The details
“...All this research has to happen before March 16, when inevitably Trump is the nominee, so that we have a plan in place,” a source familiar with the discussions said. March 16 is the day after the GOP primary in Florida, a winner-take-all contest that Marco Rubio supporters have identified as a must-win to stop Trump’s early momentum.
âItâs critical some serious attention is given to this,â the source said.
The document, stamped âconfidential,â was authored by staff at Data Targeting, a Republican firm based in Gainesville, Fla. The memo notes that âit is possible to mount an independent candidacy but [it] will require immediate action on the part of this core of key funding and strategic players.â
Data Targeting did not respond to a request for comment on the memo.
The research points to Texas and North Carolina as early tests for running an independent, conservative candidate against Trump and the Democratic nominee. The candidate would need to gather over 79,900 valid petition signatures in Texas by May 9 and over 89,000 in North Carolina by June 9.
Only two other states have thresholds that high, and gathering petitions can be an expensive and time-consuming process. Whatâs more, the Texas signatures would have to come entirely from voters who did not vote in this yearâs Democratic and Republican primaries.
But âwith 38 electoral votes in play in Texas and North Carolinaâs true swing state status, failing to qualify in either or both states would render any independent candidate non-viable,â the report’s authors wrote. âThis is logistically possible but will require immediate action.â
By July 15, the independent candidate would need more than 460,000 voter signatures to make the ballot in 11 states. Assuming an April 1 start date, the campaign would have to gather 4,345 valid signatures per day to maintain a steady pace. “
...they can follow the William Ayers method and get the names and social security numbers from graveyards.
I mean, no reason the dead can't be useful even *before* the general election /Dem rules>