Ballot
shenanigans in plot to stop Trump Brash candidacy changing practice for political campaigns, by
Bob Unruh, 12/24/15, WND
Critics of
Republican presidential primary front-runner and billionaire Donald Trump,
not having encountered his type of self-reliant, self-funded, brash and blunt
candidacy, have taken to lobbing challenges to his ballot access to oppose him.
Unsuccessfully, so far.
But analysts do point
out that getting the GOP nomination actually is a laborious process of lining
up dozens, then hundreds, then thousands of delegates who are party faithful,
and they wonder if the earthquake-generating candidate can establish the foot
soldier network to do that.
One of the complaints to
Trump’s ballot status happened in New Hampshire, where a former state
Republican Party executive, Fergus Cullen, claimed Trump should not be allowed
on the GOP ballot for several reasons, including that Trump has a history of
being a Democrat and independent, and Trump’s views, “expressed over decades,
are inconsistent with the Republican Party platform and the Republican Party of
New Hampshire’s Statement of Principles and By Laws.”
A
report in WMUR explained that after a
hearing “that lasted two minutes, the five-member commission voted unanimously
that the challenge filed by Fergus Cullen was without merit.”
New Hampshire Ballot
Commission Chairman Brad Cook described Cullen’s challenge as “grandstanding of
the first order, and I didn’t appreciate it.”
“It was trying to make
an editorial statement,” he said. “The commission – regardless of what anybody
thinks of the merits or demerits, or the philosophy or anything about a
candidate – our sole role is to figure out if a filing was legal and accurate.”
There was another
challenge mounted in South Carolina, right about the time of the first GOP
presidential debate when Trump refused to promise he would not leave the party
and stage a third-party run. He has since stated he’s committed to the party.
At the time, according
to Political
Insider, GOP officials called
for all candidates to affirm they would support the “nominees and platform of
the Republican Party” in the 2016 election.
Trump originally said he
wouldn’t want to run as a third-party candidate but needed to option to ensure
he was treated fairly by the GOP during the primary season. He later said his
plans did not include any such departure from the party.
There even was the
report this week from
the Christian Times Newspaper that said it learned several states “have all REMOVED Trump’s
name from their state’s upcoming Republican primaries.” “Election judges in
Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada, North Carolina, and Florida all allegedly
forwarded messages to the Trump campaign on Wednesday informing the Republican
front-runner that his candidacy was invalid per state laws,” the report said. “If
not resolved by February 1st, Trump’s campaign for the Republican nomination is
effectively over.”
The report was followed
within hours by a comment on the Newsfoxes
blog that no such thing had
happened. “This story is false. If
you see this one around, spread it with your friends. This disinformation has
come from several sources on the internet. Be prepared by knowing what they
will try …”
But
commentator David Wasserman at Fivethirtyeight noted there’s more to winning a nomination than
leading – by huge margins – in virtually every national political poll.
He explained how the
GOP’s nomination procedures favor a moderate candidate – a Marco Rubio, Carly
Fiorina or Jeb Bush.
“In reality, the GOP
nominating contest will be decided by an intricate, state-by-state slog for the
2,472 delegates at stake between February and June. And thanks to the
Republican National Committee’s allocation rules, the votes of ‘Blue Zone’
Republicans – the more moderate GOP primary voters who live in
Democratic-leaning states and congressional districts – could weigh more than
those of more conservative voters who live in deeply red zones. Put another
way: The Republican voters who will have little to no sway in the general
election could have some of the most sway in the primary.”
He explained that there
are 1,247 delegates at stake in states won by Obama last time, compared with
just 1,166 in Romney states.
“The RNC allows state
parties some leeway in how to award delegates to candidates. In a few states,
including Florida, Ohio and Arizona, the primary winner wins all the state’s
delegates. In most others, delegates are allocated either proportionally to votes
or by the winner in each congressional district,” he said.
The bottom line is that
gathering delegates is a vote-by-vote, doorknock-by-doorknock process that
requires a campaign organization heavy on the grass-roots.
