Report from the Texas GOP Convention
June 13th, 2008Houston July 13
During the first General Session on Thursday it was clear that this convention will be about attempting to oust State Party Chair, Tina Benkiser and Vice Chair Robin Armstrong. Ron Paul Republicans Paul Perry and Debra Medina are the only opposition candidates seeking these seats. The party chairs are powerful, though lesser known positions in state party politics. Judging from the number of Ron Paul supporters seated as delegates, there is a very real threat to the entrenched power base. The caucus results should be available by the end of today, Friday.
Numerous challenges to the seating of delegates were heard in closed committee meetings on Tuesday and Wednesday and voted on in the first General Session Thursday. Chairman Benkiser called for stand-up voting to ratify the results of these committees. The irregularity I observed was that several hundred delegates, alternates and guests had remained outside the General Session until moments before the stand up voting, filing into the room enmasse and seating themselves into voting chairs in the middle (lighted section) of the hall. This obviously circumvented earlier attempts by volunteers to insure that only voting delegates had moved up and that “guests” were not participating in the votes. This was primarily the Harris County and Bexar County, anti-Paul delegation and certainly was no accident.
During the afternoon caucuses which were closed to the press, I waundered outside to speak to the numerous TeeVee media who for some reason were still hanging around. Keep in mind that this was sometime after 4PM and there would be no other convention activity open to the press the remainder of the day. Several reporters told me at this time that Ron Paul was going to be ending his campaign that night, and they were instructed to stay and cover it.
At 9PM between 2,000 and 2,500 Paul supporters crowded into the Hilton Ballroom for Ron Paul’s scheduled ice cream social. The media was there (finally) en masse. Paul announced he was indeed ending the campaign but vowed to carry on with the Revolution and work for candidates who share his conservative ideals. Paul urged his supporters to remain active in the GOP and plan to attend his “alternate convention” in St Paul, Minnesota, September 1st.