How, and How NOT To Act At Your Convention

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I have seen a lot of advice bandied about, but not very much about how to conduct oneself at their conventions. Seeing as a lot of Texas conventions are this weekend, let me relay a little bit of advice as regards how people should, and most certainly should NOT act at their county conventions.

- Do NOT go in with a combative attitude. A lot of Ron Paul supporters at their first conventions will come in with an attitude towards storming the fortress, and will miss the great opportunity to network with your local GOP members and leaders. That is a missed opportunity that you simply cannot miss.

- Do NOT wear big flashy Ron Paul gear. Just don't. Don't wear a shirt, don't wear a hat (you really shouldn't wear a hat anyway), don't carry a big sign, or anything of the sort. You may wish to wear a Ron Paul button, and certainly a small one would not be flashy or ridiculous. But I can only tell you that you will turn off more people than you'll make friends of. A lot of folks run into these conventions thinking they need to announce to the world they're Ron Paul supporters. You really don't, not at the lowest convention level.

- Do NOT speak more than a few times, and only really if you need to. If you wish to speak on behalf of a motion or some issue, remember that you are eating up people's patience and your own political capital with every time you speak. One, two, or three times may be okay, but after more than a few, people get tired of you and just don't take you seriously.

- Do NOT use Robert's Rules of Order unless you know what you are doing, and EVEN THEN, ONLY USE THEM SPARINGLY. I cannot emphasize this enough. If Ron Paul had a nickel for every convention where Ron Paul supporters ruined themselves by over-using Robert's Rules of Order, and not even when they needed to but just because they thought it was cool to do so, then Ron Paul would have billions in his campaign account. If you have leaders for Ron Paul at your convention, and they know Robert's Rules, let them do the talking. Maybe ask them first. But just as Robert's Rules can be a great tool, it can be OVERUSED, and just like in the last point, you can unnecessarily BURN BRIDGES. Which you don't want to do.

- DO make friends with non-Ron Paul people, members of your local GOP and party leadership. When you deal with these folks, be respectful and kind, and appreciative of all they've done for the party. When talking with your leadership, maybe thank them for helping out with putting the convention together.

- DO make a point of showing and saying that you want to be involved. The GOP needs people. Volunteers. As a private organization that has to raise money, the Republican Party's biggest asset is people, and biggest debt is the lack thereof. YOU can help fill that gap. You need to say so, and point out your interest in being involved. You can also ask to see if there's a way to continue to be involved after the convention and even after the state convention. If a candidate speaks, is someone running that you think you maybe could support? Even if they're not a perfect Ron Paul match? Helping a candidate can give you credibility as long as the candidate's not a loon.

- DO make a point of thanking your convention chair after the convention is over. Go up to the person and shake their hand. Thank you for chairing the convention, you did a great job. That makes a world of difference. Do the same for the others in the party. A smile and a friendly first impression go lightyears, I assure you.

- DO dress nicely. This speaks for itself. Don't wear a suit, for goodness sakes. But act like you're going to church.

- DO make a point of talking to whoever is involved in the appointment of the preliminary slate to the state convention, assuming that you want to be a delegate. If for whatever reason there wasn't a chance to apply prior to the convention, or you weren't aware of it, find that person or group first thing and speak with him/her/them, and KINDLY ask to be put on the delegate or alternate list. Oh yeah...

- Do NOT expect to be a delegate on your first go-around. If you press to be a delegate, you shouldn't expect to be either. If you're alternate, you'll probably get seated at the state convention anyway. So no big deal.

Last thing.

- DO have fun. You're there to learn and listen, and get somewhere on that list to the state convention. Stay involved and plan on staying involved so you can do more for the movement and the party down the line, to advance the cause
 
- DO dress nicely. This speaks for itself. Don't wear a suit, for goodness sakes. But act like you're going to church.

repeating for emphasis - nothing gets you taken seriously like being dressed for a serious occasion, full suit is too much unless you're a candidate or official

please don't wear jeans and sneakers! Keyword: "respectable"
 
This is very good information and answers a lot of questions I had. Thank you, 1836. I will be following this to a tee at my convention on Saturday.
 
He's definately right that some people can't resisit "reaching for the rules" when it's just belabouring things. Not every vote on a motion (that is obvious) needs a call for division. There does not need to be a quorum call every 15 minutes. Not every typographical error in the minutes needs to be corrected.

FOCUS on getting the *important* business of the convention completed.
 
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what would happen if you wore an Obama button at any conventions? =s

You'd probably get elected presidential nominee of the GOP, at the rate they're going.

But seriously,

1836 makes some good points.

From my experience here in Georgia, we met with the chairman of the convention afterwards, and he told us that he wished we'd spoke with him before the convention. While he could not have guaranteed us a slot (edit: he was the temporary chair for the purpose of opening the convention, but was also elected and served as chairman of the convention), he could have mentioned the fact that there were indeed new people taking part in the delegate process, and perhaps stirred up some favorability. At least, when we started asking questions during the convention, people might have been able to keep in mind that it is all new to us, so we weren't just asking questions to be disruptive.
 
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And always keep some snacks with you. Conventions are more likely to run late, than close early.
 
My Ron Paul delegate (I'm his alternate) showed up to the county convention in full sweats and a long, scruffy beard. He said he'd dress better for the state.
 