Commentator
John Colson at the Aspen Times, not a Trump fan, continued, “Last weekend, the New York
Times, in a front-page article, noted that Trump may be holding his own in the
polls (though Cruz seems to have pulled ahead of Trump in Iowa), but has not
got the kind of ground-level organization in Iowa that historically has taken
candidates from wannabes to winners.
“Iowa, as the article
points out, has stuck with its caucus system for deciding who gets the support
of the state’s Republicans, just as Colorado has (Iowa’s caucus is on Feb. 1,
Colorado’s is a month later). And caucuses, as any political wonk knows, are
very complicated processes that have proven unwinnable to candidates who lack
grassroots organizations.”
However, Trump’s
entry into the presidential race, his self-funding and the practice
of lobbing verbal dynamite into the discussion, have changed much. In a
Hotair commentary, Jazz Shaw wrote about
the New Hampshire challenge.
“In his usual,
understated fashion, Trump’s campaign manager Corey Lewandowski responded by
saying that if this move were approved, ‘Mr. Trump’s supporters would probably
riot in the streets of New Hampshire.’
“Normally I’d shrug off
a comment like that as typical campaign rhetoric, but in this case it’s
probably much closer to reality than hyperbole,” Shaw wrote. “Just this weekend
I had a conversation with one family in Nashua who I’ve gotten to know quite
well through my various trips there and I could easily picture them looking
around for some pitchforks and torches. These are people who are heavily
involved in the state legislature battleground and really have their finger on
the pulse of the GOP community up there. I’m here to tell you that they are All
Trump All The Time.”
Shaw continued, “The
most common words I hear associated with the real estate tycoon in these conversations
are fight and fighter. The dire nature of the situation with ISIS
and the very real and present threat to America posed by radical Islamic terror
has people paying attention and they are looking for somebody who is ready to
fight. It’s a very H.L. Mencken atmosphere in some quarters of New Hampshire
and Trump’s appeal seems to be that he’s the guy who is ready to spit upon his hands, hoist the black flag,
and begin slitting throats.”
The
far left Huffington Post even
commented on how far the presidential race politics have moved since Trump’s
entry. “As Trump continues to
not only lead in all the primary polls but also to drive the debate for all the
other contenders, it would be hard to make the case that Trump hasn’t completed
what might be called a hostile takeover of the Republican Party brand. This
could always change, of course – nothing is ever set in stone in a
presidential race. But for the time being, Trump’s not only the party
frontrunner, he is actually defining the race for everyone else.
“This state of affairs
is downright terrifying to the establishment Republican Party machine. Trump
is, almost by definition, uncontrollable. He could do or say anything, and
often does. The party elders have watched the rise of Trump and seen their own
power diminish.”
And Salon
reported some longtime GOP
supporters have even been considering ways to secure more influence over
election results.
“One of those people is
billionaire T. Boone Pickens, who has thrown money at Jeb Bush and other
Republican candidates only to see them wither in the face of the Trump
onslaught. This is not the return on investment that Pickens was looking for,
so he’s written a LinkedIn post or blog or whatever laying out his ‘big idea’
for making sure that in the future we don’t just allow any old person to run
for president: a bipartisan committee that will pre-approve acceptable
candidates for the presidency.”
The report said Pickens
wrote, “Certainly we can do better than what we’re doing. We now have a
presidential election process that penalizes success and accomplishment and
rewards those without battle scars from business or politics.
You don’t have a record
of achievement? Well, then the media shies from tough scrutiny. My big idea for
2016 is to put together a bipartisan screening committee that vets presidential
candidates like we do anyone else applying for a job and recommends the best
candidates possible. We have people running for president now who don’t even
have experience running a lemonade stand.”
Said Salon, “Pickens is
having a moment of panic because Trump is winning despite not having gone
through the appropriate channels for a presidential front-runner, so now he
wants to set up an additional hurdle in the form of this silly committee.”
http://www.wnd.com/2015/12/ballot-shenanigans-in-plot-to-stop-trump/
Comments
Comments
Trump is the real
Republican, Jeb’s guys are RINOs. There are other real Republicans in the race
including Ted Cruz 96%, Rand Paul 93% and Ben Carson. All 4 would restore the
Constitution and US law.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA
Tea Party Leader
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