A WARNING TO THE GOP: HOLD A BROKERED CONVENTION AND MILLIONS WILL LEAVE THE REPUBLICAN PARTY
The loosely-coordinated
anti-Trump efforts are attempting to get off the ground, uncover
potentially damning research, and deploy it on television and online all
before March 15,
the date on which Trump stands to make a break-out in winner-take-all
contests if his momentum isn’t stalled. It’s a tall order, with campaign
operatives seeking to condense months of planning and strategy into
days.
by Geoffrey GriderMarch 4, 2016
NOW WITH TRUMP ON THE CUSP OF SECURING THE NOMINATION, THE GOP IS GEARING UP TO BANKROLL A DESPERATE EFFORT TO STOP HIM WITH A BROKERED CONVENTION
“Presidents are selected, not elected.” – Franklin D. Roosevelt
I have made no secret of my preference to see Donald Trump become the Republican nominee for president. I have done that in the process of exercising my Constitutional rights guaranteed to me as an American citizen. Millions of other have also stated preferences for Trump, as they have also for Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio.
We can debate, and fight and argue and all the other things that family
do, but in the end it has to be we, the American people, who choose our
next president. Anything less will be the catalyst for open revolution
on the streets of every small town and big city from Oregon to Florida.
GOP SPENDING MILLIONS TO STOP DONALD TRUMP’S SURGE:
The fat cat elites in the Republican party have stated time and again that “Donald Trump will not be the nominee”. Addressing a luncheon of Republican governors and donors in Washington on Feb. 19, Karl Rove warned that Donald J. Trump’s increasingly likely nomination would be catastrophic, dooming the party in November. But Mr. Rove, the master strategist of George W. Bush’s campaigns, insisted it was not too late for them to stop Mr. Trump, according to three people present.
At a meeting of Republican governors the next morning,
Paul R. LePage of Maine called for action. Seated at a long boardroom
table at the Willard Hotel, he erupted in frustration over the state of
the 2016 race, saying Mr. Trump’s nomination would deeply wound the Republican Party.
Mr. LePage urged the governors to draft an open letter “to the people,”
disavowing Mr. Trump and his divisive brand of politics.
NOW WITH TRUMP ON THE CUSP OF SECURING THE NOMINATION, THE GOP IS GEARING UP TO BANKROLL A DESPERATE EFFORT TO STOP HIM.
The loosely-coordinated anti-Trump efforts are attempting to get off the ground, uncover potentially damning research, and deploy it on television and online all before March 15,
the date on which Trump stands to make a break-out in winner-take-all
contests if his momentum isn’t stalled. It’s a tall order, with campaign
operatives seeking to condense months of planning and strategy into
days.
The Republican Party has, for the past 7 years, allowed the deficit to explode to nearly $20 trillion, passed Obamacare, and helped to pass the Iranian Nuclear Treaty.
In the 2014 midterms, Republicans begged America that if they would
vote to create Republican majorities in both Congress and Senate, there
would be a “Republican Revolution”
to overthrow Obama’s draconian and failed policies. The sad reality is
here we are in 2016, and still waiting for that “revolution” to
materialize. Donald Trump is the first real, organic excitement in the
Republican Party since Ronald Reagan in 1980.
SO HERE IS OUR WARNING TO THE GOP
I certainly hope that Donald Trump will win the nomination and
take it all the way to the White House, that’s my personal choice. But
if Marco Rubio or Ted Cruz win the nomination I will support either of
those nominees against Hillary Clinton as strongly as I can. I first
voted as a Republican for Ronald Reagan in 1980, and have been a lifelong Republican and Conservative American.
But if the GOP forces a brokered convention in
CLEAR violation of the will of the American people, I will call for
open revolution against the Republican Party and become an Independent.
And I will take as many people with me as possible.
Your move, GOP, choose wisely. The future of the Republican Party hangs in the balance.
Game on.
