Randy Orr is a
truck driver and a member of the Teamsters Union. He is also a Republican
delegate from Houston. This
is his first convention, and he is delighted with it. "I never finished my
degree in college. I remember the one class I took that I enjoyed was political
science. It was a Democrat that taught it, and he talked about being a
delegate. Now I'm one."
He decided to
become active in Republican politics because of his faith. "I grew up in
the church, and after about four or five years, I realized that anything that
affects you or me, God is interested in it," he says. He wasn't that happy
with John McCain, who, he says, wasn't his first or second choice--but when
McCain chose Sarah Palin for his running mate, Orr and his fellow Republicans
came around. "Christian principles mean everything to us," he says,
"When the Senator appointed her as vice president, we came
together." After McCain picked Palin, Orr says, "I went back to
my room, and I felt he was the right choice."
He says he enjoys
arguing about politics with his fellow Teamsters. "I tell them that we
want the same thing, but that we aren't going to achieve them through the
Democratic Party," he says. I ask him what some of those things are,
and he cites illegal immigration. "On our border issue, the
Republican Party is very strong about making this a legal process," he
says. "I tell the guys the Democratic Party says, ‘Come on
in.' The Republicans not the Democrats says this is driving down
wages."
Orr claims that
some of his fellow Teamsters will vote for McCain rather than Obama even though
they are Democrats. "Several of them said it was because of taxes,
but most say it is the leadership quality. When they saw the deal about the
church and about his former ties with certain people, they felt very
uncomfortable with that."
--John B.
Judis