I wonder how many votes this will cost the GOP in November?! What should have been a positive convention that garnered a national spotlight and the opportunity to pick up lots of new votes is turning into anything but. I've been saying for quite some time now...it's time to come together!!! Paul should be speaking for the Ron Paulers, Palin should be speaking for the Tea Party, Herman Cain should be speaking, Col. Allen West should be speaking! Imagine the votes the GOP could have secured. This just doesn't seem very strategic to me. Giving up this election to shield the party from Ron Paulers in the future?
At 2pm on Tuesday, the Rules Committee members will debate whether the new rule should be struck down. Fredericks thinks she has the 29 members necessary to start a debate about the change, and is hopeful she can resolve the issue before the committee adjourns and joins the larger convention floor.
"We like to fight behind closed doors...Most of us are reluctant to do a floor flight," Fredricks said.
RNC Chairman Reince Priebus told Salon Monday that he does not expect a floor fight, though he did not explain why.
Paulites are among the staunchest opponents of the new rule. It would prevent insurgent candidates such as Paul from raking up delegate votes in caucus states where party conventions instead of the statewide vote determine how many delegates are awarded. ABC's Chris Good points out that Paul would not have won a plurality of delegates in four states if this rule had been in effect during this primary.
Texas delegates planning floor mutiny over RNC rules changes
By Liz Goodwin - 8/27/2012
TAMPA--On Monday morning, at a
meeting of more than 100 Texan delegates and alternates at the
Saddlebrook Resort 20 miles north of Tampa, one topic got the crowd more
fired up than any other. Delegate Melinda Fredricks read aloud a letter
condemning recent changes to the national Republican party's rules that
would allow the GOP presidential candidate to veto and replace state
delegates.
"Our delegates are in shock that
such an amendment even would be presented before the Rules Committee
much less passed into rule," Fredricks said. "Please know from the Texas
delegation standpoint that the only way a floor fight can be avoided is
for this rule to be stricken."
At that point, the entire Texas delegation stood up and applauded.
Texans don't necessarily want to
have an ugly floor fight on the same day the party officially nominates
Mitt Romney. But they're willing to do it if their concerns about the
rule aren't satisfied. The changes, which Mitt Romney's top lawyer put
forward last week and Gov. Haley Barbour along with some other Romney
supporters have embraced, are seen by opponents as intended to
significantly weaken the power of grassroots politics and insurgent
candidates such as Ron Paul. Many against the move worry that it would
give national candidates the power to replace delegates--often
grassroots party faithfuls--with big-time donors or friends.
"We truly consider that an
infringement on our rights," Fredricks, a member of the rules committee,
told Yahoo News of the changes. Today, states generally choose their
delegates at state conventions, and then those individuals travel to the
national convention to cast their vote for a candidate based on the
share the candidate won of the primary or caucus vote of each state.
But, the changes could allow a candidate such as Mitt Romney to boot out
any delegates who are assigned to vote for him and replace them.
While
opposition to the rules began with Ron Paul supporters, it has spread
to the entire Texas delegation and significant portions of those from
South Carolina, Colorado, Virginia and Louisiana too. Mitt Romney's
campaign lawyer Ben Ginsberg proposed the rule last week, but even some
Romney supporters are staunchly opposed to the changes. Indiana delegate
and Romney supporter James Bopp wrote in an email to RNC members that
it's "the biggest power grab in the history of the Republican Party."
Fredricks, a Romney supporter, says only 30 people of the more than 300
Texan alternates and delegates support Ron Paul, yet the delegation is
"united" in its opposition to the rule.
At 2pm on Tuesday, the Rules Committee members will debate whether the new rule should be struck down. Fredericks thinks she has the 29 members necessary to start a debate about the change, and is hopeful she can resolve the issue before the committee adjourns and joins the larger convention floor.
"We like to fight behind closed doors...Most of us are reluctant to do a floor flight," Fredricks said.
RNC Chairman Reince Priebus told Salon Monday that he does not expect a floor fight, though he did not explain why.
Paulites are among the staunchest opponents of the new rule. It would prevent insurgent candidates such as Paul from raking up delegate votes in caucus states where party conventions instead of the statewide vote determine how many delegates are awarded. ABC's Chris Good points out that Paul would not have won a plurality of delegates in four states if this rule had been in effect during this primary.
Paul supporter Karen Skrill, an
alternate delegate from Vermont, said she and her husband Stewart, a
delegate, are upset about the changed rules.
"If this is how it's going to be,
I don't want to be a Republican," Skrill told Yahoo News in a
discussion on the floor Monday. The Skrills are retired farmers.
"Texas in general doesn't believe
the national level should be picking delegates," added Jon Burgin, an
alternate delegate from San Antonio who supports Paul. "It's pretty
egregious."
http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/texas-delegates-planning-floor-mutiny-over-rnc-rules-225837647.html
The following is a copy of the statement that was read in regard to the rule changes:
"We strongly oppose recently proposed changes to the party rules which would give the Republican National Committee unprecedented centralized authority over the presidential nomination process, overriding the autonomy of the states and their long established electoral traditions. We also object strenuously to new rules which would empower the Republican National Committee to change the rules under which it operates between conventions without approval of the body of delegates representing the party membership. These proposed rule changes are tyrannical, contrary to the principles of republican governance and hostile to the interests of the grassroots of the party. Together they constitute an attempt to shift the power in the party from the state parties and their members to an elite establishment which answers primarily to special interests and powerful politicians, a corruption of our party which we believe all true Republicans will find unacceptable."
Issued 8/27/2012
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