From The Campaign Trail


FRED SMITH GOVERNOR 2008 - "A Little Extra Effort" Statewide BBQ Tour
Look on as D.J., a Fred Smith campaign team-member, keeps the folks back home informed about Fred's activities while he's on the road meeting the people of our great state...

Wednesday, December 5, 2007...Hertford County "Hitch hiker" boarded at the 64 pick-up point. Our dear friend, Joseph Avery, from Johnston County joined us for the ride east. He's also traveled to Hertford and Chowan counties previously with Fred. Our regional campaign manager planned a full day starting with a BBQ luncheon in Ahoskie where nearly 10 percent of the invited guests attended. The GOP Chair was surprised although delighted. Fred always says it will be all right if we run out of food. We didn't. We ran out of plates. Thank goodness we keep a supply on the RV. The Roanoke-Chowan News reporter attended the lunch and stayed afterward to interview Fred. One of the things that never ceases to amaze me is people's desire to share news, information, and opinions with Fred and, of course, that is what one should expect when having a "conversation with the people." We get resumes, letters, copies of articles, requests for information, pamphlets, books and notes on scrapes of paper. Today we were given a note about a book called "Governors Speak" by Wake Forest University Political Science Professor Emeritus, Jack Fleur. Knowing what a voracious reader Fred is, it sounds like the perfect Christmas gift. I'll buy it but please don't tell him. Thanks, Hertford County, for a beautiful visit and a great gift idea.


DJ

PHOTOS FROM HERTFORD COUNTY BBQ

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Click HERE to view additional photos from Hertford County.

IN THE NEWS

Gubernatorial candidate mixes barbecue with politics
by Cal Bryant, Roanoke-Chowan Herald, December 14, 2007

AHOSKIE - If barbecue is king in North Carolina, then Fred Smith is its prince.

Smith, a Johnston County native, was in the area last week stumping for votes as he hopes to earn the Republican Party's gubernatorial nomination for governor next spring and then vie in the November 2008 general election for the state's highest elected office.

And in true North Carolina fashion, Smith is soliciting votes through a series of meetings he proclaims as his statewide barbecue tour. Smith plans to chow down on one of the state's most traditional meals (pork barbecue, slaw, beans, potatoes, cornbread and sweet tea) in all 100 counties.

To date, he has covered just over 60 counties with stops planned for tomorrow (Thursday) in Greene and Lenoir. At last week's gathering at the Ahoskie Inn, Smith was greeted by a room full of supporters from all four Roanoke-Chowan area counties. There, his message was as powerful as the plaque which sits behind his office desk...."The difference between good and great is a little extra effort."

"I made that wooden plaque in my high school shop class and it has been with me everywhere," Smith said. "That's what I think will win me a bid, with your support, to run for governor...a little extra effort." Smith made it clear from the outset that he doesn't consider himself a politician, despite serving as a Johnston County Commissioner and State Senator.

"Some want to run for this seat to be the governor of the government, not the governor of the people," he said. "I feel that campaigns are about talking to people about the issues, not about limiting that talk to a 30-second sound bite on a TV or radio commercial."

Smith said he's seeking the governor's seat to help shape the future of what he called North Carolina's greatest resource...its hard-working people.

"Government is how things affect people's lives," he said. "I feel that you empower people, not bureaucrats."

Listing what he said were key talking points in next year's election were economy growth without raising taxes, safe homes, streets and schools, affordable healthcare, immigration issues and the protection of private property rights."But what I've been hearing as the number one issue is that the citizens of our great state want honesty and integrity in Raleigh," Smith noted. "We need leaders that place value on the future and will lead an effort to pass on those values, our diverse cultures, languages and faith to the next generation."

Keeping true to his high school plaque, Smith said nothing comes easy.

"A plan doesn't work by itself," he said. "You must roll-up your sleeves and execute that plan. It takes a bit of extra effort to do so and I will put forth that effort."

In closing, Smith said no matter the color of one's skin or their chosen career path or religious beliefs, we are as one in the state.

"We all live together under the same sun, one that rises over the Atlantic and sets over the mountains," he stated. "By working together, we can make North Carolina a better state today and for the future."

Born in 1942, Smith was raised by parents who worked at the

Methodist Orphanage in Raleigh. His father was a teacher and coach there and his mom served as a cottage "housemother."

While attending Raleigh's Broughton High School, Smith won a football scholarship to attend Wake Forest University. Subsequently, he worked his way through Wake Forest Law School where he graduated with honors in 1966.

Smith served his country as a Captain in the United States Army JAG Corps for four years after law school. In the years that followed, Smith became a successful attorney, entrepreneur, farmer/cattleman and homebuilder. Today, Smith's family businesses provide over 600 jobs in Wake and Johnston counties.

Married with five children and a half-dozen grandchildren, Smith is active in the First Baptist Church of Clayton where he is a Sunday school teacher.

The article above by Cal Bryant was published in the Roanoke-Chowan Herald on December 14, 2007 and is available online HERE.


 

Copyright 2007 Fred Smith Governor 2008 – All rights reserved