GOPAC

GOPAC
Industry Politics
Founded 1979
Founder(s) Governor Pete du Pont
Headquarters 1101 16th St., NW

Washington, D.C.

Website gopac.org

GOPAC is a Republican (GOP) state and local political training organization. Although often thought of as a PAC, or Political Action Committee, it is actually a 527 organization. It describes itself as "the premier training organization for Republican candidates in elected office on the state and local levels".

GOPAC was founded by Delaware Governor Pierre S. du Pont, IV in 1978 in "an effort to build a farm team of Republican officeholders who could then run for congress or higher state offices later".[1] On February 1, 2007, former Maryland Lieutenant Governor Michael Steele became the chairman and served until his election as chairman of the Republican National Committee in January, 2009. The current chairman on GOPAC is Frank Donatelli.

Others who have chaired GOPAC include former Oklahoma Governor Frank Keating, former Georgia Representative and Secretary of the Army Bo Callaway, California Representative David Dreier, Arizona Representative John Shadegg, former Oklahoma Representative J.C. Watts, and former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich of Georgia.

Instructional tapes used to train aspiring Republican politicians from 1986 to 1994 were selected by the Library of Congress as a 2010 addition to the National Recording Registry for their influence in "shaping political discourse". The Library of Congress selects recordings annually that are "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[2]

Contents

GOPAC memo

The "GOPAC memo", called "Language: A Key Mechanism of Control", was written and distributed to members of the Republican Party by U.S. Rep. Gingrich (R-Georgia) in 1994. It contained a list of words with positive and negative connotations that Gingrich recommended for use in describing Republicans and Democrats, respectively.

The cover page of the memo had the sentence: "The words in that paper are tested language from a recent series of focus groups where we actually tested ideas and language."[3][4]

In popular culture

The comic strip Doonsbury mentions the memo in a strip, calling it the "Magna Carta of attack politics."[5]

References

External links