September 5, 2008

McCain's speech: Passion from The Maverick

Convention Day 4 –  I made my way from our delegation section to where the press was standing.  There I had a straight view of Sen. McCain as he spoke of the love for his country and how as President he will reform Washington, noting: “I don’t work for special interest. I don’t work for myself. I work for you.” 

My eyes welled with pride as he spoke of his service to this county and his time as a POW. His speech touched just about every aspect of the platform that I participated in creating 10 days ago, everything from vetoes of big spending projects, to keeping taxes low, to school choice. His speech delivery was passionate, something you don’t often see from The Maverick. At-large alternate from Calvert County, Kevin Igoe, notes that he did a great job in taking on his own party and notes that he wants to bring change to the Washington crowd. Of his running mate, the senator stated: “I was proud to introduce her to America. But I can’t wait to introduce her to Washington.”

My dad, 84, was a Baltimore City Democrat most of his life. He switched to Republican as I got more involved with politics. Yet, he wanted to vote for a woman as president in his lifetime. He couldn’t understand why the women of this country were not rallying around the New York senator in her bid for president. “Because, Dad,” I told him, “it has to be the right woman. We won't vote for just any woman. It has to be someone we feel comfortable with and be proud of.” Sarah Palin is that woman. This morning, as I repacked my suitcases so I could concentrate on the fun of the evening, I recalled that back in May, Don Murphy mentioned Gov. Palin to me as a person whom he thought would be a great VP. “She’s pro-life, a lifetime NRA member, mother of five children and she fought the big oil companies,” he said. After some Internet research, when folks would ask who I thought should be the VP, I would say Sarah Palin. I hope the folks out in Western Maryland, where I am the McCain regional director, are feeling their needs are being met on the issue of the Second Amendment with McCain’s selection. A good turnout in that region, with high percentage vote for McCain, is imperative. My friends in Western Maryland: Don’t sit this one out.  There is too much in the balance.

The evening, of course, ended with the falling of 3,000 balloons and 300 pounds of confetti – some of which were circular imprinted with the faces of John and Cindy McCain. 

Oh, yeah. The red phone attached to the chair in front of me did blink: Wednesday night, just before the roll call. The voice on the other end wanted to know the name of the person who would be presenting the vote.

September 4, 2008

Action on the floor, and Palin's speech

Convention Day 3 – There was so much action on the convention floor this evening. Upon arrival, I switched credentials with my alternate, Kelly Schultz from Frederick. I wanted to make sure that I was back in my seat for the speech by Michael Steele. That didn’t happen. While in the alternate section, the McCain floor leader began handing us large handmade political signs and stated there were a few Presidential candidate Ron Paul people in the area who they suspected were going to try to disrupt some of the speeches. That didn’t happen. Still, we were instructed by the young man in the yellow baseball cap to raise the signs to block any attempt made to show signs for Ron Paul. We did an awesome job. Rockin’ and rollin’ as the music blared and waving signs for nearly an hour before the protester revealed herself as she raised the unorthodox sign toward the TV camera. The sign was then confiscated – just as Steele was taking the stage.

In Steele-like tradition, he brought the crowd to their feet. Maryland draped the state flag over the railing. The delegates from the floor began a “call and response” chant with “Michael” as the alternates overhead responded with “Steele.” We were all so proud to have our former lieutenant governor light up the opposition as he addressed such issues as energy and drilling, to which the chant “drill, baby, drill” began.

Back at my seat with the delegates, I again get a handshake with Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch – at age 74, the man looks fabulous. Joe Scarborough from Fox News came by and had a seat with the Maryland delegation – he seemed to just want to have a friendly chat. Or maybe he was trying to get to one of the Kansas delegates just in front of us. At any rate, I talked to him, shook his hand and got a picture. Which reminds me – before getting to the convention floor, I had an opportunity to meet with Jon Voight and also get a photo.

