Thursday, July 11, 2013

Statement on the 2013 YRNF Convention and the Election for Chairman


To My Fellow Young Republican Leaders and Activists:

This week we will choose the individuals who will leader our organization for the next two years. 

Back in January I announced my candidacy for YRNF chairman hoping to use my experience as a parish (county) party leader, state committeeman, successful candidate for public office and campaign operative to reinvigorate the national organization and establish a greater role for the YRs in the senior party.

My primary goal was to leave the YRNF as strong in 2015 as it was when I attended my first YRLC in 1998, back when we had a paid-full-time executive director, a working office and a six-figure operating budget. 

As a candidate, it was my hope that we would have had the chance to directly share our vision and plans for the YRNF with our colleagues via the first chairman candidate debate in recent memory.

I have long felt that while horse trading and position bartering might make for successful “tickets” such practices do not necessarily result in successful administrations. 

Regrettably, the planned debate for the San Antonio national board meeting was officially scrubbed due to a lack of time, as a single hour dedicated for a public discussion about the future of the YRNF could not have been carved out from a two day schedule.

It is ironic that it was at that same venue Texas US Senator Ted Cruz talked about the importance of debates and forums to his election. 

And though the results of this week’s convention were set in stone at San Antonio, I do believe that this organization and the few hundred people who have traveled great distances at their own expense deserve to have a choice beyond the two active candidates.

Though I believe both are decent individuals, I cannot vote for either due to a matter of conscience in the case of one and philosophical differences with the other. 

And while I will do not anticipate to leave Mobile holding a national leadership position I would like to offer several ideas that I believe have merit and should be considered. 

First, we need selfless leadership who will be fully dedicated to building a stronger organization.  Our party suffers from a severe branding problem.  One of the sad ironies of the YRNF is that it is the most diverse of any of the auxiliary GOP organizations in the country yet our media presence is negligible. 

Rather than basking in the glow of Fox News, our officers should defer to extraordinary young leaders without profile to front for the YRNF on less friendly media outlets.  The YRNF is blessed by having a large number of non-traditional Republicans, individuals who can combat the prevailing negative narrative.  The YRNF does not need to be represented by club titles but different faces and articulate voices. 

Had I been elected I would have not conducted a single television interview and instead recruited a team of young, diverse spokesmen and women who do not fit the GOP stereotype and thus are that much more likely to be heard out than tuned out. 

Second, we need to become a younger organization.  At a minimum a “president rule” via constitutional amendment should be adopted prohibiting anyone over the age of 35 from being elected to a YRNF office.  A grace period of two years could be worked in to allow for this transition. 

Thirdly, quality control measures need to be implemented to ensure that participants receive a fair value from their board meeting registration fees.  Unhappy attendees communicate their displeasure by their absence at future events, which jeopardizes our capacity to attain quorum and conduct business.

And finally, the YRNF needs to become more engaged with the RNC.  We should have people representing this organization at their national meetings, if only to get the brand out.  Furthermore, RNC leaders should be invited to YRNF board meetings so they can hear what our activists have to say about the party and its direction. 

As the newly elected chairman of the Louisiana YRs, I fully intend to remain involved in the YRNF until I age out in 2015 and I will be happy to work with anyone to achieve the goals I have spelled out. 

I deeply care about this organization’s future and always considered service in the YRNF to be missionary work and not a springboard to higher political advancement. 

Since 1998 I have only missed a handful of national board meetings and have had the honor of holding two elected positions in the YRNF, winning SCA chairman at the age of 26 in 2000 and Regional Vice-Chairman a year later. 

But what gave me the most satisfaction was using my contacts with my state party and the RNC to leverage prominent speakers at events and to secure guest passes, floor access and aide positions for dozens of YRs to the past five national conventions.  I know exactly how hard my fellow activists work and how little recognition too many of us receive for our sweat equity.

It is my sincere hope that when I travel to Chicago in 2015 for what will be my final YR convention, that we will discuss what we accomplished over the past two years instead of ruefully speculating about what could have been. 

Respectfully,


Michael Bayham

Thursday, March 14, 2013

A Request, An Invitation & A Challenge

This weekend, thousands of young conservatives from around the country will converge at CPAC to network, listen to speeches and have a discussion about the future of the conservative movement in the aftermath of President Obama's re-election.

I believe it's time for Young Republicans to also have a frank discussion about the state of the national organization and where we should go from here.

That is why I would like to make a request, issue an invitation and throw out a challenge.

I would like to ask that the Texas Young Republicans create a window in the upcoming national board meeting schedule to allow for a forum for the candidates for YRNF chairman.

I would also like to invite my fellow candidates for chairman to participate in this forum to provide our colleagues the opportunity to hear our ideas, share our accomplishments as party and YR leaders and lay out our vision for the next four years.

Finally, I would like to challenge my fellow YRs to keep an open mind about the election for chairman at least until all of the candidates have had a chance to make their case in this forum.

For far too long our leaders have been selected based off of horse-trading instead of talent and ability, the results of which have manifested themselves over the past decade.

Our members and our cause deserve better than the continuation of this mentality.

I hope my fellow candidates and YRs will support the forum concept and that we have a healthy discussion about where we are as a national entity, where we need to be and how we get there in April.

Sunday, January 20, 2013

Answering the Bell


This morning, as President Barack Obama delivers his vision for a transformed America, conservatives need to resolve to answer the bell.
Young Republicans have a responsibility to vigorously oppose the enactment of an agenda that threatens our national finances and economy and infringes upon our freedoms.  After all, it’s our future on the line.
Knowing what is at stake for our country and our party over the next four years, I have decided to seek the position of YRNF chairman and respectfully ask for your consideration.
I am not pursuing this endeavor to elevate myself but to use my institutional knowledge, political experience and relationships with party leaders to elevate the YRNF as a whole while also providing greater avenues for participation within the organization for those willing to work.
The YRNF must do more than merely exist; we must work to turn the tide of statism that threatens to extinguish our liberties and arrogantly indicts our traditions. 
As President Obama begins his second term, YRs must rise to the challenge.
We can win this fight without sacrificing the principles that distinguish the Republican Party from our opposition by espousing what conservativism means to us.  Rather than recycling the arguments of others, Young Republicans need to tell the country why we choose to be conservative. 
Over the next several weeks I will share my credentials as a Republican leader, specific ideas and practices to strengthen the organization, the short-term goals I will work to achieve and the long-term goals that I will strive to put us within reach at the conclusion of my term.
Now is not the time for my fellow Young Republican leaders to make hasty commitments, but instead have an open conversation about the future of the YRNF by those who wish to lead it. 
Such a discussion is long overdue and our fellow YRs deserve nothing less.
I welcome the presence of other candidates in this race and sincerely believe we can all contribute to the betterment of the YRNF by offering our respective visions and qualifications.
Competition can be as beneficial in politics as it is in economics.
I look forward to speaking with you as a candidate and working with you to build a stronger YRNF as your chairman.
Get ready.  The rally starts now.