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State Rep. Laura Brod, a delegate to a national political convention for the first time, said Republicans meeting in St. Paul this week need to demonstrate that they’re still the party of ideas.
Pat Christman


The politically active Breitbarth family in Fairmont will have three members at the Republican National Convention in St. Paul this week. Neal Breitbarth is a delegate, Juleen is a volunteer and their daughter Rebekah — a recent Bethany Lutheran College graduate — was hired this summer by RNC organizers to serve as a press aide.
/ Courtesy of the Breitbarth family


Jon Kovaciny of Mankato volunteered for Republican candidate Ron Paul leading up to the Feb. 5 caucuses, and now the first-time political activist is volunteering at the Republican National Convention Wednesday and Thursday in St. Paul.
File photo


Published August 30, 2008 11:37 pm - The Republican National Convention, which begins Monday in St. Paul, is a magnet for party activists in southern Minnesota.

St. Paul convention thrills area Republicans
A chance to make state, party shine

By Mark Fischenich
Free Press Staff Writer

State Rep. Laura Brod will be there as a first-time delegate, a John McCain supporter and part of the unofficial welcoming committee to thousands of Republicans who will be arriving in Minnesota today and Monday.

Neal Breitbarth will be there as a conservative who was originally skeptical of McCain but is now increasingly comfortable with the man the Republicans will make their presidential nominee in St. Paul this week.

Jon Kovaciny will be there as an unrepentant Ron Paul supporter, rejected as a delegate but still eager enough to see the Republican National Convention in person that he became a volunteer at the Xcel Center to be near the action.

“What a tremendous opportunity this is for our state — not just for Republicans, but for our state,” said Brod, a New Prague Republican who represents Le Sueur County and part of Sibley County in the state House. “It’s such a wonderful opportunity to showcase our state.”

Brod has risen to a leadership role in the state House and in her party, but this is her first national convention.

The key to a successful convention, Brod said, will be to demonstrate to Americans that the GOP hasn’t run short of solutions to the nation’s challenges.

“The Republican Party is a party of ideas,” she said. “I don’t think we’ve done a good job of communicating those ideas.”

Although Minnesota Republicans favored Mitt Romney in the Feb. 5 caucuses, and there were factions who strongly supported Rudy Giuliani, Ron Paul and Mike Huckabee, the party is now in harmony, according to Brod.

“The Republicans are for the most part pretty well unified behind John McCain,” she said.

Breitbarth, a Fairmont businessman, concedes it took him a while to warm to McCain. In fact, Breitbarth wasn’t fully persuaded until seeing the Arizona senator on the televised forum two weeks ago from California’s Saddleback Church.

Breitbarth ran for a delegate spot last spring when he decided the Minnesota GOP was in the process of sending too few true conservatives to the RNC. But Breitbarth said McCain at Saddleback, talking about his opposition to abortion and other issues important to social conservatives, was clearly speaking from his heart.

“That really did a lot in strengthening my conviction to see to it that John McCain is elected,” he said.

Breitbarth will be attending his third national convention after helping nominate Bob Dole in San Diego in 1996 and George W. Bush in Philadelphia in 2000. He’s no less thrilled to be driving a couple of hours to an RNC as opposed to flying to the East or West coasts.

“No, it’s actually more exciting,” he said.



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