to portray him as an out-of-touch elitist and to rehabilitate the image of his business career.[15] The convention lasted from August 27-30, 2012. According to the convention website, it hosted 2,286 delegates, 2,125 alternates and 15,000 credentialed members of the media. The convention CEO was William D. Harris.[16] Several notable Republican figures chose not to attend the convention, including former presidents George W. Bush and George H. W. Bush, and former vice-president Dick Cheney. However, a video tribute to George W. Bush, who has stayed out of the political arena since leaving office three years earlier, was shown at the convention on Wednesday night, in which Bush's family members praised him. In the tribute, Bush's father, George H.W. Bush, said of George W. Bush: "There was never a taint of scandal around his presidency. And I think we forget the importance of that."[17]

The convention was designated as a National Special Security Event, which meant that ultimate authority over law enforcement went to the Secret Service and Department of Homeland Security.[18] The federal government provided $50 million for Convention security.[19] Much of the money went to deputizing additional police. Other expenses included expanded surveillance technology and an armored SWAT vehicle.[20][21] Tampa Bay disclosed specifically that it had spent $1.18 M on video linkages between ground police and helicopters.[22][23][24] The city paid $16,500 to the Florida State Fairgrounds Authority in exchange for police use of local fairgrounds as a command center.[25]

Dani Doane of the Heritage Foundation described the police presence as "unnerving" and "like a police state".[26][27] Others reported a quiet week with small protests and few arrests.[28][29] Police handed out bottles of water during the event[30] and at one point served protestors a box lunch.[31]

A committee, chaired by Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell, met in Tampa to draft a party platform. On August 21, 2012, the committee released a 60-page document for approval at the convention. The platform was enthusiastically approved at the convention on August 28.[32][33] Policies include:[34]

According to Fox News[43] and Associated Press delegate projections,[44]Mitt Romney, former Governor of Massachusetts, clinched the Republican presidential nomination in the Texas primary on May 29, 2012 and became the party's presumptive nominee.[45] Two weeks before the convention, on August 11, Romney announced Paul Ryan as his running mate.[46] The decision made Ryan the first major party vice presidential candidate from Wisconsin.[47]

Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich formally released their delegates in the week before the convention and encouraged them to vote for Romney. Ron Paul retained his delegates, as part of an overall strategy to influence the party. The final composition of several delegations was subject to ruling of the Committee on Contests.

The traditional roll call of the states, which permits delegates to promote their home states, took place on Tuesday, August 28, 2012, the first full day of the convention.

Paul Ryan was nominated for vice president by voice vote.

The original plan called for speeches on Monday, but due to Tropical Storm Isaac most of the Monday program was cancelled and all the main speakers were rescheduled to speak later at the convention.[48][49]

Ron Paul was offered a speech slot, under the conditions that the Romney campaign could pre-review his remarks and that he would fully endorse Romney.[50] Paul declined the offer, saying that he remained an "undecided voter".[51] Paul explained that "It wouldn't be my speech. That would undo everything I've done in the last 30 years. I don't fully endorse him for president."[50] Instead, a tribute video to Paul was shown at the convention.[52]

Congresswoman Cathy McMorris Rodgers served as the official convention host, speaking at the start of each night of the convention to provide the theme of the speeches for each evening.[53]

The most coveted speaking slot that was intended to close the Monday night program of the convention was scheduled to go to Ann Romney, Mitt Romney's wife. But since the major television networks had opted out on Monday's primetime coverage (prior to Monday's cancellation of activities), her speech was moved to Tuesday, August 28 after 10:00 pm EDT, when broadcast networks began coverage, with an introduction by Luc Vela Fortuo, the First Lady of Puerto Rico.[54] Ann Romney's task in her speech was described by Lois Romano of Politico as "to try to accomplish what the sharpest minds in Republican politics have failed to do: present her stiff and awkward husband as a likable guy."[55]

Other August 28 speakers included Governors John Kasich (Ohio), Nikki Haley (South Carolina), Bob McDonnell (Virginia), and Mary Fallin (Oklahoma).[56]

Due to Tropical Storm Isaac, the scheduled activities on Monday were postponed or canceled; RNC Chairman Reince Priebus called the convention to order at 2:00 pm on Monday and started a debt clock in the arena, before putting the convention into recess at 2:10 pm.[57]

On Tuesday afternoon, the bulk of the Maine delegates walked out of the convention in protest of the decision to replace 10 Ron Paul delegates with 10 Romney delegates.[58] This action by the RNC came in response[not in citation given] to a takeover of Maine's Republican State Convention by Paul supporters which resulted in Paul's percentage of delegates being doubled over the percentage of delegates to which he would have been entitled by the caucus vote count[not in citation given]; the additional ten delegates came at the expense of Romney.[59]

