We choose the nominee, not the voters: Senior GOP official
http://www.cnbc.com/2016/03/16/we-choose-the-nominee-not-the-voters-senior-go...Political parties, not voters, choose their presidential nominees, a Republican convention rules member told CNBC, a day after GOP front-runner Donald Trump rolled up more big primary victories.
"The media has created the perception that the voters choose the nomination. That's the conflict here," Curly Haugland, an unbound GOP delegate from North Dakota, told CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Wednesday. He even questioned why primaries and caucuses are held.
Haugland is one of 112 Republican delegates who are not required to cast their support for any one candidate because their states and territories don't hold primaries or caucuses.
Even with Trump's huge projected delegate haul in four state primaries Tuesday, the odds are increasing the billionaire businessman may not ultimately get the 1,237 delegates needed to claim the GOP nomination before the convention.
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This could lead to a brokered convention, in which unbound delegates, like Haugland, could play a significant swing role on the first ballot to choose a nominee.
Most delegates bound by their state's primary or caucus results are only committed on the first ballot. If subsequent ballots are needed, virtually all of the delegates can vote any way they want, said Gary Emineth, another unbound delegate from North Dakota.
"It could introduce Paul Ryan, Mitt Romney, or it could be the other candidates that have already been in the race and are now out of the race [such as] Mike Huckabee [or] Rick Santorum. All those people could eventually become candidates on the floor," Emineth said.
House Speaker Paul Ryan, who decided not to run for the White House this year, said in a CNBC interview Tuesday he won't categorically rule out accepting the GOP nomination if a deadlocked convention were to turn to him. But on Wednesday, a Ryan spokeswoman said the speaker would not accept a Republican nomination for president at a divided convention.
Democrats experienced the last true brokered presidential convention to go beyond the first ballot in 1952. Republicans came close at their 1976 convention.
"The rules haven't kept up," Haugland said. "The rules are still designed to have a political party choose its nominee at a convention. That's just the way it is. I can't help it. Don't hate me because I love the rules."
Haugland said he sent a letter to each campaign alerting them to a rule change he's proposing, which would allow any candidate who earns at least one delegate during the nominating process to submit his or her name to be nominated at this summer's convention.
If the GOP race continues at the same pace, Trump would likely have a plurality of delegates. So far, he's more than halfway to the 1,237 magic number.
Trump split Tuesday's winner-take-all primaries in Florida and Ohio.
The real estate mogul dominated in Florida over Sen. Marco Rubio, who dropped out of the race after losing his home state.
But Trump lost Ohio to the state's governor, John Kasich. Trump also won Illinois and North Carolina. He held a slim lead over Texas Sen. Ted Cruz in Missouri early Wednesday.
Emineth, also a former chairman of the North Dakota Republican Party, told "Squawk Box" in the same interview that he's concerned about party officials pulling "some shenanigan."
"You have groups of people who are going to try to take over the rules committee," he warned. "[That] could totally change everything, and mess things up with the delegates. And people across the country will be very frustrated."
"It's important that the Republican National Committee has transparency on what they're doing [on the rules] going into the convention and what happens in the convention," he continued. That's because of "all the votes that have been cast in caucuses and primaries. Don't disenfranchise those voters. Because at the end of the day, our goal is to beat Hillary Clinton or whoever their [Democratic] nominee is in November."
Emineth said he's worried that frustration would discourage Americans in the general election from voting Republican.
— CNBC's Lori Ann LaRocco contributed to this report.
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Matthew J. Belvedere
Senior Producer
Trust me, we are gonna get another
Can't Win
can'tdidate, and Trump runs third party. Hillary walks across the plate, scoring the winning run for the globalist establishment.
The Only way that doesn't happen is if it is a huge landslide victory for the Not Hillary candidate. The machines and the media can be used to get her in,even when the popular vote doesn't. The Only way that Doesn't happen is, barring indictment or hey, maybe a suicide? is for the Not Hillary vote to be So large that Everyone Knows that she Can't have won.
At this point,Should the gamesmanship be elevated to the point where they Don't put Cruz or Trump in as the candidate, anyone who continues to Not see what I have been saying is obviously beyond help.
Should they Believe that they Can put someone other than Cruz or Trump in the ring, against Hillary, then I don't see how it is possible to continue to believe that the People have any voice in D.C..
I'm not exactly happy with Trump or Cruz,but, I trust Hillary, and what she would support would finish us off.
If Cruz would Do what he said, that would be great.
I'm pretty sure we would see the Secret Service ordered to stand down, like the minute before JFK was shot.
E.T.A.
Here is where it gets muddy.
What is the end goal?
Depends on your concept of reality. I'm looking at a scientific concentration of control. Most of you seem to believe that the government is a bumbling but well meaning association of like minded people, in that they only want what's best for us, and each group believes in a different direction, a different idea, about how best to accommodate our needs.
Considering the obvious failures and the well known position of the People, why is it that all these well meaning people just haven't been able to reverse the trade deals that shut down the industries?
So, what is Really going on here?
I Could make the case that we won't get an election. But, it's Hillary's turn. She stepped aside and handed it to Obama.
Though, the coverage of Ferguson, and the Treyvon Martin thing, sure LOOKED like trying to stir up racial tensions.
Do they Want people in the streets yet? The global economic picture is pretty grim. I'm pretty sure they don't want it to all come down Prior to some social upheaval that causes the People to cry out to the government for help.
Remember
Problem
Reaction
Solution
And the solution is
We Will provide for you and protect you.
Everyone, turn in the guns.