Meh. Some of this I can agree with, some I can't. Certainly don't go in looking for a fight, but if the chair or a group tries to deny you your right to participate, assert your rights and don't take no for an answer. "Go along to get along" is preached over and over again in politics but it's primarily preached by the people who want you to go along to get along with them so they can do what they want because the reality is they do very poorly when faced with real principled, organized opposition.

These conventions are not festivals or pep rallies or reward systems, they are serious parts of the representative system of government and if you bring the majority you have every right to expect to walk out with the majority of delegates. If you don't have the majority you have every right to expect to be allowed to state your case and try to become the majority.

But always stay classy, and do not become what you oppose.
 
Meh. Some of this I can agree with, some I can't. Certainly don't go in looking for a fight, but if the chair or a group tries to deny you your right to participate, assert your rights and don't take no for an answer. "Go along to get along" is preached over and over again in politics but it's primarily preached by the people who want you to go along to get along with them so they can do what they want because the reality is they do very poorly when faced with real principled, organized opposition.

I had considered that possibility too, when speaking with the chairman. It was hard to absorb his seemingly-positive attitude towards us without wondering in the back of my mind what he would be saying if we had actually won (if he would have wanted to say anything to us at all.)

Sometimes if you want to know what someone's "true colors" are, you have to challenge them a bit.
 
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repeating for emphasis - nothing gets you taken seriously like being dressed for a serious occasion, full suit is too much unless you're a candidate or official

please don't wear jeans and sneakers! Keyword: "respectable"

Wtf?? I wear a suit to church lol
Now I'm confused as to what I should wear....
 
Well I guess if we are just going to roll over and die, I might as well quit donating to the Money Bombs. We aren't contributing just to be losers. We have a chance to win Texas. We failed in Brazos County, but we were very close with little organization. I wonder if the middle-aged guys (like me) wearing business casual had put on the Ron Paul T-shirt, would the negotiators have seen we could win? And if we had the numbers, we should have taken over.

Alaska let Romney take over. Goldman Sachs doesn't play nice when they have the numbers.

I drove from College Station to New Orleans and back this week. Lots of Paul signs in tiny towns. I don't think the first Romney or Santorum sign ever left the print shop.

The campaign ought to offer a Ron Paul campaign stop to the first Texas County that takes all their delegates. Just get a majority of our people in the room and the rest will take care of itself. Just go door-to-door, find Paul fans, show them the delegate request form, ask if they will go on Saturday, pick them up in your car on the way there. Make several trips if you have to.

We had maybe 60 Paul people in a room of 130. Why all this work to fall 20 people short? We had 78 delegates and 78 alternates. Maybe a good goal is to have enough Paul people in the room to account for each delegate and alternate position. That would overwhelm the establishment. Let your Congressman and District Attorney stay home while you go to Tampa. Look kids, it'll be like Spring Break II paid for by Paul campaign. (I overheard national delegates get financial help from campaign for Tampa travel expenses.)

In September if your county wins, those career politicians who have been representing your county for so long will question whether those Goldman Sachs positions really are such a good idea. They'll be inviting Paul delegates to their rich friends' houses for BBQ's. You'll be treated a lot better after bopping them a good one in the nose. This "let's be nice and work within the corrupt system" talk I'm hearing scares me.
 
If you see Paul has a majority in the room and your negotiators say they've agreed on a slate that gives Paul a handful of delegates and all the alternates, then call all Ron Paul people into a group and build your own delegate slate. Make a motion to offer that slate. Raise hell if you have to. Your negotiators might see visions of political careers just if they make nice here.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rr2yU_yXOXk&feature=related

If you dress nice to blend in, maybe your negotiators still have ways of knowing Paul's strength in the room. If all Paul supporters wear Ron Paul shirts, then you and everyone else in the room knows the score.

Don't waste this Saturday. It's the only day that matters during the whole campaign. Please don't live with the feeling I have of being 20 Paul supporters short. Of not visibly showing my Ron Paul support so the crowd could truly see our strength. Be courteous and get to know the establishment Republicans. But wear the T-Shirt so the whole room can see Paul's numbers and then use that knowledge to sweep your county.
 
Mississippi has conventions next Saturday, April 28th, and I plan to go to my precinct but as far as I can tell it will just be me, no one I've contacted has gotten back to me yet about trying to organize anything.

But I'll show up and try to get to the County meeting as well. If I manage to get elected to the State Convention (18th and 19th of May) I will somehow get there too but again it'll just be me unless something changes between now and then.
 
Meh. Some of this I can agree with, some I can't. Certainly don't go in looking for a fight, but if the chair or a group tries to deny you your right to participate, assert your rights and don't take no for an answer. "Go along to get along" is preached over and over again in politics but it's primarily preached by the people who want you to go along to get along with them so they can do what they want because the reality is they do very poorly when faced with real principled, organized opposition.

These conventions are not festivals or pep rallies or reward systems, they are serious parts of the representative system of government and if you bring the majority you have every right to expect to walk out with the majority of delegates. If you don't have the majority you have every right to expect to be allowed to state your case and try to become the majority.

But always stay classy, and do not become what you oppose.

Well definitely if that is the case. However if they are newbies to the system, and don't know the ettiqute they should follow the OP's post. When they get there and an organized block of Ron Paul supporters seems very informed, approaches them that they needs their assistance for the convention, DO WHAT THEY TELL YOU. If your not organized, your just going to cause problems AND achieve nothing. This is more of an ettiqute thing for those not in the know.
 
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