Anticipation was so high it reached the thousands of balloons wrapped tightly in the ceiling of the Xcel Center while waiting for Sarah Palin to address the convention. Jim Pelura, chair of the Maryland GOP, and Larry Helminiak discussed if she would meet the prime time deadline. Of course, the governor of Alaska hit the homerun as she attacked the opposition by contrasting her experience: “A small-town mayor is sort of like a community organizer, except that you have actual responsibilities.” Her speech showed that this hockey mom has a command of the issues and can be a governing partner to Sen. McCain. She resonated with mainstream America who value sense of community, faith and freedoms. Showing she is not afraid of challenging the status quo, she came across as a no-nonsense, formidable candidate for vice president of the free world. At the end of her speech, Helminiak turned to me and stated, “I’m glad I’m not a moose.”

--Carmen Amedori

Oops: This blog post earlier gave the wrong age for Orrin Hatch. Sorry!

September 3, 2008

Anyone who is anyone

Convention Day 2 – I ride the elevator from the 5th floor to breakfast, and everyone who gets on has a smile. The conversations are about what time to get to the floor of the convention. Some will walk over early and try to catch some of the constant news coverage offered by the cable networks, and perhaps be seen in the background by friends and neighbors. Others will be going on the Minnesota Zephyr, a train ride and luncheon through Stillwater.

At 7:45 a.m., Secret Service linger in the lobby and the front of our hotel as we await the arrival of the all-star line up of breakfast speakers. The guests are former Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson; our nominee’s oldest son, Doug McCain; helicopter pilot and Baghdad POW Ron Young; Arizona Sen. Jon Kyl; and Maryland’s own Everett Alvarez – the longest serving Vietnam POW and great friend of John McCain. This is the most crowded our breakfast meetings have been. It seems like every delegate and alternate has arrived on time.

The ride on the Zephyr was very nice. There are six miles of track and we traveled at about 6 m.p.h., while being served an elegant luncheon. I had the walleye, a fish native to Canada and the lakes of Minnesota. It was the sweetest fish I ever tasted.

I was seated in the “globe” of the train, which gives a three-dimensional view of the picturesque countryside of Minnesota’s first town. This is one of the many side events our delegation chairman, Don Murphy, and Maryland McCain chairman Chris Cavey arranged for us. A nice relaxing afternoon, yet I am antsy. I want to get to the Xcel Center and get this party started.

Once on the floor, Adrienne King, a delegate from Hawaii who served with me on the Platform Committee, adorned me with a fresh lei. Anne Stephenson, president of the Tucson Republican Women tells me that since the choosing of Sarah Palin for vice president, Democrats are banging down the door to get signs and other political materials in the most liberal area of McCain’s home state. Arizona is going strong, she says proudly as she slipped the state’s pin into my hand.

It is again an all-star lineup as many of the top Republican politicians parade pass Maryland.

First is our former lieutenant governor, Michael Steele. He is mobbed by delegates from other states seeking pictures and autographs. Michael is well-known and obviously well-loved. He takes a break from his fans and sits with us, hanging and chatting with Marylanders.

Just as suddenly as Orrin Hatch disappeared yesterday, he appears today – and right next to me. I couldn’t believe it ,since I just missed him the day before. I got my picture with the very distinguished gentleman from Utah. Later appeared Newt Gingrich, former speaker of the House, followed by Karl Rove and Janet Huckabee, wife of Mike Huckabee. Everyone knows that anyone who is anyone – or has political aspirations - comes to the national convention. Obviously that is why former Pittsburgh Steeler Lynn Swann who has recently declared his Republican run for a U.S. Senate seat in Pennsylvania, arrived. I got my picture with him, too.

-- Carmen Amedori

September 2, 2008

If the light blinks...

Convention Day 1 - I woke up eager to get to the Xcel Center. But first we attended a luncheon with Pennsylvania, Virginia and Ohio delegations at the Circus Juventas circus school, for a wonderful performance by youngsters in a trapeze ballet. The event was scaled back, we were told, out of respect for the residents of the southern part of the country who were being ravaged by Hurricane Gustav.

