
Sunday
At this moment, Joshua Workman might be the most sought-after North Carolinian anywhere in the country. Hair spiked and gelled, sporting a pierced tongue and a nipple ring, he has been fielding so many party invitations that he has to run a spreadsheet program to keep track of his social calendar. The phone rings in Workmanโs Philadelphia hotel suite: Itโs ABC News, asking if George Stephanopolous can grab a few minutes of his time tomorrow. As he chats with someone from the network, an MTV reporter in baggy khakis sits at a table, waiting to film Workmanโs night on the town.
At 19, Workman is one of the youngest delegates to the Republican National Convention, and heโs an essential piece of the partyโs marketing campaign. At a gathering where, according to one poll, there are more delegates in their 70s than in their 30s, GOP leaders want to convince America that theirs is the party of the future. The presidential nomineeโs 24-year-old nephew, George P. Bush, is barnstorming the country to stir up the youth vote, inviting comparisons to a certain Latin pop star with his winning smile and dark, dreamy looks. (The New York Times dubbed him โthe thinking womanโs Ricky Martin.โ) Tomorrowโs opening night will feature not just a rapper, but also a boy band crooning, โA-B-C-D, I love you, do you love me?โ And as the frenzy builds through the week, the Republicans will trot out Jon Secada, the hip-wiggling Cuban-born singer who will look out at the delegates, let out a throaty growl, and croon, โI can feel your body!โ (One newspaper described Secada as โthe next Ricky Martin.โ Note the pattern.)
Workman represents the best and brightest of this new generation. Raised in London, Ontario, he graduated high school two years ahead of schedule and came to North Carolina on a scholarship to Lees-McCrae College in Banner Elk. He skis competitively and plays lacrosse. As a freshman, he was elected president of the campus chapter of the College Republicans, and heโs already a veteran of numerous GOP campaigns. Heโs majoring in criminal justice and psychology, and plans to go to law school. He recently became a U.S. citizen.
Heโs so in demand that the Republican Party has assigned a staff member full-time this week to schedule his media interviews. But tonight heโs mine. Iโve agreed to shuttle him to his second party of the nightโa General Motors bash featuring Hank Williams Jr.โin exchange for an interview, and soon weโll be leaving the hotel. I want to know how a middle-class Canadian kid, the son of moderate parents who favored Bill Clinton in โ96, became a Republican activist at 16.
It seems that when other boys were thinking about girls and music, Workman had already started worrying about liberal social policy. โIt started with economics,โ he tells me. โI started thinking about the welfare system, and how people donโt act responsibly because theyโve got it to fall back on. Thereโs such a great economy in our world today that people shouldnโt have this crutch that they rely on just to be lazy.โ
โHave you met people on welfare?โ I ask.
โIโve got friends that are on food stamps right now,โ he says. โOne of my friends is on it just as a total scam. He fills out a one-page application and gets 30 bucks a week or something like that. They take it out of our local Pantry store so he can go in and buy soda and chips and party stuff.โ
After learning about welfare reform at 16, โI started thinking about other thingsโlike whether minimum wage helps workers or kills jobs. Right now, Iโm definitely leaning toward the idea that it kills jobs.โ Like some of his partyโs staunchest free-marketeers, Workman thinks the law should be scrapped altogether. No, he says, he wouldnโt work for less than the current minimum wage. But if someone offered him a $4.50-an-hour job, heโd simply look elsewhere. โThatโs supply and demand,โ he explains.
โYou must feel at odds with your country of birth,โ I say.
โYes and no. I love Canada. Iโve got a maple-leaf tattoo. I like the fact that itโs safe there, that you donโt have to think about getting mugged.โ
โCanada also has national health care, has a more liberal immigration policy,โ I note, and Workman interrupts me. โCanadaโs pretty liberal,โ he agrees. โNo handguns allowed. The only time you have a gun is if youโre a hunter, or if youโre a cop. I donโt think thatโs a good policy. If the wrong person was elected, the wrong party came to power, not having arms would be a major benefit for a dictatorship or someone of poor moral character to take over. If only the police and the army have guns, the governmentโs going to do what they want. If people have guns, then we have a means to fight.โ
Weโre interrupted by a knock on the door of his hotel suite. Itโs Workmanโs friend Celia Phillips, chair of the Delaware College Republicans. Sheโs an attractive woman with long dark hair and an enthusiastic squeal about all matters Republican.