Originally scheduled to speak at the closing of Monday night's program, Ann Romney spoke in front of the Republican National Convention on Tuesday, August 28, 2012. Romney started off by stating that her speech was not about politics or party, but about love. She spoke about her husband, Mitt Romney, in an attempt to present her husband as likeable and relatable, responding in part to his opponents' depiction of him as an out-of-touch elitist.[60]

The single dad who's working extra hours tonight so that his kids can buy some new clothes to go back to school, can take a school trip, or play a school sport, so his kids can feel, you know, just like other kids.[60]

The speakers for the day were:

Wednesday saw a speech from vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan.[61] The accuracy of some of Ryan's statements was widely challenged by the media, fact-checkers, and political opponents.[62][63] The Associated Press criticized Ryan for taking "factual shortcuts",[64] and the speech was criticized in other outlets for being "misleading"[65][66] and "dishonest".[67][68] The most widely challenged portion of Ryan's speech occurred when Ryan criticized Obama for supposedly claiming, at a 2008 campaign appearance at a GM plant in Janesville, Wisconsin (which was slated for closure), that he (Obama) would keep that plant open if he became President.[69] GM began a phased plant closing for the Janesville facility during the 2008 presidential campaign, laying off nearly all of its 1,200 workers on December 23, 2008. 57 workers remained employed at the plant during final assembly and another 40 to 50 in the decommissioning of the plant.[70][71] On September 19, 2011, GM reported that the Janesville plant was on standby status, as part of a contract between itself and the UAW.[72]

The speakers for the day were:

Actor and director Clint Eastwood made a planned surprise appearance at the convention, speaking at the top of the final hour. He spent much of his speech time on a largely improvised routine addressing an empty chair representing President Obama. In at least two instances, Eastwood implied the President had uttered profanities directed both at Romney and Eastwood.[73] Eastwood's remarks were well-received within the convention hall, but responses were mixed in the media.[74] Film critic Roger Ebert commented "Clint, my hero, is coming across as sad and pathetic. He didn't need to do this to himself. It's unworthy of him".[75]Breitbart.com editor-at-large John Nolte was more positive in his review, stating that the performance was "funnier, fresher, edgier, and braver than anything those comedy cowards Chris Rock, Jon Stewart or Stephen Colbert have done in 15 years."[76] Comedian Bob Newhart, who had popularized empty-chair interviews in the 1960s, tweeted in his deadpan humor style, "I heard that Clint Eastwood was channeling me at the RNC. My lawyers and I are drafting our lawsuit".[77]

Thursday night concluded with Romney's acceptance speech. He announced that if elected, a Romney administration energy policy would take "full advantage of our oil and coal and gas and nuclear and renewables".[78] Romney also joked about the Obama administration's policies on climate change, saying "President Obama promised to begin to slow the rise of the oceans and heal the planet", a line which elicited laughter from the convention audience.[79] By way of contrast, Romney continued "MY promise...is to help you and your family."

Thursday's speakers included:

Besides Rabbi Soloveichik, another five religious leaders were scheduled to provide blessings or invocations, including the Rev. Sammy Rodriguez, president of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference; Ishwar Singh of the Sikh Society of Central Florida; Archbishop Demetrios, primate of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America; Ken and Priscilla Hutchins of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (to open[81]); and Roman Catholic Archbishop of New York Timothy Dolan.[82] Dolan gave the closing prayer.

In October 2011, Tampa city officials began planning for anticipated protests, and discussions centered around small prior protests by the Occupy movement. According to former Tampa City Council member John Dingfelder, then the senior staff attorney for the mid-Florida office of the American Civil Liberties Union, the convention should expect to draw far more protestors and the city should plan on up to 10,000. Dingfelder encouraged the city to be proactive regarding where protests could occur and protestors could sleep. Tampa's Mayor Bob Buckhorn's response was "If they want a place to sleep, they can go home or to a hotel.... Just because they want to occupy something doesn't mean we are obligated to provide them with an opportunity to camp out in a public park or on a sidewalk."[83]

The city of Tampa has banned puppets from downtown during the convention, a decision which some puppet-makers say violates their civil liberties. Police claimed that puppets could be used to conceal weaponsat the 2000 RNC, police charged a group of puppet-makers in Philadelphia with conspiracy to resist arrest.[84]

On August 4, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) held a forum addressing what would be considered free speech during the Convention.[85][86]

In early August, the city announced plans to provide delegates and protestors alike with potable water and toilets.[87]

Various groups began demonstrating on July 27 in Tampa and Tallahassee as part of a one-month countdown to the convention, calling for "good jobs, healthcare, affordable education, equality and peace."[88]

Unlike the 2004 Republican National Convention which saw 1800 individuals arrested in New York City, the Occupy Tampa demonstrators were met with tolerance by Tampa officials.[89]

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2012 Republican National Convention - Wikipedia

Republican women have made significant strides but have more work to do – Sacramento Bee


Sacramento Bee
Republican women have made significant strides but have more work to do
Sacramento Bee
One hundred years ago during the 65th Congress, Jeannette Rankin was sworn in as the first female member of Congress. A Republican from Montana, Rankin was the first woman to hold national office.