The sponsor of the luncheon, Dominion Power, said they contributed $25,000 to the Red Cross and would send more if necessary. Mark Supple, an alternate delegate, tells me he was a juggler in the Florida State University circus with the founder and owner of this very unique center.

Supple's is a special agent doing criminal investigations with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. He has never really been involved in politics and is thoroughly enjoying this gig. Like all of us, he can’t wait to get to the convention.

On the bus, Phil Baker-Shenk came up with the song title “Sarah-a-bration Times”. Now we are trying to come up with lyrics to the tune “Celebrate” by Kool and The Gang. Suggestions can be posted on this blog.

Inside Xcel, the security is tight. It’s wall-to-wall politicians and observers.

From a distance, I spy Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah across the room, but am unable to catch up before he disappears through another set of doors. My disappointment is short-lived as I am down on the floor of the convention and meet Kansas Congressman Todd Tiahrt. He asks about Governor Bob Ehrlich and his attendance. I state he is not expected , as he is very busy with work and family.

I am floor leader, so I have an assigned seat on the end of the row with a telephone attached to the seat in front of me. If the light blinks. it is my responsibility to answer it and forward onto the delegation any instructions that are relayed. I have no idea where the phone is connected or who will call or why. But I periodically look to see if there is blinking going on.

The seats are tight with not much leg room, but we have a pretty decent location about 150 rows back from the stage, very close to the CNN, Fox and NBC television news sets. As matter of fact, CNN announcer Wolf Blitzer could be heard commenting while we bowed our heads in opening prayer. Alternate delegate Gloria Murphy reports from her section that she saw Mary Matalin, GOP political pundit. “She is more appealing in person than on TV,” Gloria said. I did manage to get the autograph of newscaster Tom Brokaw on my version of “The Rules of the Republican Party.”

There were appearances by First Lady Laura Bush and Cindy McCain, at which making a plea for relief to assist the hurricane victims. Gulf Coast governors made remarks via satellite, sending best wishes and demonstrating the perseverance of the American spirit.

By the way, today is my baby daughter's birthday – she is 26. Happy birthday, Kara Maria. I love you.

-- Carmen Amedori

September 1, 2008

A Message for Hollywood

Dateline: Sunday in the lobby of the Embassy Suites St. Paul.

Delegates and the media are shuffling in. Many are returning from a Catholic Mass at the St. Paul Cathedral, where they prayed for those in the South who need to flee their homes ahead of Hurricane Gustav.

My roommate, Anne McCarthy, a former candidate for Maryland Comptroller, says she prayed really hard for the storm to take a different course, leaving Gulf Coast residents unharmed.

Many of the top-name speakers have cancelled their appearances at the convention due to the storm. President George W. Bush, who was supposed to speak Monday, will not be in attendance. We are told that the business of the day will be conducted on Monday, but we will be out of the Xcel Center by 5 p.m.

Chris Cavey, the Maryland chairman of the McCain campaign, is getting credentials available for distribution. He is thinking of removing one of the many Maryland flags from the hotel lobby and hanging it in his room.

Del. Tony O’Donnell and I head back to Minneapolis for a premier of the movie “An American Carol,” a satire on certain ultra-liberal documentary films.

The main character was a filmmaker named Michael Malone, who was associated with the liberal advocacy group “Mooveahead.org” It starred Jon Voight, Kelsey Grammer and many other high-profile conservative actors, with a guest appearance by Bill O’Reilly. The release date is Oct. 3, and I urge all to make it a blockbuster sending the Hollywood elite a strong message on the possible unintended damage that can be inflicted by making films that strike to the heart of our servicemen and -women while at war.

The full delegation arrived at the Minneapolis Convention Center and toured Civicfest, where there was plenty of political memorabilia.

Larry Helminiak, a former Mitt Romney supporter from Carroll County, proudly displayed his newly purchased McCain/Palin lapel pin. There was never a doubt in my mind that Republicans would mesh with unwavering commitment and support for our candidate.

