Friday, September 5, 2008

Cedarburg: McCain and Palin's First Stop

I expected to be among a large, enthusiastic crowd this morning when I went to see John McCain and Sarah Palin in Cedarburg.

I've been to presidential campaign events before. I knew I'd have to go through security and I was sure it would take a while. Overall, I thought I had a good idea of what to expect.

Wrong.

The crowd wasn't large. It was enormous. The turnout was really stunning.

The line to get through security twisted nearly around a block, then crossed a barricaded street, and continued, and continued, and continued... People waited for hours.

I knew that we would never get through security.

I was right about that, and I really wasn't disappointed.

It was a beautiful morning and it was great just to be with so many, many people excited about the McCain-Palin ticket.


The press blocks my view.

When it was clear we weren't going to get near the stage, we opted to greet the motorcade, along with hundreds of others happy just to snap a few pictures and to wave at the next president and vice president of the United States.


Police: "Stay on the sidewalk!"

I talked to people from Madison, Green Bay, and New Berlin. They all said the same thing: I had to be here.

I met two people holding "Democrats for McCain" signs. They said that they had been leaning toward voting for McCain, but it was Sarah Palin in the VP spot that sealed the deal for them.

McCain's selection of Sarah Palin as his running mate was a defining moment for his campaign. Before the announcement that she would be on the ticket, there wasn't much enthusiasm.

People were united against Barack Obama, but they just didn't seem to be fully on board with John McCain. That has changed.

I saw a woman wearing a t-shirt handpainted with "Moms for Palin." Her little girl had a t-shirt painted with, "Sarah Palin is my role model." Her little boy wore a shirt that read, "I'm glad my mom is pro-life."

Women in their 20s stood at the curb with "Women for McCain" signs. Women in their 70s, maybe 80s, did the same.

There was a group of women holding homemade signs, "Pitbulls for Palin."


Pitbull Moms

There's no question that McCain has tapped into something very special here.

From the
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:

At a packed street rally here this morning, Republican John McCain used his first post-convention stop to promise a war on special-interest influence and excessive partisanship in Washington, D.C.

"We're going to start to work for the people of this country," McCain shouted. "It's over for the special interests. It's over!"

The Arizona senator joined Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, his vice presidential pick, in front of an ice cream shop on a well-preserved main street the city says is virtually unchanged since 1900.

Without mentioning specifics in a brief address downtown, McCain said the duo would visit small towns across America to talk about real change.

Palin drew the loudest cheers and chants of "Sarah! Sarah! Sarah!" Both repeated popular lines from their convention speeches. McCain briefly touched on "tough times" facing job-seekers in Wisconsin and across the U.S. and promised lower taxes and better job training.

Palin focused mainly on the war in Iraq. She hit Democrat Barack Obama hard for opposing the troop surge.

If Obama's view had won out, she said, America would be less safe from al-Qaida, and it "would have left millions of innocent people to a violent fate."

The nominees chose one of the most reliably Republican counties in a hotly contested state to start the final two-month sprint in the marathon presidential race. Ozaukee County backed the Bush-Cheney ticket by 2-to-1 margins in both 2000 and 2004.

True, Ozaukee County is friendly Republican territory; but this crowd wasn't just an Ozaukee County crowd. It was a Dane and Brown and Milwaukee and Waukesha County crowd, too.

Whatever the polls say, the Obama campaign should be concerned about Wisconsin.

I saw cars with Illinois plates and Minnesota plates as well.

There is real excitement. People traveled long distances to attend the rally.

Rock star Obama is being challenged. There's a new star on the scene.

But polls leading up to the Republican convention showed that McCain still had work to do firing up the kind of core GOP voters that reside in Ozaukee County.

Campaign finance reports show that Obama had raised more money than McCain in Ozaukee County - one of the wealthiest counties in America - for the 18 months ending June 30.

No enthusiasm gap was evident today as McCain sought to build on momentum gained from Palin's surprise selection and the high-energy reception that both Palin and McCain received at the GOP gathering in St. Paul this week.

A lot of the interest seemed to be for Palin. Sara Rattan, 49, of Menomonee Falls carried a sign that read, "Read My Lipstick," a nod to a joke Palin told during her speech at the Republican National Convention.

"She makes me want to do more with my life because she's done so much with her life at such an early age," she said.

Christina Brockhaus, 30, of West Bend wasn't close enough during the speeches to see the stage, so she climbed the railing of temporary bleachers near the stage afterward, but the most she could see was Cindy McCain's blond hair.

"I would have killed to see Sarah Palin," she said.

Brockhaus said that as a moderate Republican she found both John McCain's and Palin's speeches "refreshing."

"I'm a (deer) hunting mom, and I just think she's phenomenal," Brockhaus said of Palin. "Everything about her appeals to me."

Sarah Palin has inspired many Republican men and women. They've finally shaken off that malaise they've been swimming in for months.

Palin has been a shot of desperately needed adrenaline for the entire party. Plus, she's convinced some Undecideds and converted some Independents.

For conservative women, however, her place on the ticket has a special significance.

I can relate to her. More importantly, I think she can relate to me.

