Colin Powell - Too Busy to Go to the Republican Convention?
Friday, August 20, 2004 at 08:54AM
TheSpook
Colin Powell - Too Busy to Go to the Republican Convention?
Or Just tired of being a GOP stage prop and not getting any props?
Probably rounding out his last months as a prominent
public servant, Powell has declared he is obliged as secretary of state
not to engage in "parochial debate." That is he will not attend the
Republican Convention next month. State Department spokesman Adam Ereli
said last week that "on White House instruction, Secretary Powell as
well as others among the Cabinet, will not attend" the Republican
convention, which opens Aug. 30 in New York City. "This is in keeping
with past practice," he said. And so it is, so far as secretaries of
state are concerned. But being in Bush's Cabinet does not automatically
disqualify officers from campaigning. Commerce Secretary Donald Evans
will attend the convention and Education Secretary Rod Paige is
scheduled to speak at the convention. Also Treasury Secretary John Snow
is campaigning for the president in states where the contest is close. [more ]
Pictured above: Colin Powell at the 2000 Republican Convention (8/2/2000). A hushed audience heard Gen Powell declare the following:
"The party must follow the governor's lead in
reaching out to minority communities and particularly the
African-American community, and not just during an election year
campaign. My friends, if we're serious about this, it has to be a
sustained effort. It must be every day and it must be for real.
The party must listen to and speak with all
leaders of the black community, regardless of political affiliation or
philosophy. We must understand, my friends, we must understand that
there's a problem for us out there. We must understand the cynicism
that exists in the black community. The kind of cynicism that has
created, when, for example, some in our party miss no opportunity to
roundly and loudly condemn Affirmative Action that helped a few
thousand black kids get an education, but you hardly hear a whimper
when it's Affirmative Action for lobbyists who load our federal tax
code with preferences for special interest. It doesn't work. It doesn't
work. You can't make that case.
Overcoming the cynicism and mistrust that exists
and raising up that mantle of Lincoln's about more--it's much more
about than just winning votes. It is about giving all minorities a
competitive choice. They deserve that choice. And if we give them that
choice, it will be good for our party, but above all, it will be good
for America, and we need to work to give them that choice." [whole speech ]