Romney’s RNC speech: workmanlike, but no masterpiece
If Mitt Romney’s acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention Thursday night was a piece of steak, it would have been a small portion, grilled over a low flame and served medium. A sampling of local political reaction to the speech indicates that, like steak, observers have their preference.
“You can come out of these speeches with a five- or six-point bounce with a dynamic speech that had some real one-liners,” said Republican activist and consultant Chris Tiedeman. “That was clearly not the focus. It was to lay out the conversation for the rest of the campaign.”
Tiedeman had met Romney four years ago in a small-group setting where, he said, Romney was less impressive than others vying for the nomination in 2008. Tiedeman saw a big change last night.
“I thought he was great last night,” he said. “He had a number of points he had to make. He’s a business guy and he made it clear that was going to be his focus.”
Carrie Lucking, executive director for Alliance for a Better Minnesota, a group that works on behalf of DFL candidates, viewed the Romney speech as a glass half-empty. “It was better than most people expected, but light on substance -- and most of that substance was policies that haven’t worked,” she said.
Lucking said the convention itself didn’t serve Romney well. “There was no consensus on a path forward or a vision on how to turn things around,” she said.
Some of that lack of consensus was evident in the floor fight among delegates over a change in party rules that would require states to bind their delegates to the clear front-runner in a nomination race. No one was angrier with that rule than the Minnesota delegates pledged to Ron Paul.
Marianne Stebbins, a delegate and chair of Paul’s Minnesota campaign, said she hopes Romney will use his new position as nominee to change the rule. “This is the RNC stomping on grass roots,” she said, the people who will be needed to help Romney win. Those potential voters are “up in arms,” she said.
If Stebbins is correct on discontent among the Paul delegates, Romney’s speech didn’t change much. “The speech was less successful as an inspiring speech to motivate people to get out there and win the election,” said Dale Carpenter, a Republican active in the campaign to defeat the marriage amendment and law professor at the University of Minnesota.
But Carpenter agrees with Tiedeman that Romney emphasized the right issues: the economy and jobs. “I’m also glad he avoided extended treatment of hot button social issues,” he said.

REUTERS/Jason ReedActor Clint Eastwood addressing an empty chair during the final night of the Republican National Convention.
Romney’s comments on social issues were limited to one line about the sanctity of life and marriage.
Romney’s image -- or the “optics,” as political consultants like to phrase it -- played well for Carpenter, Tiedeman and Stebbins.
“In terms of him personally, I’m glad he avoided playing the candidate he is not,” said Carpenter. “America does not need a loveable president, they need a competent president.”
Stebbins said: “I think there was a lot of nice optimism. He’s very upbeat, positive in contrasting himself with Barack Obama. But I was listening for content, and I didn’t hear a lot. I was listening for some kind of acknowledgement that he was interested in bring the liberty votes to the table.”
Romney didn’t mention the liberty votes, and barely even used the word “liberty,” but he did spend a considerable amount of time lauding women and their influence in his personal and professional life.
“A bit forced,” is how Carpenter reacted.
Lucking dismissed the those parts of the speech. “No matter how many women inspired Mitt Romney, his policies turn back the clock for women,” she said.
Lucking and Tiedeman agree that Romney’s statement “I wish President Obama had succeeded because I want America to succeed” sounded a note Americans want to hear.
“Republicans realize that Americans are angry with people who say they want the president to fail,” said Lucking.
“I think the point he was trying to make, and he did it well, is that everybody had high hopes for Obama even if they didn’t vote for him because we are Americans,” said Tiedeman.
But as a piece of stagecraft, a crescendo of words and thoughts that soared and stirred and sealed the deal for an undecided voter, Romney’s speech fell short.
“It was a perfectly workmanlike effort,” Carpenter said. “Nobody will remember it in a month. Probably a week.”
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Comments (12)
Romney might as well have promised 100 million jobs...
...as the 12 million he says he'll deliver. Talk is oh so cheap.
The New York Times, not too subtly,
totally destroyed the Republicans talking point that they wanted Obama to succeed.
Mr. Romney Reinvents History
Mitt Romney wrapped the most important speech of his life, for Thursday night’s session of his convention, around an extraordinary reinvention of history — that his party rallied behind President Obama when he won in 2008, hoping that he would succeed. “That president was not the choice of our party,” he said. “We are a good and generous people who are united by so much more than divides us.”
The truth, rarely heard this week in Tampa, Fla., is that the Republicans charted a course of denial and obstruction from the day Mr. Obama was inaugurated, determined to deny him a second term by denying him any achievement, no matter the cost to the economy or American security — even if it meant holding the nation’s credit rating hostage to a narrow partisan agenda.
link: http://nyti.ms/NzIa3X
How is that possible?
When Obama took office in January 2009 he had a democrat-controlled house and a democrat-controlled senate who gave him everything he asked for.
The republicans didn't take over congress until January 2011. He had two years of total control to do whatever he wanted. The problem is, he wanted the wrong things.
Senate majority was brief
Obama only had an effective Senate majority (60 votes can block anything) for about six months...from the time Franken from Minnesota was seated until the time Scott Brown from Massachusetts was seated.
Budgets only require 51 votes!
You are hopelessly wrong. Budgets only require 51 votes in the U.S. Senate. With this in mind, why hasn't the U.S. Senate passed a budget in well over three (3) years?!!
Republicans have plainly
Republicans have plainly stated they wanted the President to fail, and worked very hard through filibuster and their control of the House to make that happen. Their desire for control has thrown the rest of us under the bus.
It is a testament to President Obama that we've had steady job growth and a growing economy in the face of GOP's America-hating obstructionism not to mention a lackluster world economy.
His vision of an America where all people, not only the wealthy, deserve every chance to succeed, get a helping hand when they need it and keep the freedom to make their own personal decisions is the vision my family holds dear.
Nothing in Romney's speech or his biography comes close to matching that vision. Nothing.
Best lines of the night
"Our problem with President Obama isn't that he's a bad person. Our problem is he's a bad president." - Marco Rubio
"These are tired and old big government ideas. Ideas that people come to America to get away from!" - Marco Rubio
"When somebody does not do the job, we got to let them go." - Clint Eastwood
"President Obama promised to begin to slow the rise of the oceans and heal the planet. My promise is to help you and your family." - Mitt Romney
Simmer down Dennis, try and
Simmer down Dennis, try and keep your powder dry. We can turn our cannons to the DNC next week.
Nixon was more honest than these folks.
The GOP swore to deny Obama re-election as their top priority from day #1.
They have followed through in this effort in all ways large and small - no matter what the cost of their obstructions might be to the country.
One wonders what the consequences will be if they prevail in this particular auction of the White House. One *must* wonder, as the vague promises and assurances Romney has given are so lacking in specific substance, there is nothing there to hold up to the light for close examination.
To criticize the GOP is not to hold Obama and the Democrats as any kind of bargain - it's going to be necessary for a lot of voters to hold their nose while voting this time, regardless who they select in the booth.
Could we maybe do better than a choice like this? The two party system is failing us.
Rubio
Can not even tell the truth about his family history. Oh that is how he fits in with republican party.
Mr Romney's speech was just
Mr Romney's speech was just okay. He certainly didn't hurt himself. But I don't think he changed anyone's mind, and it may worry Republicans about his ability to move the polls before November.
Marianne Stebbins
Fortunately, Marianne Stebbins is a very little person in the scheme of things. She showed how little she is by the tonal inflection when she cast the 6 votes for Mitt Romney. Shame on her!