-- Carmen Amedori

August 31, 2008

Breakfast with Karl Rove

My phone rang at 7:15 a.m. Saturday – it was Tony O’Donnell asking if I was going to the South Carolina breakfast.

Ugh, was my initial thought, as it was so early.

Then he told me Karl Rove would be there – ugh, again, as I am not a fan of the man who nearly took the skin off of my candidate eight years ago.

Still, I got myself ready and headed to the breakfast. Rove arrived and a line formed for those seeking pictures with “the architect.”

He told stories of how he first entered politics and traveled to South Carolina to meet up with the then unknown Lee Atwater, whom some describe as a near-brilliant political operative. Atwater, who died in 1991, was a GOP consultant and trusted adviser to President Ronald Reagan, was RNC chairman. Rove described how they moved through South Carolina doing door-knocking and literature drops – the real grunt, core work of any campaign. I reminisce about my good friend from Texas, Koreen Hughes, and the fun we had as she taught me how to work like that during my first run for the Maryland General Assembly.

Rove also told the story of Bud Day. Day was a POW with Senator McCain who escaped the prison compound. The North Vietnamese were so embarrassed that Day broke free that when they recaptured him his punishment was to be tortured by breaking his arm so severely that his wrist bone was popped out at the elbow. They then yanked it back and positioned it so it would never heal correctly, putting Day in constant pain. It was Senator McCain who gathered bamboo to make a splint. But first he had to break Bud Day’s arm again. Yikes. And he did. He broke his comrade’s arm and then placed the bamboo splints so that Day was no longer in that excruciating pain. McCain, of course, spent 2 years in solitary confinement for that compassionate, courageous act.

Okay. So maybe it wasn’t all bad to get up early for Karl Rove.

But here’s the best part - Fred Davis, the creative mind behind McCain’s TV ads was there. He was the inspiration of the morning. He entertained us with clips from ads past and those upcoming. I would have been disappointed had I decided to blow off the breakfast, slept in and then learned Mr. Davis was also a speaker.

After getting settled in at our new hotel in St. Paul, chatting with staff from the Maryland State Party - April Rose and Justin Ready - Don Murphy, O’Donnell and I headed to the Padelford Landing for an old-fashioned ride down the mighty Mississippi. It was an enjoyable afternoon. The weather is near perfect. Low humidity and hot sun. The ride down the Mississippi was very relaxing. Thursday, the entire delegation will take the ride and be treated to a luncheon.

-- Carmen Amedori

August 30, 2008

Ready to rock

It’s Friday, and Delegates from across the country are arriving in Minneapolis for the festivities that will begin Sept. 1 in St. Paul.

They are greeted by the news that Sen. McCain has chosen a conservative woman as his running mate.

Gov. Sarah Palin has energized this campaign. I have a smile on my face that just cannot be erased. As the working mother of two daughters, I can relate to what it is to multi-task, balancing children, family, career and commitment to all.

I am impressed with the VP pick for her personal and political accomplishments. I think she must be able to use both hands, perhaps simultaneously, and have eyes in the back of her head, like me, my mom, my grand mom and most of the moms I know who are working hard to make ends meet while raising a family.

As we walk to the Conservative Leadership luncheon, delegation Chair Don Murphy and I are recognized by campaigners and political operatives from across the country. It is a nice feeling to know folks we worked with during the primaries remember us.

Once there, the chatter is about Palin’s background as a hockey player, a broadcast journalist and her high school nickname of Sarah Barracuda. The consensus is Gov. Palin is a strong contender. She has 13 years of government experience under her belt.

Sara Palin has taken on the government. She has reformed Alaska in many ways, including being fiscally responsible by lowering taxes and going after the big oil companies. Her tenacity has served Alaska constituents well, and, as Gov. Palin has said, she will do no less for the citizens of the United States.

This week has been so filled with the committee work that I hadn’t even noticed the cute emblems in the hotel lobbies which illuminate the RNC seal lighting the way.

