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News

The Flyer Does Conventions Right

No other local publication sent, not one, but two reporters to the GOP convention. In this picture, Chris Davis gets up close and personal with the candidates. Read all the Flyer’s coverage here.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Rick Santorum never cared about winning the Republican primary as long as Barack Obama was defeated.

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Rick Santorum addressed the Tennessee Republican Delegation on topics as diverse as barbecue, the French Reign of Terror, and beating Barack Obama.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Light Moments at the Apocalypse: Tampa Bay Edition

Visiting politicians have to eat in Tampa Bay. So do the natives:

Chris Davis of our team has made the most of his opportunity to make new friends.

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News News Blog

Air Quality Committee To Deal With County’s Polluted Air

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A 13-member committee has been appointed by Mayor Mark Luttrell to explore new ways the county can improve its air quality and meet ozone pollution standards.

The committee met informally for the first time on Tuesday, and it’s charged with examining air pollution from cars, industry, and other sources. The group will be required to submit its plans to Luttrell in a few months.

“We were notified months ago that Shelby County’s air quality did not meet federal standards. That finding and the recent decision by the City of Memphis to stop vehicle emissions testing led to my decision to form this committee. We need to take a comprehensive look at this issue to ensure corrective measures are taken,” Luttrell said.

Here’s a list of those appointed to the committee:

· Co-Chairperson: Harvey Kennedy — Chief Administrative Officer, Shelby County Government
· Co-Chairperson — Germantown Mayor Sharon Goldsworthy
· Bartlett Mayor Keith McDonald
· Kim Hackney — Deputy Chief Administrative Officer, Shelby County Government
· Kelly Rayne — Shelby County Attorney
· Carter Gray — Assistant Shelby County Attorney
· Yvonne Madlock — Director, Shelby County Health Department
· Tyler Zerwekh – Administrator of Environmental Health Services, Shelby County Health Department
· Bob Rogers — Manager, Pollution Control, Shelby County Health Department
· Tom Needham — Director, Shelby County Public Works
· Pragati Srivastava — Administrator, Metropolitan Planning Office
· Paula Lewis — Executive Assistant, Shelby County Chief Administrative Office
· Martha Lott — General Services Director, City of Memphis

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Republican Pollster Whit Ayres discusses race and American Politics

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This week the GOP has presented a strong slate of Latino, African-American, and female speakers who have addressed overwhelmingly white RNC audiences. But the illusion of diversity is hard to put over with prominent Republicans like South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham saying things like, ““We’re not generating enough angry white guys to stay in business for the long term.” Today at a breakfast for the Tennessee Republican Delegation pollster Whit Ayres laid out the demographic realities underpinning what appears to be a two pronged strategy of racially charged rhetoric combined with an attempt to cultivate more diversity — or, at least, that impression.

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News

More Shenanigans at the Health Department?

Hannah Sayle says that the Shelby County Health Department used even less of its Title X funding than previously reported.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Thai Bistro’s Beignet Bits

Yes, we bullied the Lunch Martyr into choosing where we’d go for lunch. We were relentless — decide, decide, decide.

And so LM did. He opted for Thai Bistro — I’m always in the mood for their Pad Thai or Drunken Noodle — and to celebrate the occasion we had dessert:

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The Beignet Bits are pretty much a dessert no-brainer in the best way possible — beignets topped with ice cream and syrup.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

With the Warm-Up Acts Completed, the Stage is Set for Romney

Romney applauds a Christie line during his Tuesday night sojourn in the arena

  • Romney applauds a Christie line during his Tuesday night sojourn in the arena

TAMPA BAY — After several warm-up appearances by members of his supporting cast, Thursday night, the culminating act of the 2012 Republican National Convention finds the main player himself, Mitt Romney, ready to take center stage.

