Posted on 03/31/2016 8:20:36 PM PDT by BagCamAddict
In case anyone is unaware: All this talk about "1237 delegates means Trump is the nominee" is BUNK.
That so-called "rule" is a temporary rule that can be changed at the convention. Therefore, Trump is not guaranteed the nomination even if he gets 1237, or 1400, or even 2000 delegates.
They can change the rule to suit their #NeverTrump plan, and make the requirement 1 delegate more than however many Trump has.
On the O'Reilly Factor tonight, Eric Bolling confirmed this. There are 42 convention rules in the rule book. Rules #26 through #42 are Temporary Rules that are written and voted on at the convention. The rule about 1237 delegates falls under Rule 40 D & E. That means they can change the requirement to 2000 delegates if they want to.
Make no mistake: They plan to steal the election from Trump and put in their own people: Ryan, Romney, Rubio, Bush, etc. For those of you who support Cruz or Kasich, please wake up. It won't be Cruz, and it won't be Kasich.
Video at link:
The 1237 Rule Can (and will) Be Changed At The Convention
(Excerpt) Read more at video.foxnews.com ...
That is fine as long as you are willing and ready to accept defeat in the general election as a consequence.
I would love to see a four way election between Cruz(R), Hillary(D),Sanders(S) and Trump(I). Now that would be something for the ages.
Careful: you might not like the way that cuts. The negative numbers for Trump are not looking good for a general election.
To another subject: are we not facing a very serious question on the rule of eight? If I have not been passed by in the swirl of events, I understand that only those candidates who have won eight states can be nominated? That includes Trump and probably Cruz but no other Republican. If that holds all the fears concerning the elites running in a Rino are misplaced because the fight for the nomination remains between those two.
But if the elites amend the rule of eight, they open the field to a Paul Ryan or some other Rino. So the amendment of the rule of eight might be where the real battle occurs. I would think that both Cruz and Trump will oppose it.
What happens if only Trump wins eight states? He cannot get a majority of the delegates but they cannot vote for anyone else?
I think our time may better be spent preparing for Hillary.
Our party is just slightly less corrupt than democrats... please read this nathan...
The Democratic spokespeople for the17 states that refused to go along with the Clinton campaigns plan, even though many of them were as broke as the Montana State Democratic Party was (Nebraska springs to mind), were clear that it seemed less than democratic to be choosing sides in a primary that hadnt happened yet. That the very purpose of a primary was to let the people choose which candidate they wanted to represent them and to not let the party establishment load the dice in their own favour. They made it obvious that they were choosing democracy over kick-backs.
A joint fundraising committee linking Hillary Clinton to the national Democratic Party and 33 state parties is routing money through those state parties and back into the coffers of the Clinton campaign and all its PACS and Funds It is a highly unusual arraignment if only because presidential candidates do not normally enter into fundraising agreements with their partys committees until after they actually win the nomination. And second, Clintons fundraising committee is the first since the Supreme Courts 2014 McCutcheon v FEC decision eliminated aggregate contribution limits and congress increased party contribution limits in the 2014 omnibus budget bill said Paul Blumenthal, a writer for The Huffington Post.
A loud article in the NYT in March proclaiming that elected officials in 22 states would not support Bernie Sanders conveniently left out that those 22 states had signed agreements with the Hillary Clinton campaign and the Hillary Victory Fund.
What it really does is seriously handicap the Democratic Primary Race. Every one of the states charging electoral interference by the Clinton campaign is a state that made a deal with the Hillary Victory Fund. Insinuations of conspiracies are unprovable in these cases. But the perception of fraud and corruption is glaring and damaging.
What the Clinton campaign appears to be in stunning denial about is that most of us regular folks (a revolting term used with growing frequency these days) are not burdened with an inability to confuse morality with legality. Corruption is corruption is corruption no matter how many laws there are allowing it. Very few brilliant business people give presidential candidates upwards of six million dollars without expecting something in return. There is a reason they are brilliant business people. Throwing away millions of dollars for nothing is not one of them
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You can’t change rules that have yet to be written..
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