Posted on 04/19/2016 8:31:08 AM PDT by markomalley
When the Missouri Republican Party held their county caucuses across the state April 9, they selected slates of delegates that will go to the state and congressional districts to vote for the final delegates sent to Cleveland for the Republican National Convention this summer.
But some Republicans, namely supporters of real estate mogul Donald Trump, are raising their eyebrows at the process and raising their voices to oppose what they see as unfair practices.
Among them is Ellisville Mayor Adam Paul, who attended the Wild Horse township caucus in St. Louis County. At that caucus, Paul said that former Missouri House Speaker Tim Jones also attended, despite the fact that he lives in the Meramac township on Wild Horses southern border. Paul said Jones brought a slate of candidates that supported second place Republican presidential candidate Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, and eventually, Jones slate of candidates won.
While Paul recognized that Jones and his supporters followed the rules and procedures, the decision made at the caucus troubles Paul.
Those things dont pass the smell test, he said. We had a slate that we presented which was more a reflection of the will of the people, and their slate was filled with Cruz supporters.
Those Cruz supporters could come into play at the national convention that eventually chooses the final nominee. Each state picks their delegates in their own way, as determined by the state party. In Missouri, a presidential preference primary is held. Trump edged out Cruz by fewer than 2,000 votes March 15, but he won in certain places to give him a favorable allotment of delegates. As the Missouri GOP site explains, Trump will receive 12 of Missouris 52 pledged delegates for winning the state and another 25 for winning five of Missouris eight congressional districts (five delegates per district). Cruz will get the other 15 pledged delegates for winning the other three congressional districts.
Those delegates are selected in two places: at the state convention and at congressional district (CD) conventions. The county and township caucuses select slates of delegate candidates to attend both the state convention and the CD conventions. Each CD convention will select three delegates for a total of 24 delegates, then at the state convention, 25 delegates will be selected.
The other three delegates are automatic delegates. Missouri COP Chairman John Hancock, National Committeewoman to the Republican National Committee (RNC) representing Missouri Susie Eckelkamp, and Missouris delegate to the RNCs Rules Committee Lance Beshore are those three delegates.
So what does all of this have to do with Cruz supporters potentially stuffing county and township caucuses? The race between Cruz and Trump is relatively close at this point in the race, and national media as well as Republican party officials have mused on the possibility of a contested convention. At a contested convention, delegates must vote how they are pledged by their states in an initial round of voting, but afterwards, they may vote essentially as they please if no candidate gets more than 50 percent of the vote.
If Trump does not hit the 1,237 delegate mark, who the delegates support rather than who states voted for could matter a great deal. Trump supporters like Paul are taking notice.
This is shedding a negative light on the process of the delegates to a larger group of people, and theyre realizing Whats the point of going to a primary and voting in Missouri when your delegates arent going to be appropriately, he said.
Paul pointed toward delegate selection in other states, like Colorado, where Cruz won all 34 of the states delegates in a private party convention without a presidential preference vote.
However, officials within the party, including Missouri GOP Executive Director Jonathon Prouty, believe these fears are overblown, especially because delegates have yet to be selected. CD conventions are held April 30, and the state convention is not until May 23.
Somebody might be trying to make a prediction by who they saw elected at the county caucuses, but those delegates, the national delegates, have not been selected yet, he said.
Pat Thomas, secretary of the Missouri GOP, also notes that these rules have existed for quite some time and that the backlash against standard procedure may be a result of a bizarre election season that has brought in unlikely candidates and unlikely voters. Before this election season, she says, Missouri had no reason to change the procedures.
Usually, were in a situation where by the time Missouri votes, somebody gets 50 percent plus one or theres really only one viable candidate left, Thomas said. This is just an anomaly of a thunderstorm that has hit that people just all of a sudden who have not ever or been very limited in the process. Maybe theyve shown up and voted and now all of a sudden, theyre like Oh but youre hurting my rights, and we havent really changed anything.
She also said that Colorado had not paid for a presidential preference election for the last few election cycles. In Missouri, the government spent around $7 million on the election in March.
Paul believes a simplification of the process and delegate allocation could go a long way to reducing those frustrations.
A winner-take-all primary is a clear referendum of who we want to choose for our nomination, he said. Political Kabuki theater is thwarted when you have a process like that. I think that the process right now, it allows for political insiders and campaigns to push for a strategic movement that only benefits themselves.
Thomas does not believe that is the answer.
When [Trump] only won by 0.2 [percent], should we have been a winner-take-all? she asked rhetorically. Even now, the Cruz people are saying, Well, is the proportional even really fair? because its so close.
Paul notes that should a contested convention happen and Trump does not emerge as the partys nominee despite a current difference of nearly 2 million votes, it could have a negative impact on the party.
