Threshold Requirements Will Force A Two-Way GOP Race By
March 1ST, by Dick Morris, Published on DickMorris.com on January
19, 2016
When will some of the dozen or so Republican candidates
withdraw so we can focus on a two-way race and make a clear decision?
Will Rubio, Kasich, Bush, Christie, Carson, Fiorina,
Huckabee, Paul, Santorum et al ever get the message and pull out? They won't
have to. The party rules will force them out, de facto, on March 1st.
On that date, 14 states will select their delegates to the
national convention. A total of 701 delegates will be selected, more than
two-thirds of the total needed to win the nomination. But, of these, 388 will
be awarded by proportional representation with a minimum threshold to qualify
for delegates. To have a shot at 298 of these delegates (including Texas' 152)
a candidate will need to win at least 20 percent of the vote. Anyone falling
short of that total won't get in on splitting the delegates by proportional
representation.
So, if Trump gets, for example, 35 percent in a given state
and Cruz gets 30 percent, they will divide the delegates proportionately. But
if Rubio, Bush, Paul, Kasich, Christie and the others get less than 20 percent
of the vote each, they will get no delegates at all. There is little chance of
the field whittling down sufficiently for any of these candidates to break the
20 percent threshold, and certainly it would be impossible for more than one to
do so.
Thus, de facto, the GOP nomination process will be a two-way
race after March 1. Like a freeway that merges from a dozen lanes to two, there
will be a mess of traffic and angry campaign managers, but the process is
inexorable.
In Texas, there is a 20 percent threshold for the statewide
at large delegates and a separate 20 percent threshold for each congressional
district's delegates.
Another 90 delegates will be selected on March 1 by states
with either a 15 percent or a 13 percent threshold, making a two-way race in
these states somewhat likely.
On March 5 and March 8, 93 more delegates will be selected
in 20 percent threshold states and another 81 from 15 percent threshold states.
So, by March 8, 562 delegates will have been chosen by
proportional representation from states with 15 percent or 20 percent threshold
requirements -- for all practical purposes high enough to keep all but two
candidates out.
Over the same period, 370 delegates will be selected in
states with low or no thresholds. There would be no bar to Rubio, Bush, Kasich,
Christie or Paul getting at least a slice of these delegates, but so will Trump
and Cruz. Combined, the Trump and Cruz vote totals from these states and from
the high threshold states will likely be so high that the small number of
delegates these candidates might win in low or no threshold states will not
matter much in the final outcome.
And then come the winner take all primaries beginning with
Florida, Missouri, and Ohio on March 15th. These will deal the final deathblow
to all other candidates (especially to Bush and Rubio should they lose
Florida).
A by-product of forcing a two-way race at the outset is that
the nominee will likely be known by March 16th. We will have a pretty clear
idea of who will win by then.
Source: dickmorris.com
Comments
We are
used to seeing a run-off if no candidate gets a majority. It’s a separate vote held at a later date,
with just the top 2 candidates on the ballot. This is sort of a run-off by
Munchausen.
At the
2012 convention, the GOP threw up all over itself by insisting that all
delegates change their vote on the first ballot to Romney rather than letting
them vote for the candidate their group sent them there to vote for.
Conventions
in the past allowed the first vote to show the actual delegate support for each
candidate. In 2012, the GOP didn’t want anyone to know how much delegate
support Ron Paul really had.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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