More History: Michael Steele Picked To Lead GOP (1st African-American)

13,094
2,121
Joined
Jan 27, 2001
New chairman of the GOP.

Michael_Steele.jpg


Interesting....
RNC elects first black chairman

Posted: 04:07 PM ET

WASHINGTON (CNN) - Michael Steele, a former Maryland lieutenant governor, was elected chairman of the Republican National Committee on Friday.

Steele becomes the first African-American to head the RNC.



WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Michael Steele, a former Maryland lieutenant governor, was elected chairman of the Republican National Committee on Friday.

art.michaelsteelemd.gi.jpg

Michael Steele was chosen Friday as the first African-American leader of the Republican Party.

corner_wire_BL.gif


Steele, the first African-American to hold the post, defeated South Carolina GOP Chairman Katon Dawson, 91-77, in the final round of voting among the RNC's 168 members. Only 86 votes were needed.

"This is our opportunity. I cannot do this by myself," he told the crowd at the annual RNC meeting Friday. "God bless you, and God bless our party. ... It's going to be a new day."

Steele also told his fellow party members that it will be a "great honor to spar" with President Obama.

For the duration of his campaign, Steele fought perceptions that he was too moderate to lead the party because of his blue-state roots and his former membership in the Republican Leadership Council, a group that sought to curb the influence of social conservatives in the party.

"For so long, we've allowed the Democrats to define us, we've allowed the media to define us, and so it's important for us to begin to establish with clarity who we are, what we believe as we begin to go out and take, I think, a brand new message to the American people," he said Friday.
video.gif
Watch Steele's remarks to the RNC »

Steele brings a national profile to the committee, having shot to fame in the political world during an underdog Senate bid in 2006 distinguished by a series of clever TV commercials. He has since become a fixture on cable talk shows, experience that boosted his reputation as the best communicator among the field of RNC candidates.
Earlier Friday, Republican National Committee Chairman Mike Duncan, who was elected to lead the committee in 2007, dropped his re-election bid, telling committee members: "Obviously the winds of change are blowing here at the RNC."
Duncan rose to address the committee after three disappointing rounds of balloting in the chairman's election. He bled votes on every successive ballot, his support trickling to the other candidates in the race.

Despite the sometimes contentious nature of the campaign and criticism that the party suffered with him at the helm, Duncan told the crowd the race had been worth it.

"I thought this would be good for the party," he said. "And I think it has been."

Duncan earned a noisy round of applause when he said running the committee "has truly been the highlight of my life."

Former Ohio Secretary of State Ken Blackwell also ended his run Friday, throwing his support to Steele, a fellow African-American candidate.

Blackwell had been in last place after four rounds of voting.

"I told you last night that in elections, there are two ways that you change outcomes: You either change the composition of the electorate, or you can change the attitude of the electorate," he said Friday.

"My fellow Republicans and members of the RNC, I cannot change the composition of this electorate. Nor would I want to. I do want to influence your perspective and your attitude at this moment in history. We must be a party that makes good the promise of Lincoln. We must unleash a new, a new birth of freedom," Blackwell said.

Also on Friday, Michigan GOP chairman Saul Anuzis ended his bid to head the national party. He did not endorse either of the remaining candidates.

"It's been a great honor," he said. "I have enjoyed every minute."

With Republicans out of the White House and in the minority in both houses of Congress for the first time since 1994, the new chairman will have an uncommonly powerful role in revitalizing the beleaguered party.

"What counts now, quite frankly, is competence more than change," said Massachusetts committee member Ron Kaufman, who backed Duncan's re-election bid. "People want a chairman who can run the building, raise the money and spend it wisely, and that becomes more important to folks than just change for change's sake."

Duncan had garnered more public endorsements from RNC members than any of his opponents and had run a sophisticated re-election campaign. However, many in the committee were ready for a clean break from the soft-spoken Kentuckian, who managed to raise $400 million during a difficult 2008 cycle.

Duncan, tapped in 2007 to succeed Ken Mehlman, is also associated with former President George W. Bush and sat atop the party through an election in which Republicans hemorrhaged congressional seats for the second consecutive cycle.

Some party members want the new chairman to change with the times to win back disaffected voters, while others are convinced the party must stress basic conservative principles like small government and lower taxes.

With so many considerations on the table and opinions differing widely among the membership, no candidate emerged early as the true front-runner. As a result, the race had, at times, turned sour. Each contender was the victim of e-mail salvos laden with opposition research that appeared in member inboxes almost daily in recent weeks, sometimes anonymously.

Dawson presided over of a string of GOP successes in South Carolina, from the state house on up to last year's pivotal Republican presidential primary.

He boosted his prospects earlier in January, but a number of party members said they didn't savor the thought of having a white Southerner as the face of the party in the age of Obama. In September, he resigned from a country club with a whites-only restriction in its deed.


http://www.cnn.com/2009/P...0/rnc.chairman/index.html
 
ploy?
laugh.gif


but in all seriousness, congrats to him, hopefully he can get them back to where they should be, fiscal conservatives.
 
This guy is a true conservative. It was a very tight race, there were 11 candidates for the GOP seat.

Congratulations Mr. Steele. I might consider going to the conference in D.C. now.

pimp.gif
pimp.gif
pimp.gif
 
His views are no different than the previous leaders of the GOP are they?
nerd.gif


Talk about taking a step backwards
 
Originally Posted by Frankie Valentino

I wonder why...

word
smh.gif
i aint giving congrats to this man because if obama was never elected then he would've never received this position to lead
 
Originally Posted by LifeLessons

Originally Posted by Frankie Valentino

I wonder why...

word
smh.gif
i aint giving congrats to this man because if obama was never elected then he would've never received this position to lead


By that logic if Bush wasn't elected, Obama would have never been chosen to lead. Regardless of how it came about, it is positive change.
 