This is going to throw a wedge into the Republican party if Trump wins the majority of delegates that are bound but not the nomination. I think thats really going to damage the party, he said.
Its possible it already has.
And I prefer closed caucuses...where motivated people have their say, but still, either is preferable to the byzantine systems that most state parties have set up.
So the rules need to change. And there is only one way to do that. Solutions proposed by twerps like Roger Stone or Gary Forbes aren't the way to accomplish it.
“Americans love a winner and will not tolerate a loser”
George Patton
Shouldn’t a winner be the guy who goes out to the people, asks for their votes , and gets most of them? Shouldn’t thevwinner then expect the contest rules to,award him the fruits of his victory? Isn’t that what the voters expected when they stood in long lines to hear speeches and to vote?
The real voting public doesnt see Cruz as a winner in any respect
Unfortunately his downfall may take a lot of us with him
That would be the way it should be...A person should have to be registered to the party of their choice BEFORE the candidates are announced...
Of course, they will also wonder why the GOP sucks and continues to lose...but as long as they feel good about purity of party above all else....
I agree too with your post #13.
Also Coloraduh and similar is a disgrace. WTH citizens dont vote for the candidate but the delegate? Ludicrous-— as we mentioned delegates should only vote for the candidate who won their district, period unless brokered convention. And ‘unbound or super delegates’? More evidence of infringement of citizen voter rights.
I think what you suggest is already in place. Even if the delegates prefer Cruz, they still are bound to Trump and must vote for Trump on the first ballot.
What people seem to want a delegate to be is a proxy for the candidate. What a delegate is is someone delegated by the local party to speak and act for the members of the party in a whole variety of ways at the convention. The primary in some states does affect how they are delegated to speak in the first round, but nothing more. If one wants to ensure that the delegate selected is more of a proxy for the candidate, one needs to adopt a model more like what is present in Illinois, that model of uncorrupt democracy.
No system is perfect.
I dislike caucuses...I believe in the DIRECT voice of the populace....
That is the reason the GOPe is disappearing...Rapidly....
>> Shouldnt a winner be the guy who goes out to the people, asks for their votes , and gets most of them?
Absolutely!
But “most of them” is “the majority”: “50% +1”. Not merely “about a third but more than any one other candidate”. (That would only be a ‘plurality’, and that is what Trump now has.)
Unless Trump gets a majority, “NotTrump” is the guy who got “most” of the votes.
What do you think is going to happen the next time the state (or national) party sends a request for money explaining that it's important that the "average voter" (i.e., a non-insider) "get involved with the candidates"?
Well Ted only got 43% of the Texas vote so that means #notted should get 57% of the delegates?
Kasich only got 46% of Ohio so #notkasich should get 54%of Ohio?
Trump got 35% of wisconsin but only got 6 out of 42 delegates
Do you see where your logic is going?
I know where *my* logic is at, but I am not sure I understand your own.
You started out talking about VOTES, and fluidly shifted into talking about DELEGATES when it suited your purpose.
I understand why you did it — to gain a perceived advantage — but it derails your original premise.
They believe that the rules being in place for a long time makes them safe, whereas this may well be the first time most voters have noticed the rules and how they are deliberately set up to support the wishes of the party, not the voters.
I sincerely hope that the GOP and CPUSA - er Democrats - develop the Mizzou funding dilemma in the short, medium, and long terms.
Mizzou is now completely surprised that freshman enrollment and student retention are way down - but they are sure that their capitulation to the BLM crowd has nothing to do with it.
A valid comparison, for sure. Thanks!
And don't think I'm not watching - God
The parties are committing fraud.
No company, bank, or private individual would get away with this multi million dollar fraud without class action law suits and those happen all the time.
Some state parties are committing fraud by having the candidates spend millions of dollars on a campaign to win the vote which allocates delegates but after the vote the delegates can be taken away by the party rules. People don’t always know how they got screwed by fraud but all of us know when we have been screwed. That’s why Ted’s poll numbers have dropped.
Grassroots organization and ground game used to refer to campaigning before the vote, not after the vote.
The delegate system was put in place to guard against corruption, not to enable corruption.
Ted and the GOPe are basically holding endless recounts until they come out on top. Don’t worry, it only matters if there is a second vote. Riiiiiight.
Maybe it is time for Trump to get his head out of his ass and start playing by the rules set up by the individual states.. We all seem to want state rights unless our candidate can’t figure out what to do except trash the Republican Party. Bullying and whining hasn’t won the day. Trump says that it time for him to start acting Presidential and a bit more constrained. If he is supposed to be the great deal maker why is he being so badly outmaneuvered by Cruz?
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