Discussion » Statements » Rosie's Corner » Paul Ryan disinvited Trump to the Wisconsin Saturday gathering . Pence was just disinvited too. Are Trump's problems affecting Pence?

Paul Ryan disinvited Trump to the Wisconsin Saturday gathering . Pence was just disinvited too. Are Trump's problems affecting Pence?

Posted - October 8, 2016

Responses


  • 3907
    Hello Rosie:

    I don't think he was dis-invited..  I think he's not going on his OWN motion..  Maybe, just maybe, Pence might call for Trump to withdraw too..  That, of course, would put HIM in line for the presidency, wouldn't it??  He's NOT ambitious, is he?  Maybe he can see which way the wind is blowing..

    Plus, Pence said, "I'm a Christian, a conservative, and a Republican, in THAT order"..  Let's see just how Christian he is.


    excon This post was edited by excon at October 9, 2016 1:16 AM MDT
      October 8, 2016 10:12 AM MDT
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  • 113301
       Yep. Time will tell. Pence is as much for Pence as Trump is for Trump. I think Trump got blindsided!  That you for your reply excon! :)
      October 8, 2016 10:31 AM MDT
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  • 35911

    Actually Pence would not automatically become the candidate.  The members of the RNC (the establishment Republicans 168 memebers) could decide to nominate someone totally different.  I could see Jeb easily coming out of that with a nomination.


    Rule 9
     of the Rules of the Republican Party—which were last approved and amended at the Republican National Convention in July 2016—says that if a Republican candidate for president or vice president leaves the race due to “death, declination, or otherwise” after the national convention, the Republican National Committee (RNC) has the authority to fill a vacancy by a majority vote of its 168 members or by reconvening the national convention.

    If the RNC took the latter route—reconvening the national convention—the logistics and details of this are unknown, but the basic idea is that the right to fill the vacancy would be handed over to the 2,472 delegates of the national convention.

    The details of what would happen if the RNC chose to fill the vacancy by a majority vote of its membership are spelled out in Rule 9. It would work like this:

    • All 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, Northern Mariana Islands, and the U.S. Virgin Islands have three members who sit on the Republican National Committee: a state chair, a national committeeman, and a national committeewoman.
    • Those three individuals would be entitled to cast the same number of votes for the replacement nominee as their state or territory was entitled to at the national convention. So, for example, California’s three members on the RNC would be responsible for casting 172 votes, while Alaska’s three members would have 28 votes.
    • What would happen if California’s three members disagreed on how to cast their state’s 172 votes? Rule 9 says that the state’s votes would be “divided up equally,” and that includes fractions. In other words, each RNC member from California would get 57.3 votes.
    • For a candidate to be elected to fill a vacancy, he or she would need to receive a majority of the 2,472 votes up for grabs, which is 1,237.

    For more about Rule 9, see this page.

    According to Rule 8(b), the chair of the RNC must call a meeting for the purpose of filling a vacancy on the national ticket, and he or she must give a minimum of five days notice to the committee members (the minimum is ten days for other matters). Another option would be for 16 members of the RNC, "representing no fewer than sixteen (16) states," to file a petition to the RNC chairman requesting a meeting. The chairman would then have ten days from the receipt of the petition to call a meeting. The date of the meeting could be "not later than twenty (20) days or earlier than ten (10) days from the date of the call."

      October 8, 2016 1:03 PM MDT
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  • 1615
    It sure is, what a mess
      October 8, 2016 12:18 PM MDT
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