Ron
Paul Delegates Cause Mayhem At Republican Convention
A
divided Republican Party was on full display Tuesday when Rep. Ron
Paul's (R-Texas) supporters and other grassroots activists loudly
booed House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) on the first full day of
the Republican National Convention.
28
August, 2012
The
fight was over the unglamorous rules process that dictates how
delegates are apportioned in each state. Paul didn't sweep the ballot
boxes in state caucuses and primaries, but his supporters quietly
worked behind the scenes in an effort to take control of state
parties and delegate assignments.
The
RNC's rules committee adopted provisions that would bar
this sort of insurgent takeover from happening in the future:
Convention delegates would be bound to
vote for the candidate who won statewide at the ballot box.
In
other words, when there is a statewide popular vote, if the result is
not winner-take-all, each candidate must get delegates
in proportion to
their percentage of the popular vote. The rule was proposed and
pushed through the committee by lieutenants loyal to Romney. Some
Republicans, including ones loyal to Romney,opposed
the rule change,
arguing it hurt grassroots activism.
Twenty
Paul backers from Maine were also stripped of their spots as official
delegates after the RNC concluded
that their election was invalid.
On
Tuesday afternoon, House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) called for a
full delegation vote on the rules, including the ones the Paul
backers opposed. The voice vote of ayes and nays were equal in
volume, but Boehner immediately gave it to the ayes, leading to loud
boos and shouts from Paul supporters.
The
dismissed Maine delegation was easy to spot on Tuesday. They were all
wearingwhite
baseball caps that
read "Maine 2012" and had a picture of Paul. Before the
vote on the rules, Paul supporters would frequently interrupt the
proceedings with shouts of "Seat them now" (referring to
the Maine delegation), "We were robbed," "President
Paul" and "Point of order."After the vote, Paul
supporters took to the hallways outside the main convention area and
continued shouting and talking to reporters about how they believed
they were robbed. Several of them said they may not support Romney --
and it could cause problems for Republicans in the fall.
"After
the way they treated us, treated the state of Maine, treated us
Republicans, they should be worried about how this is going to affect
the election," said Erin Gail, a stripped Maine delegate.
"This
is a sign this man [Romney] will take our country down a much worse
path than the guy who is currently in office. And I can't stand the
guy who is currently in office," said John Jones, another
rejected Maine delegate.
Paul
is with his backers, all the way. He is not speaking at the
convention this year, because he denied the RNC's two conditions:
that he allow his remarks to be vetted by RNC officials and that he
fully endorse Romney.
“It
wouldn't be my speech,”
Paul told The
New York Times.
"That would undo everything I've done in the last 30 years. I
don't fully endorse him for president."
On
Tuesday, Paul told Fox News host Neil Cavuto that he was "undecided"
on whether he would vote for Romney.
Gladys
Lemley, an alternate delegate from West Virginia who is backing
Romney -- although she originally supported Newt Gingrich -- agreed
with the Paul delegates that the divide in the GOP could hurt the
party in November. She said she wished the Paul backers would join
with other Republicans and focus on defeating Obama.
"By
now, we need to unify the Republican Party and go after Obama. He is
our enemy, not members of the Republican Party," she said.
When
asked whether it could help Democrats win in November, she added, "It
could. I remember back when Ross Perot ran. It hurt the Republican
Party."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.