TAMPA, FLA. - Taking his turn in the national GOP spotlight Wednesday, former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty delivered one of the convention's most scathing critiques of President Obama, calling him the "tattoo president ... like a big tattoo, it seemed cool when you were young."
Regaling the party's grassroots activists in a 10-minute speech studded with one-liners, Pawlenty dubbed the convention a "retirement party" for a president who "takes more vacations than that guy on the 'Bizarre Foods' show" and who has provided jobs only for "golf caddies."
"Barack Obama's failed us," Pawlenty said. "But look, it's understandable. A lot of people fail at their first job."
While Pawlenty went on the attack, the star of the night was Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, the GOP nominee for vice president, who vowed that a Mitt Romney administration "will not duck the tough issues" if Republicans win the White House.
"After four years of getting the runaround, America needs a turnaround, and the man for the job is Governor Mitt Romney," Ryan told cheering delegates.
An opportunity to get noticed
For Pawlenty, it was the day that could have been. Instead of entering the hall as Romney's running mate, he arrived as part of the multi-speaker buildup to Ryan, who accepted the party's nomination in an address that often brought the party's delegates to their feet.
Pawlenty's speech was one of the biggest of his two decades in politics, a chance to be seen by a national television audience taking the measure of a newly energized GOP, a party more emboldened than the one he addressed at the Republican convention in St. Paul four years ago. Pawlenty got laughs, as well as cheers for his echo of the free market plea to "just get the government off my back!"