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Republican women have made significant strides but have more work to do - Sacramento Bee

Why a Georgia Republican sent his cell number to 400k GOP voters – Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)


Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)
Why a Georgia Republican sent his cell number to 400k GOP voters
Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)
I've never been so excited about the future of this country, the Cumming Republican said after detailing his digits. As the first Georgia elected official to endorse Donald Trump, I'm proud of the incredible work he's done so far. Williams, a ...

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Why a Georgia Republican sent his cell number to 400k GOP voters - Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)

Republican Fiscal Sense Will Be Needed As We Replace Aging Infrastructure – InsideSources

Its no secret that infrastructure across the United States is badly in need of repair. Local roads and highways are pocked with potholes, many large enough to cause significant and costly damage to vehicles; bridges are crumbling with several along the largest trucking routes named to priority fix-it lists for states and the federal government. The things we can see tend to get fixed first, but what about the infrastructure we dont see? The pipes that run under our homes, schools, offices, and roads, and carry either fresh water for drinking or wastewater, are some of the most important infrastructure in the country but we rarely pay attention to these until something breaks.

There are more than 1.2 million miles of water pipes running underneath the streets and countrysides in America. Most of those pipes have a service life of 75 to 100 years, but for many municipalities, their pipes are either nearing or have reached the end of their lifespan. About half of Philadelphias water pipes were installed before 1930, but there are some pipes that were, incredibly, laid before the Civil War. Many of Milwaukees pipes were put in the ground prior to the mid-1950s, and officials there, as in most other cities, are looking at tightening budgets and wondering how far their dollars will stretch.

The spending question is one that will soon takeover the national debate. During his campaign, President Donald Trump pledged to rebuild the countrys infrastructure, which is expected to cost upwards of $1 trillion. That cost will be split among local jurisdictions, states, and the federal government, but thats still an enormous amount of money that must be spent wisely. This is where Republicans must forcefully exert their political will to make sure that infrastructure dollars are used prudently.

According to a report from the Congressional Budget Office, in 2014, more than 75 percent of the $416 billion in public funding spent on transportation and water infrastructure came from state and local governments with the federal government chipping in $96 billion. But most of the money 57 percent went towards operations and maintenance, while rehabilitating existing pipes took a backseat. The same report also noted that starting in 2003, the cost of materials to build and operate water infrastructure began to rise rapidly. The more expensive the price tag to replace our aging infrastructure, the more important we get it right, and that means using the right kind of pipe to ensure that new or replacement systems last for as long as possible.

While there are still a few remaining wooden pipes in the country, the first water systems were constructed from cast iron. Theres a reason cast iron pans are handed down through generations of families its durable, safe and long-lasting. Theres even a Cast Iron Century Club, founded in 1947, that honors public utilities with cast iron water mains still in service after 100 years. The Cast Iron Sesquicentennial Club, formed in 1989, is for 150-year-old cast iron water mains.

Ductile Iron Pipe is the construction parallel to your grandmothers frying pan. It, too, is durable, safe and long-lasting and is the only infrastructure material with a service life upwards of 100 years. Given the constraints on public dollars, it makes sense to use these funds to buy the longest lasting pipe available. The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that each year, there are about 240,000 water main breaks that cause anywhere from minor to severe disruptions around the country. When officials were putting together their wish lists for the Obama Administrations stimulus package, the list from Ohio totaled $3 billion for drinking water infrastructure projects alone.

For as advanced an industrialized country as we are, our infrastructure is woefully in need of repair. We take for granted that when we wake up, our sinks, showers, and toilets will work as expected. But the 156,000 public water systems we count on to make all that happen are essentially working on borrowed time. President Trump was right to focus on the great need to repair and replace these systems, and congressional Republicans would be wise to work with him to fund these priorities, which will create jobs and provide a true economic stimulus.

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Republican Fiscal Sense Will Be Needed As We Replace Aging Infrastructure - InsideSources

Republican Lawmakers Face Angry, Worried Constituents at Town Hall Meetings – Voice of America

GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.

The voter identified himself as a cancer survivor, and he had something to say to Republican Rep. Justin Amash: "I am scared to death that I will not have health insurance in the future."

The comment earned 61-year-old retiree Paul Bonis a standing ovation from the crowd packed into a school auditorium in Amash's Michigan district Thursday night. And the congressman was booed for his response: That the Affordable Care Act has "hurt a lot of people," and he supports his party's plans to repeal and replace it, even though the GOP still hasn't united around an alternative.