โHave a drink if you want,โ Workman says. He motions her over to his mini-bar, which has an impressive array of beverages: Crown Royal, Jose Cuervo Especial, Makerโs Mark, Absolut vodka. He pours himself a whiskey and Coke. โHey Josh,โ I say. โWhatโs the drinking age?โ
โI donโt know,โ he says.
โAsk me no questions, Iโll tell you no lies,โ chimes in the guy from MTV.
Weโre all ready to leave for the Hank Williams Jr. bash when another journalist calls. The delegate settles into the sofa, singing the praises of Gov. George W. Bush. โHe totally attracts people, young people especially,โ Workman says. โHeโs definitely pulling people in. Hispanics, minorities, women, everyone possible. The next eight years under his presidency are going to be great.โ He looks at his guests and rolls his eyeballs.
โYouโre eating into my social life,โ Phillips calls out, but now Workman is opining about Dick Cheney. Phillipsโ cell phone rings. She takes one call, then another, and by the time Workman hangs up, his friend is chattering away. โYouโre cutting into my social time,โ he says, mocking her.
Finally, the phones stop long enough for us to leave. But getting to the General Motors party proves difficult. With Philadelphia under high security, our exit is blocked by police. Workman directs me to the left-hand shoulder of the exit ramp, where I dodge flares to find a stopping place. He flashes his delegate badge, and an officer blurts out directions for a detour, then waves us impatiently away. As I merge back onto Interstate 95โno easy featโWorkman starts laughing. โWouldnโt that be a sweet story?โ he chortles. โNineteen-year-old youngest delegate serves jail time first night in Philadelphia. Philadelphia cops caught on video beating suspect.โ Phillipsโ phone goes off again. โHey, howโs the boat show?โ she asks. โOh shโฆhold on one second. Hello? Hey, how are you? Weโre on our way, but we canโt get to the Navy Yard. How did you get there? Shit, I know, we just asked a cop, and we didnโt get the best directions.โ
Our trip is starting to resemble After Hours, the movie in which Griffin Dunne spends all night trying to get home from a date-turned-sour, only to be stymied by one obstacle after another. Roads are blocked. Promised intersections never materialize. Workman jumps out of the car to ask directions of a Secret Service agent, and comes back smirking. โHeโs being a bit of a dick,โ the delegate reports. โHe said, โYou can walk, but itโs like five miles. Tell the girl to take off her heels and start walking.’โ
But Workman is determined to get to the party. โAt least this thing goes late, so weโll get to hear Hank,โ Workman says. โThatโs all I want to hear, a little bit of Hank.โ
โDo you?โ Phillips asks.
โI love Hank,โ Workman says.
โOh really?โ Phillips asks.
โYeah. Iโm a redneck.โ
Phillips leans over to give me directions, but sheโs interrupted by Workman. โMan, credentials here will get you into anywhere. The Secret Service guy was like, โYou can go wherever you want. Itโs like you got the key to the city.โ Itโs like yeah!โ Phillips teases Workman for asking another police officer for an escort to the party, but Workman just shrugs. โI was like, โWeโre totally lost. Just drive us over there.โ I was like, โWeโll follow you.โ When I picked up Elizabeth Dole, we had this sweet, sweet police entourage. It was awesome.โ
We hit another blockade, which forces us to make a U-turn. There are pedestrians crossing the street. โHit โem,โ Workman says. โTheyโre protesters.โ Finally, after an hour, we find ourselves at a hangar-like cruise-ship terminal that has been decorated in patriotic colors for the evening. The place is crammed with delegates and their guests, and on stage is Hank Williams Jr., bearded and husky, wearing a black T-shirt and a spangled cowboy hat, singing away:
Iโm a pissed-off Republican.
