Kepler
Si certus es dubita
Re: Campaign 2016 - I'm Biden my time till I doctor the hearing.
This came on the morning drive.
So it is actually statistically possible for nobody to qualify under RNC rules to be their nominee, which is funny, but not the point here. The point is at a brokered convention there may be VERY few options for the Republicans, and one option off the table completely is a white knight.
The RNC might still be able to wiggle around this, by for example decommitting delegates from candidates who have dropped out and either not counting them or rolling them to acceptable candidates. And of course if they are headed for Armageddon they have plenty of lawyers to change the rules and then gum up the appeals process until the election is long over. But it means that my favorite scenario, in which somebody like Paul Ryan plays the really long game and tearfully emerges at a bitterly divided GOP convention after the 54th vote and humbly accepts the nomination "for the good of (sniff) the country" cannot happen.
All BS aside, its going to take a lot of heavy lifting for the GOP to win the WH given the demographics of the country and the electoral map. The RNC has to stop these behind the scenes shenanigans to throw the nomination to an Establishment stiff. Either the primaries count or they don't. They don't count only if you get the person you want.![]()
This came on the morning drive.
The Republican Party requires candidates to gain a majority of delegates in eight States and/or territories. If a candidate doesn’t get the majority of delegates in at least eight, that candidate is disqualified.
...
The rule is known as Rule 40, and some say that it may not be in effect by the time the primaries begin, but some candidates are including it in their campaign strategies.
So it is actually statistically possible for nobody to qualify under RNC rules to be their nominee, which is funny, but not the point here. The point is at a brokered convention there may be VERY few options for the Republicans, and one option off the table completely is a white knight.
The RNC might still be able to wiggle around this, by for example decommitting delegates from candidates who have dropped out and either not counting them or rolling them to acceptable candidates. And of course if they are headed for Armageddon they have plenty of lawyers to change the rules and then gum up the appeals process until the election is long over. But it means that my favorite scenario, in which somebody like Paul Ryan plays the really long game and tearfully emerges at a bitterly divided GOP convention after the 54th vote and humbly accepts the nomination "for the good of (sniff) the country" cannot happen.