Yes, contrary to what I seem to read everywhere, we are neither dragging our feet moribund in our loss, searching around for a future, or living in denial of the Herculean work we have to do. To a person, we seem to recognize the challenge of facing up to a popular president willing to do anything to gain, keep and radically expand his power: fund a campaign with anonymous donations, appoint a group charged multiple times with perpetrating voter-fraud to count the Census, send David Axelrod on TV to claim the “Tea Parties” were “dangerous” and, as a parting shot at the idea of a free market, refuse to take repayments –with interest- from banks who neither wanted nor needed our tax money. When I stepped into the headquarters of the Republican National Committee on April 6th, it was fifteen days after I met Chairman Steele and, sixteen days after I last spoke the words, “I could never work in D.C.”
I have never been happier to have been wrong: I do work in D.C., more importantly, I work with some of the most brilliant, principled and focused people I have met.
These people are also excited.
Yes, contrary to what I seem to read everywhere, we are neither dragging our feet moribund in our loss, searching around for a future, or living in denial of the Herculean work we have to do. To a person, we seem to recognize the challenge of facing up to a popular President willing to do anything to gain, keep and radically expand his power: fund a campaign with anonymous donations, appoint a group charged multiple times with perpetrating voter-fraud to count the census, send David Axelrod on TV to claim the “Tea Parties” were “unhealthy” and, as a parting shot at the idea of a free market, refuse to take repayments-–with interest--from banks who neither wanted nor needed our tax money. Our elected leaders will continue to offer principled plans which strike a stark contrast to the president’s manifesto of spend, borrow, and pay favors to supporters (then repeat at will). We, meanwhile, will do our part. My particular role is to work with a small bit of the RNC Universe, our newly renamed New Media Division. We are blessed to be buttressed by a much larger group of technomedia experts: our Tech Summit participants; their sage guidance informed the path we have charted for the effort. I hope they will continue to lend their hearts, hands and minds to this effort. With their advice freshly read, last week we held well over sixteen hours of meetings to determine the partners for the new digital presence of the RNC. This week, we decide. Next week, we plan and build. We are anxious to get started. The partners who have made the final cut for review are also jazzed by the challenge and seem to be aware of the difficulty ahead as we face the most power-hungry administration in our lifetimes. That, as much as anything, has been reason for me to celebrate: the talent and commitment of the republican, digital media professionals who came to D.C. to play a part in this effort and the many that have lent advice freely through our social media hubs.
If you find yourself aching to be involved this is your invitation. Of all the things we aspire to create, the one for which we have the most hope is a real connection between us, the small staff here in D.C., with you: the big, collective conservative brain out there in the real world. Tap us on Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, at events like the Young Republicans Convention. Put your excitement to work.
More later.
I have never been happier to have been wrong: I do work in D.C., more importantly, I work with some of the most brilliant, principled and focused people I have met.
These people are also excited.
Yes, contrary to what I seem to read everywhere, we are neither dragging our feet moribund in our loss, searching around for a future, or living in denial of the Herculean work we have to do. To a person, we seem to recognize the challenge of facing up to a popular President willing to do anything to gain, keep and radically expand his power: fund a campaign with anonymous donations, appoint a group charged multiple times with perpetrating voter-fraud to count the census, send David Axelrod on TV to claim the “Tea Parties” were “unhealthy” and, as a parting shot at the idea of a free market, refuse to take repayments-–with interest--from banks who neither wanted nor needed our tax money. Our elected leaders will continue to offer principled plans which strike a stark contrast to the president’s manifesto of spend, borrow, and pay favors to supporters (then repeat at will). We, meanwhile, will do our part. My particular role is to work with a small bit of the RNC Universe, our newly renamed New Media Division. We are blessed to be buttressed by a much larger group of technomedia experts: our Tech Summit participants; their sage guidance informed the path we have charted for the effort. I hope they will continue to lend their hearts, hands and minds to this effort. With their advice freshly read, last week we held well over sixteen hours of meetings to determine the partners for the new digital presence of the RNC. This week, we decide. Next week, we plan and build. We are anxious to get started. The partners who have made the final cut for review are also jazzed by the challenge and seem to be aware of the difficulty ahead as we face the most power-hungry administration in our lifetimes. That, as much as anything, has been reason for me to celebrate: the talent and commitment of the republican, digital media professionals who came to D.C. to play a part in this effort and the many that have lent advice freely through our social media hubs.
If you find yourself aching to be involved this is your invitation. Of all the things we aspire to create, the one for which we have the most hope is a real connection between us, the small staff here in D.C., with you: the big, collective conservative brain out there in the real world. Tap us on Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, at events like the Young Republicans Convention. Put your excitement to work.
More later.