So now it is off to St. Paul where the party begins. It is time to repack my suitcase and shuttle to the new hotel. Some state delegations are staying in Minneapolis. While I dread the repacking, it comes with the solace that the new hotel is only 5 blocks from the Xcel Energy Center. Come Monday, all the members of Maryland’s Delegation will be there. It seems fitting that our convention will be in the Energy Center – we are so ready to rock.

-- Carmen Amedori

Pounding out a platform

I came to Minneapolis a week before the GOP Convention in St. Paul to assist in forming the Republican platform.

It is very quiet on the south side of Minnesota’s largest city with 369,000 residents. The scenery is like downtown Baltimore, with tall, large office buildings.

Yet it is very quaint. Homey almost. Kinda like Carroll County in the years of old.

Not many cars on the road, very few people are walking around on this sunny afternoon. Almost total silence, as I sit outside the hotel and enjoy a little bite to eat before the first gathering of the Resolutions Committee.

Breaking the quiet after almost two and a half hours into my arrival there is a squealing – a siren in the distance. An ambulance rushes by.

As I enter the revolving door of the hotel, there is a sign “No Guns are Permitted on the Premises.” Revelation: Minnesota is a right-to-carry state. The only policemen I see are in the Minneapolis Convention Center.

I am told there are about 50 murders a year in this city of peacefulness; so unlike Baltimore. I wonder: Does the right to carry a concealed firearm have anything to do with the low crime rate ?

By the third day, everything is on schedule; we worked Monday through Wednesday, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., crafting the platform which articulates the philosophies and positions of the Party of Lincoln.

It was rewritten from top to bottom, going from 40,000 words to about half the size, with the hope that being so concise would convey a clearer understanding of what being a Republican means, and would encourage folks to register and vote Republican.

Our co-chairs, Congressman Kevin McCarthy, (R-CA) and Sen. Richard Burr (R-SC) were very patient in allowing each of the 106 members to debate and amend the document that will be the basis for Senator John S. McCain to accept his nomination as the next president of the United States.

Maryland House Republican Leader Tony O’Donnell and I had front row assignments in the full committee, which was televised live by C-SPAN. It was truly an honor to be a part of this historic process. It is a document that should be read by anyone who is interested in the governing principals of the GOP. I am proud to be a Republican, and an American, where I know I am free to have a voice in the process.

-- Carmen Amedori

'I saw a lot of me in him'

Carmen Amedori, 52, was born in the Govans neighborhood of Baltimore, and her family later moved to Reisterstown, where she spent her teen years.

Her political interest was sparked as a young woman. She recalls an episode in a classroom at Villa Julie college, where a professor recognized the name of one of the students: it was Jamie McGuirk, daughter of state Sen. Harry J. McGuirk.

A student leaned over to Amedori, and whispered: “I wish my dad was a senator.”

“Too late for that. I’ll have to be a senator,” Amedori responded.

She has been a Republican since the 1970s, a time when the party’s prospects were flagging due to Watergate and Nixon. She joined the party, she said, because it seemed like the underdog.

Amedori spent years as a paralegal, doing title abstracts and raising two girls with her first husband. But she had other interests: one day, driving past the Baltimore Sun, she said “I’m going to work there.” Within weeks, she had entered the world of journalism, at the Sun in Carroll County. She stayed in the profession for about three years.

Amedori’s political connections in Carroll County strengthened after her second marriage to Jerry Barnes, who would become the Carroll state’s attorney. She ran his campaign, and when he was elected in 1994, her involvement accelerated.

She got involved with local Republican groups, and was asked to serve on a panel that was reviewing the county charter in 1997. Unhappy with what the board produced, she resigned as chairman two weeks before the vote and campaigned against the changes. The charter amendments were defeated. A year later, she was elected to the House of Delegates. After Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. was elected in 2002, he put Amedori on the state parole commission, where she still serves.

Amedori supported McCain during the 2000 campaign, a decision that smacked of rebellion. Ellen R. Sauerbrey, the former gubernatorial candidate, was head of the George W. Bush campaign in Maryland, but had not tapped any residents of Republican stronghold Carroll County to run as convention delegates.