Iโm a P.O.R.
Iโm a pissed-off Republican.
Thatโs what I are.
Thereโs a sushi bar and a margarita bar, platters of chocolate rum balls and bowls of homemade peach ice cream. Workman lines up for a frozen strawberry margaritaโno one checks his IDโand before long, he and Phillips disappear into the throbbing, dancing, sweating Republican crowd.
Monday
โI was talking to a younger delegate last night,โ I say, โwho wants to see an abolition of the minimum wage, because he feels it stifles job creation.โ Iโm sitting with David Gouge, an officer in his local College Republicans, inside a clubhouse overlooking the Philadelphia Phillies baseball field. Weโre at a reception for Tar Heel Republicans sponsored by Sprint and CP&L. Iโm relaying my conversation with Joshua Workman, not mentioning the delegate by name. Gouge, an earnest, ruddy-faced young man with stick-out ears and deferential manners, seems positively repelled.
โI donโt understand that,โ says the 21-year-old college junior, who is helping staff the North Carolina delegation. โSo you can pay them just as little as you want?โ
โIf the market supports $2.50-an-hour jobs, you can do that, because then you can possibly create twice as many jobs.โ I explain.
โWell, then maybe you can ask him if he wants to work for $2.80 an hour,โ says Gouge, โand see what he says.โ
At first blush, David Gouge seems like the Republican Everyman. The son of an automobile dealer from Thomasville, he attended Virginia Military Institute before transferring to High Point University, where he now majors in political science and philosophy. He hopes to be a lawyer, believes in serving his country, and admires the heck out of John McCain. โHe went to a war that may not have been very popular, and did what our elected officials told us to,โ Gouge says reverently of the Arizona senator. โSo many times, we donโt see that what keeps us from a two-bit dictatorship is the fact that our military commanders are under the authority of our elected officials.โ
Interviews like this can be scripted in advance, or so I might have thought. But sitting at the table overlooking the baseball diamond, Gouge keeps taking me places that I donโt expect to go with a Republican.
Growing up, he tells me, โI wasnโt exposed to many different religions or to any kind of racial differences. I think that really hampered my world view. It really gave me a lot of prejudices that I had to break through.โ It wasnโt until college that Gouge learned to question his childhood assumptions, and the first to go was his complacency about economic justice. โOne thing that really has molded a lot of my political thinking is the growing disparity between the rich and the poor, not only in the United States but all over the world,โ he says. โWith the technology age, with the big stock market, the rich people are getting so much richer, and pulling up the middle class with them. But the people who rely on skilled labor, it seems like theyโre getting poorer. People making minimum wage right now are below the poverty line, and thatโs not right.โ A waitress comes by offering chicken satรฉ hors dโoeurves. He waves her away politely.
โSo far,โ I note, โyouโre talking like a leftist.โ
โSo far, I am,โ he says. โI donโt believe in everything thatโs on the Republican Partyโs platform. Itโs like Ronald Reagan said: If you agree with me 80 percent of the time, we can work out the other 20 percent. Thatโs how I feel about the Republican Party. I feel like, honestly, thereโs a bunch of big money in both parties. To deny that would be ignorant. We have to realize that a lot of policies are making poor people poorer: Policies like NAFTA and free trade, that take companies out of our country, put them in other countries because of cheaper labor, and donโt give the American worker a chance. Maybe heโs not intelligent enough to go to college. Maybe heโs not fortunate enough to go to college. Maybe his parents werenโt rich enough to send him. It doesnโt give that person a chance, and I think thatโs very wrong.โ
So where is Gougeโs 80 percent agreement with Republican ideology? Thus far, he hasnโt said anything particularly conservative, yet he clearly considers himself in step with George W. Bush. Well, for one, thereโs their shared opposition to gun controlโโmaybe thatโs just the Southern upbringing in me,โ he says. Then thereโs his opposition to abortion. โAnother big part of my upbringing was the church,โ explains the Methodist. โI really feel like the Republican Party has the best venue for a modern-day Christian who desires to become involved in politics.โ
Again, his words veer off to unexpected placesโcertainly not toward the Christian Coalitionโs brand of religion. โAs a Christian, I say that God created everyone in his likeness, and that we should love each other. The Constitution says all men are created equal. But, as we know, thatโs not true. We donโt see that in our everyday lives, with the Civil War, with slavery, and especially in North Carolina with the influx of the Hispanic population and the ethnic tension that they probably feel. And with women in politics: I feel like as a Christian, and as someone whoโs desiring to be true to their Constitution, they can only seek true equality. Iโm not socialist by any means, but I believe an environment is created where certain people become advantaged and certain people arenโt.โ
By the time we finish talking, I can understand why Gouge is a Republican: He supports the partyโs pro-military leanings and leans rightward on hot-button issues such as abortion. But what fascinates me is that, while he can address these issues articulately, he canโt stay there for very long before he comes back to redistributing the wealth.