It's a scene that's played out around the country over the past several weeks as Republicans and President Donald Trump have assumed control of Washington and begun moving forward on their long-held promise to undo former President Barack Obama's health care law.

In an echo of the raucous complaints that confronted Democrats back in 2009 as they worked to pass "Obamacare" in the first place, Republicans who want to repeal it now are facing angry pushback of their own at constituent gatherings from Utah to Michigan to Tennessee and elsewhere, even in solidly Republican districts.

People shout to Rep. Jason Chaffetz during his town hall meeting at Brighton High School in Cottonwood Heights, Utah, Feb. 9, 2017. In an echo of the raucous complaints that confronted Democrats back in 2009 as they worked to pass "Obamacare" in the first place, Republicans who want to repeal it now are facing angry pushback of their own at constituent gatherings from Utah to Michigan to Tennessee and elsewhere, even in solidly Republican districts.

And just as the protests in 2009 focused on health care but reflected broader concerns over an increasingly divisive new president and Democrats' monopoly control over Washington, now, too, constituent complaints at town hall meetings appear to reflect more general fears about the Trump administration and the implications of one-party GOP rule of the nation's capital.

In a Salt Lake City suburb on Thursday night, GOP Rep. Jason Chaffetz faced irate constituents chanting "Do your job!" as they pressed the House Oversight Committee chairman to investigate Trump. Chaffetz struggled to be heard as he faced a litany of sharp questions and screams from a crowd of people who grilled him on everything from Obamacare to Chaffetz's desire to overturn a new national monument in southern Utah.

"Come on, we're better than this," Chaffetz protested over the hubbub at one point, practically pleading with the deafening crowd to let him speak.

In Tennessee, GOP Rep. Diane Black faced questions from impassioned and well-informed constituents defending the Affordable Care Act, including one man who told her that he and others with health conditions might die without insurance.

"And you want to take away this coverage, and have nothing to replace it with," the man said. Black argued that the Affordable Care Act has been ineffective because although 20 million people gave gained coverage under the law, millions more have chosen to pay a fine and remain uninsured.

And in southern Wisconsin, GOP Rep. James Sensenbrenner faced a voter who asked him: "Who's going to be the check and balance on Donald Trump?"

Like others interviewed at town halls around the country, the woman asking the question, Barbara Kresse, said she has not been politically active, another similarity to 2009 when the advent of the Obama administration seemed to cause enough anxiety to awaken groups of voters who had never previously gotten involved.

Indeed the recent protests are being amplified by liberal activists modeling their opposition to Trump on the tea party groups that sprang up to oppose Obama and the Democrats.

Calling itself "Indivisible," a non-profit group that grew out of a how-to guide written by former Democratic congressional staffers has advertised town hall gatherings nationally, suggesting at least some level of coordination, which was the case with the anti-Obamacare protests as well. Some Republicans, including White House press secretary Sean Spicer, have dismissed the protesters as orchestrated and even paid, though there's been no evidence of that.

Noor Ul-Hasan reacts during Rep. Jason Chaffetz's town hall meeting at Brighton High School, in Cottonwood Heights, Utah, Feb. 9, 2017. In an echo of the raucous complaints that confronted Democrats back in 2009 as they worked to pass "Obamacare" in the first place, Republicans who want to repeal it now are facing angry pushback of their own at constituent gatherings from Utah to Michigan to Tennessee and elsewhere, even in solidly Republican districts.

House GOP leaders have taken note of the protests, and took time during a regular meeting of their conference this past week to give lawmakers "best practices" advice for dealing with them, including to treat protesters with courtesy and respect, consider hiring security or a moderator for town hall gatherings, or even "kill them with kindness" by offering cookies or coffee.

Lawmakers insisted that they are not changing their public schedules out of concern over being met by protesters, but town hall meetings have grown rarer in recent years anyway, with some lawmakers citing the shooting of Democratic Rep. Gabby Giffords at a constituent gathering in Tucson, Arizona in 2011 as one reason.

In some districts and states, constituents have been trying to shame lawmakers into holding town halls to discuss Obamacare or other issues, showing up at district offices with signs demanding a meeting.

In a letter to fellow House Republicans on Thursday, Rep. Doug Collins of Georgia, vice chairman of the GOP conference, downplayed the opposition and sought to encourage lawmakers to stay committed to their agenda.

"We have been charged with holistic reform," Collins wrote. "And to the extent that we are leading our communities in a new direction, we remember -- with sadness -- that, because a broken system became the status quo, even those who have suffered under that brokenness may resist its repair."

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Republican Lawmakers Face Angry, Worried Constituents at Town Hall Meetings - Voice of America