“She slighted Carroll County, and I was very upset,” Amedori said. Legislative colleague Don Murphy of Catonsville was touting McCain, so Amedori took a look, and decided to back the Arizona senator.

“I wasn’t doing it totally to rock the boat,” she said. “The more I learned about him, the more I saw a lot of me in him.”

She attended the 2000 convention as an alternate delegate, and has supported McCain ever since. This year, she volunteered with the campaign, doing advance work for town hall meetings in Florida, and getting to meet the candidate and his family.

Throughout the primaries, “the more his numbers went up, the more excited I got,” she said.

-- written by David Nitkin

Grand Finale: "No Second Chances"

This week has gone by in a whirlwind. There have been breakfast meetings, luncheons, caucus meetings, receptions, parties and speaker forums sponsored by many different groups as well as individual politicians. It has been a blast!

The Democratic National Convention has been an overwhelming success. We are once again united as one to serve the interest of many. Our leaders have shown themselves to be some of the most articulate, hardworking, well-organized and dedicated people in the world. I’m growing confident that in a few short months, I will once again be able to trust my government to fight for me.

I say once again because “they” have dropped the ball. They let services for our children and elderly be taken away. They let the safety and quality of our food be compromised. They let the price of gasoline escalate and threaten our economic security. They let the quality of our schools plummet and the cost of higher education soar out of reach for the average American.

Wait a minute. There is no “they.” Only me and we! No one should know that better. I am one of the 100 delegates who represented you, progressive Marylanders, this past week. I got to sit in a world-class stadium with 80,000 other Americans and listen to the next president of the United States tell us to take back our country! I experienced first-hand that golden moment in the afterglow of Barack’s acceptance speech when the air was fresh, the sky above us clear, confetti poured down, and spirits soared. It was as if we were all in a snow globe!

I now feel in my heart what I’ve always known in my head; America is our treasure! She embodies the hopes and dreams not only of us but of the entire world! We have only 65 days to ensure that we get her back! It becomes clearer and clearer every day that Barack Obama is the leader to get us where we need to go. Marylanders, we have worked very hard to support our candidate. We now must work even harder.

Mike and I have left Denver. We arrive in St. Louis to visit our daughter at college before returning to Maryland, and the campaign trail. As our shuttle-bus driver takes us to our rental car, he summarizes it all. Reacting to the personalized “Obama ‘08” button I am wearing he volunteers: “We’ve got to bring out every single voter to win in November. There are no second chances here!”

-- Cheryl Miller

About the bloggers
Two Maryland delegates – one Republican and one Democrat – share their convention experiences in an online diary moderated by Sun reporter David Nitkin. Their entries will offer an insider's view of the sights and sounds of events in Denver (Democrats) and St. Paul (Republicans).
Carmen Amedori, Republican

Carmen Amedori, 52, is a resident of Westminster and was a state delegate representing Carroll County from 1998 to 2004, when she was appointed by then-Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. to serve on the Maryland Parole Commission. A native of Baltimore and graduate of Villa Julie College, Amedori worked as a paralegal and journalist while raising two daughters, before entering the world of politics. She was one of the few elected officials in Maryland who supported John McCain when he ran for president in 2000, and was an alternate delegate at that year's convention. Her backing has not wavered, and this year, Amedori is the Western Maryland regional director for McCain. She has also been cleared to be a surrogate — meaning she has the blessing to speak on McCain’s behalf when called upon.

Cheryl Miller, Democrat

Cheryl Miller, 55, and her husband, Michael, coordinate the Volunteers for Obama office in Anne Arundel County. She is an Annapolis resident and mother of two who runs a home-based event planning business. Despite studying political science at Lycoming College in Pennsylvania, Miller was not particularly involved in politics until this year. She was invited to a fund-raiser last fall, and soon found herself immersed in the Obama campaign, working phone banks and traveling to Ohio and Pennsylvania to door-knock. This will be her first convention.

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