There's only really one party... This whole two party system is a joke. You vote for one until they mess up. Then the other party gets voted in... It'sso flawed.
 
Originally Posted by kix4kix

Originally Posted by LifeLessons

Originally Posted by Frankie Valentino

I wonder why...

word
smh.gif
i aint giving congrats to this man because if obama was never elected then he would've never received this position to lead


By that logic if Bush wasn't elected, Obama would have never been chosen to lead. Regardless of how it came about, it is positive change.
nahh man....democratic party has obama so now the GOP trying to make some news by pulling this stuff....republicans never gave 2 f's aboutblacks and now they're trying to receive some sort of acceptance from us (majority)
 
don't like Michael Steele's views at all, but i guess its good to see another black man doing his thing... oh, and MD represent
pimp.gif


Strange.. I have a theory but I'd prolly sound crazy

i have a theory too...

the RNC KNOWS that it will spend the next four years attacking Obama with everything they've got... yet, if McCain's campaign was any precursor, theyare afraid people will label them as racist for attacking Obama so hard.

the "future" of the Republican Party wants to be able to incorporate not just old white men, but all races and ethnicities, young and old. because ofthis, they know have to shake that age-old "racist" label at all costs.

so what do they do? they appoint a black guy as their leader, so that in the future when they make up all of their bull %!@# about Obama, they can't becalled racist because it's a black man saying it.they'll just say "how can we be racist, our party leader is black!" in the meantime, thereal powerful RNC people behind the scenes will be using Steele as their puppet. Brilliant...
grin.gif
tired.gif
 
Originally Posted by DAYTONA 5000

Originally Posted by KICKINHEADZ1010

Originally Posted by Mangudai954

Strange.. I have a theory but I'd prolly sound crazy
This man speaks the truth.
He hasn't even said anything though.
laugh.gif


but I would probably cosign it though

If we let the theory out of the box then it'll probably sound crazy. That's the point.
 
Originally Posted by DOWNTOWN43

don't like Michael Steele's views at all, but i guess its good to see another black man doing his thing... oh, and MD represent
pimp.gif


Strange.. I have a theory but I'd prolly sound crazy

i have a theory too...

the RNC KNOWS that it will spend the next four years attacking Obama with everything they've got... yet, if McCain's campaign was any precursor, they are afraid people will label them as racist for attacking Obama so hard.

the "future" of the Republican Party wants to be able to incorporate not just old white men, but all races and ethnicities, young and old. because of this, they know have to shake that age-old "racist" label at all costs.

so what do they do? they appoint a black guy as their leader, so that in the future when they make up all of their bull %!@# about Obama, they can't be called racist because it's a black man saying it.they'll just say "how can we be racist, our party leader is black!" in the meantime, the real powerful RNC people behind the scenes will be using Steele as their puppet. Brilliant...
grin.gif
tired.gif




Nice analysis. Also important to take note is that following the election, the Republicans split into two different camps.
Camp 1 : Head back to their roots and support Palins eventual run for office
Camp 2 : Accept that old politics are a thing of the past, and change with the times.

I think this proves which camp won at that conference.
 
You guys are full of it. So now he's a puppet? I could easily say the same thing about Obama and the Democrats but I won't. Steele has had momentumsince 2004 ironically when Obama got his foot in the door.

What is this appoint? He was barely winning last week. He was voted in. He almost lost, that's how close the race was.
 
I mean, I knew black people were trendy from new jack swinging to hip-hop to fashion to slaguistics.... but now they WANT __s inpolitics? The hell is going on here?
 
Originally Posted by RellNye

You guys are full of it. So now he's a puppet? I could easily say the same thing about Obama and the Democrats but I won't. Steele has had momentum since 2004 ironically when Obama got his foot in the door.

What is this appoint? He was barely winning last week. He was voted in. He almost lost, that's how close the race was.

All politicians are puppets. That's the name of the game. It's just that "We the People..." are rarely the ones holding the strings thesedays. YES, Obama is a puppet. YES, this guy is a puppet. Yes, the cynic in me believes that just like with the Palin push, the GOP is only pretending to careabout minority achievements to combat the Dems who may or may not care themselves. BUT, remebmer...the Dems pretended to care first. And the first person to tell the story has the most credibility. Either way though, this is a momentous occasion. Blackpeople sit at the head seats of BOTH major parties.
pimp.gif
 
HOLY +*+@! ... thats my man right there ... i cant believe he actually made it this far in politics ... when they tried to reform me when i was younger he wasthe dude who sat me down and tried to get me to practice my faith more ... he belongs to my church and i saw him at the mall a couple of months ago and said hito him like he was a normal guy ... i may be able to get a job in politics after all ...

and for those of you saying "i wonder why" and blah blah blah ... he is the ONLY person aside from jindal that can hold his own when put up againstdemocrats under pressure and actually sound intelligent ... he was going around all over the media outlets including the ultra liberal, defending the GOP andstating his case ... this is a very very very very very good look for republicans ...

If somehow he becomes the nominee in 4 years he will ABSOLUTELY DISMANTLE Obama ... im calling it right now ... if it is a Steele/Palin, Steele/Rice,Steele/whoever ticket, they will take over the presidency in a heartbeat ... in fact, it wont veen be close ... yall think Obama is articulate and captivating,wait till you get to know my man Steele ...
 
Back
Top Bottom