Romney’s acceptance address will not be his first extended moment in the tableau. He has already broken with tradition by spending the better part of a prime time evening in a highly visible red-rimmed box of sears on the floor of the Tampa Bay Times Forum. That was on Tuesday night, during an address to delegates by Chris Christie, the rotund and resonant governor of New Jersey, whose star turn was one of the few that have come close to upstaging the principal actor.

The other contenders in that regard have been Romney’s wife Ann, whose self-presentation as a plucky, attractive, and unexpectedly warm helpmate had immediately preceded Christie’s speech, and Paul Ryan, the angular, somewhat Ichabod Crane-ish ideologue of the Right who was chosen by Romney as a vice presidential running mate and who comes far closer than the presidential nominee himself to representing the core thinking at the heart of today’s Republican Party.

On Wednesday night, Ryan did better than most with a script that emphasizes themes of sacrifice and austerity rather than vaulting ambition. The anointed heir apparent is well-known in Congress as the author of a budget plan and transformational economic prospectus that would largely scuttle not only what remains of FDR’s New Deal and Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society but would significantly carve into the residual governmental apparatus left by Richard Nixon, creator of such add-ons as the much-denigrated Environmental Protection Agency.

“We can do this!” was the war cry intoned several times by Ryan to cheers from the GOP audience — the “this” being a dramatic regeneration of the American private sector, theoretically to be achieved by shrinking of governmental largesse and oversight coupled with increased incentives for a class that Republicans these days call “job creators” and whose members have historically been designated by various other names ranging from “captains of industry” on the high side to “malefactors of great wealth” on the low side.

With some justice, perhaps, Democrats at their party’s convention in Charlotte, North Carolina, next week will assail this GOP new-think as the same old trickle-down philosophy that ended in the financial debacle of 2008 that helped to usher in the tenure of Barack Obama as president.

Anticipating as much, Ryan was careful to suggest that the nation’s current troubled economy owed something to the big-spending ways of Obama’s predecessor, the unnamed George W. Bush, but, for obvious reasons, most of the blame was reserved for the current president, whom Ryan dismissed with patronizing scorn more than condemnations per se.

Ryan even posed as something of a tech-age hipster, gently mocking his ticket leader’s iPod preferences as elevator music and boasting, “My playlist begins with AC-DC and ends with Zeppelin.” (A thought: Inasmuch as this was generational outreach as much as true confessions, wouldn’t ZZ Top have gone over better with this crowd?)

As if fairly well know, the Republican rank and file of 2012 probably feels more comfortable with Ryan, the acolyte of Ayn Rand, than with Romney, the man of many masks, none of them thus far very revealing. The Wisconsin congressman’s task will be to broaden his message and his appeal, just as Romney’s will be to firm up his standing with the Republican base. (Obviously, his selection of Ryan was a large step in that direction.)

The opportunity for the Republicans has been harped on in every message from every speaker — the fact of a still stagnant economy and job market and the suspicion in many Americans’’ minds that the president doesn’t have a sure sense of what to do. That note was sounded by everyone who appeared from the rostrum.

The problem for the Republicans is how to make a message of sacrifice ad belt-tightening appealing. Much of the rhetoric at the convention has had a Valley Forge tinge to it, and the issue of more incentives for what Democrats call the privileged 1 percent is an unspoken anti-theme which does not speak its name here in Tampa Bay.

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Ryan closes out his speech on Wednesday night.

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Sports Tiger Blue

C-USA picks: Week 1

The goal, of course, is to improve on last year’s 76-21 mark. And it starts with 12 games this weekend.

(winner appears in bold)

THURSDAY
UCLA at Rice
UCF at Akron

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SATURDAY
UT-Martin at Memphis
Appalachian State at East Carolina
Texas State at Houston
Marshall at West Virginia
Southern Miss at Nebraska
Rutgers at Tulane
Tulsa at Iowa State
Troy at UAB
Oklahoma at UTEP

SUNDAY
SMU at Baylor

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News

Let the Games Begin

Bruce VanWyngarden is ready for some football. Sort of.