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GOP to club: No donkeys allowedHeadquarters scolds Galveston chapter after it hosted Democrat
The Houston Chronicle ^ | Nov. 30, 2007, 11:15PM | ALAN BERNSTEIN

Posted on 12/01/2007 7:38:43 AM PST by GulfBreeze

The Texas Republican Party is reminding its auxiliary clubs about a cardinal rule: Keep those Democrats and other non-Republicans away from your microphones and stages; you're not in the business of boosting the opposition.

But the warning has created a near-revolt in at least one corner.

One of the events that prompted the reminder took place in early summer, when state Rep. Craig Eiland addressed the Galveston Island Pachyderm Club.

Pachyderm Clubs — there are 30 in Texas with about 2,000 members — are named after the Grand Old Party's mascot, the elephant.

Eiland is a Democrat — in the mascot world, a donkey.

His speech, following the end of the 2007 legislative session, focused on changes in state law that affect the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston, according to audience members, and it included praise for Republican lawmakers from the Galveston area, such as state Sens. Kyle Janek and Mike Jackson.

Nevertheless, Eiland's turn as guest speaker caused a stir that reached GOP headquarters in Austin.

It's debatable whether Eiland's speech was a shot in the partisan political wars, said state GOP coalitions and auxiliary committee chairman Mandy Tschoepe of Plano, "but we received complaints from grass-roots people in that area."

Those elephants' beef, according to Tschoepe, was that "when a Republican club gives a Democratic official a venue to speak, it is detriment to recruiting someone" to run for the office as a Republican.

Call for education

So in early November, Tschoepe wrote to the Pachyderm clubs, the state's College Republicans chapters and other such groups with this instruction: "When providing a forum or support for candidates, limit the support to Republican candidates in partisan elections."

Otherwise, she explained in an interview, the organizations will risk being dropped as official auxiliaries of the Texas party and lose a seat on the state GOP executive committee.

The warning didn't sit well with one Pachyderm club.

"We didn't take kindly to being told who we should and should not invite," said Dickinson lawyer Kerry Neves, president of the Galveston Island club as well as chairman of the Galveston County Republican Party.

He said he will confer soon with the club board about dropping its official affiliation with the Texas GOP. "We probably should tell them we don't think we can operate under this approach and go our separate way," Neves said.

As he explained, the National Federation of the Grand Order of Pachyderm Clubs Inc. is a Republican organization that promotes Republican candidates and conservative stances.

But the organization's charter also calls on the clubs to "promote practical political education and the dissemination of information on our political system."

If Eiland had already drawn a Republican opponent for 2008, Neves said, he might not have been invited to report on legislative changes, but, "I don't think it's unwise to have him talk about what happened in this last session."

'A higher standard'

Lawyer Robert Shults, president of the Greater Houston Pachyderm Club, said he never saw Tschoepe's letter and that the speakers issue has never come up at his organization because "we don't have Democratic candidates come and speak."

But, he added, "It seems to me to be a tempest in a teapot. If a Democrat was elected district attorney and we felt the need to have some information provided to the clubs about what was going on in the district attorney's office, I am not sure we wouldn't invite the sitting DA."

Tschoepe, a College Republicans national officer when she attended the University of Texas, said she has seen ample evidence that the Pachyderms and other auxiliary organizations help expand and promote the Republican Party.

As for the Pachyderm clubs, "We seem to have come to an understanding that their national mission is to educate voters," she said. "But if they want to maintain their status with the Texas party, we have a higher standard."

The state party will next review its club affiliations in December 2008.

alan.bernstein@chron.com


TOPICS: Politics/Elections; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: galveston; houston; pachyderms; republican
OK. I understand that an individual organization wants the right to invite whoever they will. However, this club is CHARTERED as an affiliate of the GOP. There are other cases of inviting even MORE rabid speakers than Eiland. This threat from Kerry Neves, GOP County Chairman, jumps out at me though.

The warning didn't sit well with one Pachyderm club.

"We didn't take kindly to being told who we should and should not invite," said Dickinson lawyer Kerry Neves, president of the Galveston Island club as well as chairman of the Galveston County Republican Party.

He said he will confer soon with the club board about dropping its official affiliation with the Texas GOP. "We probably should tell them we don't think we can operate under this approach and go our separate way," Neves said.

1 posted on 12/01/2007 7:38:44 AM PST by GulfBreeze
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To: weegee; humblegunner; stevie_d_64; anymouse; YCTHouston

ping


2 posted on 12/01/2007 7:42:11 AM PST by GulfBreeze
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To: GulfBreeze
Dickinson lawyer Kerry Neves,

= RINO moron lawyer!