Civil war has erupted in the Republican Party, and the Republican establishment is in full-blown panic mode. Donald Trump was never supposed to get this far, and now party insiders
are scrambling to come up with a plan to block him from securing the
nomination before the convention. After winning seven states on Super Tuesday,
you would think that the Republican Party would be rallying around
Trump and preparing for a tough general election battle with Hillary
Clinton. Instead, the goal is now to stop Trump at all costs.
It
is amazing to me that a candidate that is openly at war with the
Republican Party establishment, Fox News, Glenn Beck and a whole bunch
of other prominent conservative pundits is running away with the race for the nomination. If someone would have told me this a year ago, I never would have believed it.
But the war is far from over. Special interest groups are going to pour tens of millions of dollars into an all-out attempt to defeat Trump, and the mainstream media is going to continue to try to smear him however they can.
Normally,
any candidate that was forced to endure such withering attacks would be
done by now. But Trump has just continued to roll on, and his momentum
appears to be unstoppable. Moving forward, the Republican
establishment has four main options that it can try in an attempt to
stop Trump...
#1 Marco Rubio –
The establishment could put everything that they have into pumping up
Marco Rubio’s failing campaign, but it might be too late. Just like Jeb
Bush, Rubio doesn’t really inspire anyone, and his reputation of being
robotic is well deserved. The main reason many Republicans are voting
for him is because they don’t like Trump or Ted Cruz. Rubio is already
way behind in the delegate race, and if he doesn’t win his home state of
Florida later this month, it is hard to see any possible way that he is
going to be able to block a Trump nomination.
#2 Mitt Romney –
Have you noticed that Mitt Romney has started to make a lot of waves
over the past week or so? There are reports that suggest that if Marco
Rubio does not win the state of Florida that Rubio will drop out and
Romney will enter the race.
At that point it would be difficult for Romney to accumulate the
delegates that he would need to clinch the nomination before the
convention, but if he could win big states such as New York, California and
At
first a lot of people dismissed these whispers about Romney, but now
that Romney has been relentlessly attacking Trump these reports are
being taken a lot more seriously. And according to NBC News, Mitt Romney is scheduled to deliver a speech on “the state of the 2016 presidential race” tomorrow...
#3 Independent Campaign –
There had always been speculation that Donald Trump would try an
independent campaign if he did not get the nomination, but now it is
Republican insiders that are seriously considering going this route.
Of
course an independent campaign would be far from easy to pull off.
Just trying to get on the ballot in all 50 states is a logistical
nightmare, and over the years the Republicans and the Democrats have
made sure that the rules are heavily stacked against anyone else.
In
addition, an independent campaign mounted by Republicans would almost
certainly split the conservative vote, and that leads us to option
four...
#4 Throw The Campaign To Hillary –
This may sound completely and utterly bizarre, but the truth is that
most establishment Republicans are far more comfortable with Hillary
Clinton than they are with either Donald Trump or Ted Cruz.
By disavowing Donald Trump or mounting an independent bid, many establishment Republicans think that they may be able to keep control of both houses of Congress even if Hillary Clinton wins the presidential election.
Plus,
many Republican members of Congress are right on the same page with
Hillary when it comes to foreign policy, free trade, immigration and
other key issues.
Sadly,
if it came right down to a choice between Donald Trump and Hillary
Clinton, a lot of establishment Republicans would willingly choose
Hillary. Just consider the following anecdote from Infowars.com...
All of this shows me that there is absolutely no hope for the Republican Party.
If
they can’t unite now, after eight years of Barack Obama and potentially
facing four years of Hillary Clinton, when will they be able to get
their act together?
The
fact that establishment Republicans seem far more freaked out about
four years of Donald Trump than they do about four years of Hillary
Clinton says an awful lot.
Sadly,
the Republican establishment is not even willing to rally around Ted
Cruz because they hate him almost as much as they hate Donald Trump.
They would much rather deal with “President Hillary” than either Trump
or Cruz, and so that is quite likely what America is going to get...
Courtesy of Michael Snyder.
Laura J Alcorn
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