That means everything.

I don't support Palin because she's a woman. If the choice was between Hillary Clinton and John McCain, no way would I have voted for Hillary.

I support Palin so fervently because she's a woman who shares so many of my values.

When the motorcade rolled down Washington Ave. to approach the stage in front of the Chocolate Factory, hundreds of people cheered and applauded. I mean really cheered.

When the buses carrying the press brought up the rear, the crowd booed. I mean really booed. I gave them a big smile and a big thumbs down.


For months now, the lib media have been telling conservatives that they should feel demoralized. They said the Republican Party is fractured. It's lost its way. Nothing can stop destiny's child, Barack Obama.

Those days are over.






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Audio

10 comments:

Isobel Rowan said...

Hi Mary,

Thanks for posting concisely why you support Palin. Brava! The left doesn't get it! Gloria Steinem can't fathom why women would support Palin. It just underscores how out of touch the Democrats are, bless their hearts.

Cheers!
Isobel

Mary said...

Isobel,

You're right. The Dems are dangerously out of touch.

It's empowering to be able to support the McCain-Palin ticket.

It was such a pleaure to be at the rally yesterday and experience the hope for real change in Washington.

August Danowski said...

It's funny, because back a few weeks when Obama was picking his Veep, there was some thought he would pick Gov. Kaine of Virginia. I think Karl Rove said it best on Face the Nation:

"With all due respect again to Governor Kaine, he's been a governor for three years, he's been able but undistinguished," Rove said. "I don't think people could really name a big, important thing that he's done. He was mayor of the 105th largest city in America."

Rove continued: "So if he were to pick Governor Kaine, it would be an intensely political choice where he said, `You know what? I'm really not, first and foremost, concerned with, is this person capable of being president of the United States? What I'm concerned about is, can he bring me the electoral votes of the state of Virginia, the 13 electoral votes in Virginia?'"


So, basically, Kaine has been a governor a year longer than Palin, and was Mayor of a town more than 20 times the size of Wasilla before that, and yet Mr. Rove feels Kaine wouldn't be capable of being President with such a sketchy background. Hmmm. It's amazing what liberals like Karl Rove will come up with.

Mpeterson said...

McCain and Palin on parade for their subjects....beautiful pageantry, but I kept hearing Yeats in the background:

And what rough beast,
its hour come round at last,
slouches towards Cedarburg to be born?


"Out of touch" apparently means noticing the increasing poverty in this country -- maybe you haven't noticed it -- and hoping we can do something about it, or that income distribution in the US is at its most extreme since the age of the Robber Barons -- maybe you hadn't noticed that either -- and hoping maybe we can do something about that too.

I guess it's out of touch to hope for something better than more of the same.

What you forget about the left is that it never fell out of touch with reality. It didn't get its start with people like Gloria Steinem but in sweat shops and steel mills and mines; in hunger and in institutional disenfranchisement from power -- experiences most of my neighbors in Cedarburg have avoided.

People on the bottom of the economic pile are the ones most in touch with reality.

Are you really saying that being raised by a single mom who was abandoned by her husband and, then, working hard enough to get through a great college and, then, intentionally picking a job helping the poor is the life story of person who is out of touch with the lives of real Americans?

Mary said...

To august26--

WHAT?

Karl Rove said THAT?

KARL ROVE?

Well in that case, Sarah Palin is not fit to serve. I've completely changed my mind about her.

I don't think for myself. Rove tells me what to think.

Good grief.

Mary said...

To mpeterson--

First, I think you should look into the history of the Republican Party, why it was created and what it hoped to achieve.

Second, I don't think one has to be poor or struggling economically to be in touch with reality.

I don't think one has to be born to a single mother or not have a relationship with one's father to be in touch with reality.

You say, "People on the bottom of the economic pile are the ones most in touch with reality."

Obama is far from being on the bottom of the economic pile. He's a multi-millionaire. According to your standards, Obama isn't in touch with reality.

Frogspond said...

"I support Palin so fervently because she's a woman who shares so many of my values."

Good to know that your values include firing people because they won't do what you ask even though what you ask is unethical http://www.ajc.com/news/content/news/stories/2008/08/29/palin_troopergate_scandal.html
http://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/story?id=5713866&page=1


Good to know that your values include putting your children last on your priority list by subjecting them to national scrutiny during a family crisis by accepting the invitation to run as the Vice Presidential candidate. (Yep I hold men to this standard too.) http://www.adn.com/palin/story/512560.html


Good to know that your values include supporting an organization dedicated to separating Alaska from the United States. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F4iCDBIAde8
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/09/02/politics/animal/main4409075.shtml

Mary said...

You forgot that it's good to know my values include passing off my daughter's pregnancy as my own.

Anonymous said...

It's September and August still doesn't understand that the problem is that Obama is a nobody and should still be kissing butt in the Senate. He's no more qualified to be President than the dandelion i growing in my backyard.

Palin's candidacy is making this imminently clear to the electorate (of which the kook left that is running the Democratic party is a very small percentage.)

Mary said...

The Left is panicking.

It has to be scary.

The Democrats' chickens are coming home to roost.