Aug 31 2008
McCain Curtails Opening Day Festivities Waiting for Gustav
The Republic National Convention will be several thousand miles north of where Gustav strikes, but candidate John McCain wants to make sure everyone knows that the RNC feels for the Gulf Coast. It is a largely symbolic gesture and a bit of grandstanding, attempting to look as though the RNC is doing something about the hurricane.
On the one hand, I applaud McCain for the effort, calling the nation’s attention to the potential for destruction and death on out coast line again. He means well, I think. And huge parties in one part of the nation while another part suffers is in bad taste. Kudos to him for having the forethought to think so.
On the other hand, the cynic in me recognizes the gesture as meaningless. In fact, it is sort of a slap at those who can attend. Here they have waited for four years to attend the convention, earned the right to play a part in the democratic process and now Mother Nature has taken their stage away.
In many ways, it’s hard to say that the show must go on, but I think its the American way. There is not a darn thing the politicians gathering in Minneapolis can do for the Gulf Coast, other than watch and pray. Perhaps, after we know the extent of the damage, they can host a fundraiser or sent aid from their home states, but nothing they do on Monday will change the course of the storm or the people it affects.
The show should go on. In fact, I think the Republican Party will suffer greatly by curtailing their events. The storm will doubtless be the headline news for the next several days. The convention will, at best, be relegated to the second slot. To take advantage of the headlines they should have been getting, the Republicans need to go on with the show. part of what we love about politics is the pageantry of it all. Kill the pageant and all you have are some boring speeches.
John McCain is right to subdue the opening festivities, but other than a short show of respect for the people of the Gulf Coast, he must go on and to paraphrase the faremr, “make hay while the sun shines.”