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San Diego, Here They Come . . . : 1992 GOP Convention Could Bring the City $100 Million--if It Happens

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Who could ever forget that great betrayal?

In 1972, the Republican National Convention was snatched from San Diego at the last minute. It wound up in Miami. San Diego felt robbed, and the loss became a civic sore point and low benchmark. And in bitter reaction, civic leaders proclaimed their town “America’s Finest City.”

That’s all in the past now.

Key GOP sources say San Diego is the nearly certain choice for 1992. The final decision, as in 1972, probably has more to do with politics than a city’s qualities. Both of 1992’s other finalists, Houston and New Orleans, have GOP albatrosses: Texas’ Democratic Gov.-elect Ann Richards is no favorite of President Bush; and Louisiana legislator--and possible 1992 gubernatorial candidate--David Duke is a former leader of the Ku Klux Klan.

Who cares why the GOP is coming to San Diego? As long as it comes. If the convention can indeed be staged only with private donations, the economic benefit to the city should be $50 million to $100 million. Not bad. And it will be a boost to all Southern California, where just one national political convention has been held in 160 years. If San Diego does a first-class job, the region will have two major cities to contend for future conventions.

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To GOP insiders, the fact that San Diego is mainstream Republican cancels out the drawbacks that the city is putting up no money and splitting the event between the downtown Convention Center and the stadium.

Republicans also know that “America’s Finest City” is a grand place to hold a party.

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