Tuesday
The theme at Sottoโs restaurant in downtown Philadelphia is nautical. A giant ceramic squid clings to the ceiling above the bar, presiding over a kingdom of starfish chandeliers and seahorse wall lamps. Glass waterfalls punctuate the aquamarine walls. Solicitous servers make their rounds, offering up boiled shrimp, crab cakes and oysters on the half-shell to North Carolinaโs Republican delegates and their guests. United Airlines and U.S. Airways are picking up the tab.
The conversation is low-key and politeโbut then suddenly 50 Tar Heel noses are pressed against the restaurantโs plate-glass windows. Outside, police in riot gear are converging, with horses and squad cars and buses to cart off arrestees. A few minutes later, a knot of demonstrators rounds the corner, many of them wearing black clothing and scarves over their faces. They are protesting the mistreatment of people of color by the criminal justice system: the disproportionate number of minorities who face prison sentences, police brutality, immigrant detention centers and the death penalty. โStop the Texas killing machine,โ says one sign, referring to the steady clip of executions under Gov. Bushโs administration. โNot one more lynching,โ says another. Some of the protesters break into a run, and the police give chase. Blue lights flash everywhere.
The North Caroliniansโ eyes spin like pinwheels.
โThis is ape!โ says Joshua Workman.
โWhere is Colin Powell when you need him?โ asks Gilbert Parker III, the 25-year-old assistant director of the conservative John Locke Foundation in Raleigh.
โLooks like theyโre going to throw them in the paddy wagon,โ says another young Tar Heel. โNo harm.โ
โWell, I think itโs wonderful,โ says an older Republican woman, clearly in the minority here. โWhen you are young, you ought to do things like that. Thatโs where the energy of the world comes from.โ
Elise Mayse, a 19-year-old student at Lenoir-Rhyne College in Hickory, steps outside the restaurant to photograph the commotion, only to find that she has run out of film in her disposable camera. She comes from Kings Mountain, just on the other side of Charlotte, and has never seen anything like this. โWe still have tractors going down the road in my town,โ she says.
Mayse has been reflecting on the protesters all week. She thinks theyโve been grabbing too much attention, creating an impression that Americaโs youth are grubby, noisy radicals. She wants me to know that there are โgoodโ youth tooโconservatives like her who respect the system and love America. Like David Gouge, she is helping to staff the North Carolina delegation, and she thinks of the many interns serving the convention as examples of her generationโs finest. โThere are 200 of us in our program who are here because we want to study the government, weโre so fascinated with how it works, and we have so much faith in the process,โ she says.
