Trump’s Texas Opponents Take Last Stand

Donald Trump Speaks at his golf course in ScotlandBy Andrew Schneider, Houston Public Media News via Audio Texas

The Republican National Convention in Cleveland is now just one week away. A majority of delegates are pledged to vote for Donald Trump. But there’s a movement afoot to block Trump from winning the nomination, one that includes members of the Texas delegation.

Ever since Donald Trump became the presumptive G-O-P nominee, the question has been whether his former opponents will rally behind him. Paul Simpson is chairman of the Harris County Republican Party. He’s going to Cleveland as a delegate from Houston.

“I think the party’s going to pull together. I think we will be united in the fall, because it’s largely – we have such a terrible choice on the other side at the presidential level.”

In other words, the presumptive Democratic nominee, Hillary Clinton. But there are still Republicans who worry Trump is the wrong candidate to face Clinton in November. Grant Moody is a delegate from San Antonio.

“I have good relationships with the [Bexar] County party officials. I know that obviously they feel a duty to party unity at this point, but I think that that’s a false premise, to be honest. It’s based on the fact that we can unite around Donald Trump and he can actually win and beat Hillary, and I don’t think that’s the case.”

Moody is part of Free the Delegates, a coalition aimed at stopping Trump from winning the nomination. The group’s best strategy hinges on getting a statement out of the convention’s rules committee that delegates are free to vote their conscience. James Dickey is a delegate from Austin.

“There’s actually only been one convention in the last 160 years where the Republican delegates were officially bound, and that was the ’76 convention, where the delegates then were forced to vote for [Gerald] Ford instead of [Ronald] Reagan, and we all know how that ended up.”

Those are the national party’s rules. The state parties have their own systems. Matt Mackowiak is an Austin-based Republican consultant.

“On the second ballot, a large number of delegates become unbound. The third ballot is when Texas becomes unbound. The fourth ballot is when Florida becomes unbound. That’s where you might have another candidate – someone who ran, or someone like Mitt Romney or Paul Ryan – could step forward and could start building support.”

The odds still favor Trump clinching the nomination on the first ballot. But the rules could make the difference. The stop-Trump forces only need to win over a quarter of the rules committee to put their argument before the convention. Toni Anne Dashiell represents Texas on the Republican National Committee.

“You know, they have a right to their voice. And if they get the 28 people that they need from the committee to have a minority report, then it’s open for discussion on the floor.”

Dashiell says she’ll stand behind the party’s nominee, whoever that is. But for now, she’s staying neutral.

Leave a Reply