Went to the Hilton hotel where the RNC Summer meeting was in process. Showed our ticket. A young volunteer told us she'd have to check to see if we were on the list. 'Wait over there', she said. Waiting was comfortable; free WiFi and sodas in comfortable chairs. But we never got into the summer RNC meeting.
Went to the media operations desk at the Q to see if a personal appearance would get us something. It did. After a lot of hanging around wasting time, we were given a temporary pre-convention pass in exchange for leaving my driver's license as hostage. Then we gave ourselves a tour of the Q under construction. Talked to the guys putting it all together. On asking, they told me they were about 80% union members — Carpenters, Teamsters, stagehands, communications workers — but there were no union t-shirts or other insignia in sight. They also said that they were running behind because their overlords kept changing their directions. Build it here; no build it there. Set this up here; no set it up there.
Walked the half mile back to the media filing center and finally got in. Yeah!
Saw lots of blue curtains partitioning off spaces for the major media who had paid for their spots. Didn't see alot of people. AT&T is providing space for the little media, but you have to pay for an internet connection. The CCC WiFi was turned off. Nearby, Fox News has paid for ballrooms about the size of a football field and were decorating them with interview stages. I stood in an open door and took a couple photographs — until security asked me to leave. 'You can't take pictures of private space', he said.
Five women from the Cleveland Host Committee had their own booth and were passing out local story ideas to anyone who stopped to ask for directions. When they found out we wrote about women and politics, they urged us to go to the International Women's Air and Space Museum. Did that the next day and found it fascinating. Since it is spread around the waiting room of the lakefront municipal airport, there is no fee to get in.
Went back to the Q to retrieve my license and turn in my temporary pass — without which you can't get into anything. When will I get my actual pre-c pass, I asked. Don't know, said a rather rude young man. Come back tomorrow.
Burke Lakefront Airport in Cleveland, site of Intl Women's Air and Space Museum; A 1963 Pilurs-Smith DSA-1 Miniplane built by Tracy Pilurs, winner of the 1962 Women's National Aerobatic Championship; Wikipedia
'Tomorrow' wasn't any different. A young woman actually spoke to Brigit Visconti on her cell phone, but would only give me a temporary Pre-C pass in exchange for my driver's license. I took it. Went back to the building where the Rules Committee was meeting, only to learn that it had concluded its business at 11:00 p.m. the night before. Since no committees were meeting, we were allowed down into the basement to see where they had met. It was a curtained off room in a very large space. I counted about 50 seats for press, and 150 for other guests, all arranged to make it hard to see the actual committee discussion other than on a screen. The fact that seats were never available was due to a human decision and not to natural physical constraints.
The official convention press credential were given out on Saturday. That was done by the Congressional Press Galleries and worked well. We got what we were promised without a glitch. We also learned that the RNC cut their allocated number of press credentials well into the credentialing process, leaving them short of the number they actually need.
This year there was an added step: All correspondents had to go through a background check for the Secret Service. Once approved, you got a special badge with your photograph on it. In the past, press credentials could be shared by all members of the "press organization." Not anymore. Now you have to be on the list that was checked out and approved in advance. This was not done by the RNC. Maybe that's why we got ours without any problems.
©2016 Jo Freeman for SeniorWomen.com
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