Mayse doesnโt oppose protests per se. Itโs just that her parents have told her so many stories about the 1960sโwhen the nation was grappling with legalized racism and the Vietnam Warโthat the current issues seem so trivial. Thirty-five years ago, โso many Americans were being driven apart just because of the color of their skin,โ she says. โAnd people were being drafted into a war that many believed we shouldnโt be in. And this? It just seems very small, them wanting to release some guy whoโs on death row.โ Besides, she says, we should all feel lucky to live in the United States. โEven the people who say, โWeโre underpaid, weโre underprivileged,โ they are so much more privileged than many people. If you went to Africa, India, there are so many people who are poor and dying and starving. The people in America who are considered poor are rich compared to people in other countries.โ
Itโs no surprise that where the protesters see racism and harassment, Mayse sees opportunity. She grew up in an intact family, the daughter of a man who escaped his parentsโ hog farm and earned a scholarship to medical school. โMy parents always showed me that if you work through the system, then everything can work,โ she says. She was educated in first-rate schools and taught to respect authorityโand thatโs why she votes Republican. โItโs not so much being a conservative as it is being a good kid,โ she says.
As we talk, what strikes me is how little this election has to do with issues for Mayse. She seems to have no passionate political convictions. Abortion? She has friends who have had the procedure, and she thinks the issue is more complex than either side claims. โI can see both sides,โ she says. โI have not hardened my view.โ
Gun control? โI can easily see both sides. Iโm in the middle.โ
Gay rights? โIโm from a small town. It really doesnโt affect me that much. We have homosexuals, but itโs never really made a large impact.โ
Bushโs economic program? โIโm sounding really dumb. I donโt know. I didnโt really base my decision for him on his economic principles. Iโm a college student, and no college students have money.โ
School choice and charter schools? โMy parents were very, very big on the fact that I would not go to a private school. Iโm glad I went to the public school system.โ On the other hand, โeverything Bush says sounds great.โ
Campaign finance reform? โItโs a big issue, but Iโm still not formed on a lot of my opinions.โ
So why Bush? โOur country seems to be in a rut,โ Mayse says. โAlthough Gore maybe would make a good president, he will also be associated with the Clinton administration. Right now, we really need someone to come in and shake things up. I think the Republican Party can do that.โ
The rut theme has woven its way through much of the Republicansโ rhetoric this week, and it perplexes me. The economy is humming along just fine, creating unprecedented opportunities for Mayseโs generation. We are experiencing relative peace in the world. Crime is down, and the presidentโs approval ratings are high. Whatโs the rut, I ask Mayse.
She motions to the protesters outside the plate-glass window. โPeople are upset,โ she says. โPeople donโt trust the government. People have so many things that they feel theyโre not being heard about. And I think the current government is not taking care of it.โ
Thursday
The convention floor has been building to a frenzy for the last four nights, and even the normally restrained North Carolina delegation is starting to catch the spirit. David Gouge was swept up by Tuesday nightโs military theme, buoyantly singing Anchors Aweigh during a musical interlude. As Norman Schwartzkopf spoke on a video screen from the Battleship U.S.S. New JerseyโโFreedom is not cost-free. It is bought and paid for with the blood and guts and lives of veteransโโGouge jumped up from his chair, shouted โYes!โ and gave the general a private standing ovation. โI love General Schwartzkopf,โ he says. โIt definitely makes you want to thump your chest.โ
Tonight the convention floor is so packed that the security staff is getting worried about a fire hazard. Elise Mayse, though not a delegate, has scored a floor pass, and is standing in the middle of the North Carolina contingent, dancing in place. Joshua Workman, worn out from his intense social schedule, is looking a little red around the pupils, but his smile is beatific. โItโs been awesome,โ he says of his week. โThe best political experience of my life. Itโs reinvigorated me. Any tiredness I felt is re-energized.โ
Just as the floor canโt get any wilderโmiddle-aged delegates with elephant-patterned clothing are now swing-dancing in the aislesโthe nominee takes the podium. โOur generation has a chance to reclaim some essential values, to show we have grown up before we grow old,โ Gov. Bush says. โBut when the moment for leadership came, this administration did not teach our children, it disillusioned then. They had their chance. They have not led. We will.โ
A chant sweeps the room, from one state to another, and finally to the North Carolina section. Even Workman, usually one of the last to start cheering, gets caught up in the moment. Standing in the aisle, he pumps his right fist in the air and joins in the echo of his partyโs standard-bearer:
We will.
We will.
We will.
We will.
He means it. 


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