During the brief bit of Mitt Romney’s speech I watched live last
night, (I was more interested in the Cougar game and will watch the
speech online before I leave work today.) I thought I caught a
glimpse of Arna Souza, the Bremerton local who went to Tampa as a
delegate. It got me wondering if with all the media there whether
our delegates netted any other coverage nationally.
Silverdale’s Donna Hamilton, wife of Kitsap County Republican
Party Chairman Jack Hamilton, was the clear winner, getting two
mentions. No one else in a brief Google search I did was
mentioned.
Donna Hamilton was referenced on a New York Times blog The Caucus in reference to Ann
Romney’s speech and in USA Today for her apparel
choice designed for TV coverage.
If you hear of anything else I’d be glad to post it here.
And by the way, if you want to see if Souza did show up on TV,
go to C-SPAN and watch there. It was around the time Romney
mentioned his father George Romney having a flower delivered to his
wife every day.
Kitsap County Republican Party Chairman Jack Hamilton will be a
delegate at the Republican National Convention, Aug. 27-30, in
Tampa. He will be joined by Gig Harbor’s Marlyn Jensen, who
challenged state Rep. Larry Seaquist, D-Gig Harbor, for his seat in
the Legislature in 2008.
Three other Kitsap residents are going as alternates: Donna
Hamilton (Jack’s wife), Arna Souza and Willard Swiger.
Jensen and the alternates go representing the Sixth
Congressional District. Jack Hamilton is going as an at-large
pick.
The state Democratic Party is expected to release its list
today.
Kitsap Republicans will have a full slate of delegates and
alternates when they go to the state party convention on May 31 in
Tacoma.
County party members met for a second time on Saturday and
completed the voting process that stopped prematurely on April 21,
when a nominating process ran into conflict with a commitment to be
out of the Klahowya Secondary School building.
State party officials informed county party leaders they could reconvene and get
approval from the state convention rules committee to seat the
five-dozen-plus delegates in total. If, for whatever reason, the
committee were to decline, the county would be represented by 14
people. The head of that committee, however, gave assurances
earlier that the full delegation would be seated.
Speaking of sitting, that the full delegate slate will be seated
doesn’t sit well with a “Daily Paul” poster with the
moniker staobrof who wrote, “Because of the unorthodox reconvening
and the rules violations, the state convention will have to rule on
whether Kitsap County’s delegates can even be seated at the
convention. From the strongarm tactics I saw at the convention, I
don’t think they should allow them to be seated.”
Hamilton, in his statement following the convention, makes no
mention of what appears to be a brief, but boisterous, moment of
dissension that was videotaped. Hamilton thanked those who attended
both events. “Your sacrifice of time, energy, and money are greatly
appreciated. In addition, your willingness to actively participate
in our political process (with all it’s warts and glory) set you
aside from most voters. As those of us who have spent far too much
time chasing dreams of political success know, you are no longer a
‘normal’ person,” Hamilton wrote.
The video, which apparently is against county party guidelines,
shows the videographer being told to stop taping. He eventually
yells that he’s being assaulted. There’s more attempting to get him
to stop taping while Kirby Wilbur, state party chairman, attempts
to talk to the rest of the delegates. Wilbur tells someone to “Sit
down and shut up,” but I can’t tell from the video who he was
addressing.
As the delegates begin dispersing to their three different
caucuses the videographers get a variety of comments sent their
way. One woman says, “Hey video this,” then tells them to take
their anarchy somewhere I couldn’t decipher. Another convention
delegate tells the filmer “Hey, you’re cool man. Good job.”
A final critic offers a condemnation that makes little sense to
me, only because I’m assuming the videographer is a Ron Paul
supporter. “What part of the Communist Party do you belong to?” the
man yelled. That insult gets lobbed all the time at Democrats, but
not at libertarians.
Many commenters to the video operate under the illusion that the
party has to allow filming. It doesn’t. A political party is not
subject to state open meeting laws, because those only apply to
governments, and political parties are not governments.
The state attorney general has a page on this, which gives broad
explanations of when a meeting must be public. Note that “political
subdivision,” which is mentioned on the page, refers to a smaller
government, such as a city or county, that is subject to state law.
In fact, not all government bodies are subject to open meeting
laws. The Legislature wrote in exceptions for itself and for the
courts. Even the government entities that are subject to the law
are allowed exceptions, such as when they meet to consider a legal
action or real estate transaction.
Whether it’s a good idea to prohibit filming at a political
event is another question. Any time someone attempts to stop it the
resulting footage provides better public relations fodder than
anything the videographer might have otherwise caught.