3 posted on 12/01/2007 7:49:11 AM PST by sausageseller (http://coolblue.typepad.com/the_cool_blue_blog/)
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To: GulfBreeze

What about guys like Orson Scott Card, or Zell Miller?


4 posted on 12/01/2007 7:53:35 AM PST by wastedyears (One Marine vs. 550 consultants. Sounds like good odds to me.)
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To: molette67; NavyDude
But the warning has created a near-revolt in at least one corner.

Which corner? The Demoratic corner in the Republican Party?

"We didn't take kindly to being told who we should and should not invite," said Dickinson lawyer Kerry Neves, president of the Galveston Island club as well as chairman of the Galveston County Republican Party.

And I don't take kindly to allowing demorats to infiltrate the GOP.

"We probably should tell them we don't think we can operate under this approach and go our separate way,"

dont let the door hit you in the keyster. See Ya!

5 posted on 12/01/2007 7:56:58 AM PST by do the dhue (They've got us surrounded again. The poor bastards. General Creighton Abrams)
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To: do the dhue

I think after 1994 the GOP was sloppy about who they allowed in the Party. I think a lot of these RINO types jumped into the Party during the 1990s just because it looked like the only way they could win any political office.


6 posted on 12/01/2007 8:23:18 AM PST by MNJohnnie (What drug pushers do with drugs, politicians do with government subsides)
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To: wastedyears
Neither Miller or Card are official representatives of the Democrat Party, this speaker, as an elected Democrat, is an official representative of their party.
7 posted on 12/01/2007 8:24:18 AM PST by MNJohnnie (What drug pushers do with drugs, politicians do with government subsides)
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To: MNJohnnie

Miller was the 79th Governor of Georgia.


8 posted on 12/01/2007 9:05:22 AM PST by wastedyears (One Marine vs. 550 consultants. Sounds like good odds to me.)
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To: GulfBreeze
I’m sure the Chronicle took some quotes out of context and slanted the story to suit their purpose of exacerbating the division within our ranks, but this is an issue that our local Republican Party needs to address and fast to keep it from getting out of hand.

Having unchallenged Democrat officials speak is one thing, but providing a Republican forum for unelected Democrat candidates running against Republican candidates is not appropriate from a logical perspective even without official guidance from the Party.

9 posted on 12/01/2007 2:39:55 PM PST by anymouse
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To: GulfBreeze

The Pachyderms are idiots and should lose their affiliation.

It’s also sadly unsurprising that Kyle Janek and his good buddy Craig Eiland are part of this story. With friends like Kyle Janek, who needs enemies?


10 posted on 12/01/2007 5:54:33 PM PST by YCTHouston
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To: GulfBreeze

Kinda sad, and yet pathetic in a way...

Personally I think our strength is in these smaller “clubs” and organizations that don’t get caught up in too much of the glitz and glam of candidates and elected officials...

Sure its good to speak to a friendly, agreeable crowd...But I find it to be a good thing to build up a candidate or elected offical to be “critical” and very opinionated to them as well...

The grassroots is like that, and what better mechanism to try and keep the party functional than through this level of politics...

Just my take on this...


11 posted on 12/02/2007 5:31:55 AM PST by stevie_d_64 (Houston Area Texans (I've always been hated))
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To: GulfBreeze
He said he will confer soon with the club board about dropping its official affiliation with the Texas GOP. "We probably should tell them we don't think we can operate under this approach and go our separate way," Neves said.


Yeah, that kinda bothered me too...I think it would be good to inform him if he doesn't like it he can take his toys out of the sand box and go play "Independently" if he desires...

Never thought it would get this bad...
12 posted on 12/02/2007 5:35:12 AM PST by stevie_d_64 (Houston Area Texans (I've always been hated))
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To: GulfBreeze
He said he will confer soon with the club board about dropping its official affiliation with the Texas GOP. "We probably should tell them we don't think we can operate under this approach and go our separate way," Neves said.


Yeah, that kinda bothered me too...I think it would be good to inform him if he doesn't like it he can take his toys out of the sand box and go play "Independently" if he desires...

Never thought it would get this bad...
13 posted on 12/02/2007 5:35:12 AM PST by stevie_d_64 (Houston Area Texans (I've always been hated))
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To: wastedyears
"What about guys like Orson Scott Card, or Zell Miller?"

You DID note this issue relates to Texas, right?

14 posted on 12/02/2007 8:42:17 PM PST by Redbob
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