RT @MarkJWestpfahl To the unsung heroes behind the scenes, and the volunteers that made the #mngop12 convention a success. #thankyou @mngop
I am afraid it is time I admit that all of these "new people in the Party" are not there because they want to become Republicans like the rest of us, and to admit that a lot of them are simply Ron Paul libertarians, NOT necessarily interested in helping elect Republican candidates. We can certainly still admire their enthusiasm and organization without calling them names, and I wouldn't even be too concerned about their heavy-handed tactics and occasional shouting sprees if they could just answer one question: to what purpose?
Why are these folks organizing so thoroughly, fighting for rules favorable to themselves alone, being paranoid about balloting and pushing hard their "slates" of delegates? I have heard a couple of reasons, but they don't make sense to me.
I am told that the purpose of all this effort is to elect delegates to the Republican National Convention who will vote for Ron Paul on the first ballot. There isn't anything wrong with that, so you wonder why the slates are kept so confidential, and why none of these delegate candidates SAY that is why they are running. Why hide it? Now, we all know that Ron Paul is not going to be the Republican presidential nominee, and in fact just yesterday he himself suspended his campaign and acknowledged that Mitt Romney will be the nominee. So again, what is the point?
Some-- those who pass on the previous questions – say that their status as national delegates will earn Ron Paul a speech at the National Convention. But what good is that? Representative Paul has been in the Congress for something like 20 years and has no doubt had the opportunity to give hundreds of persuasive speeches on various pieces of legislation. Yet he is frequently on the wrong end of a 434-1 vote. If he cannot persuade even one of his colleagues of the rightness of his positions, how likely is it that one more speech will sway a major part of the Republican Party, let alone the electorate at large?
Both of these reasons seem to begin and end with the Republican National Convention in August. So what happens to all that organization and enthusiasm when the reasons for it have disappeared? And why was it necessary to push the rest of us Republican activists under the bus just for your short-term but essentially meaningless "victory"? Could you not convince us to join you?





James Simpson of 


