How the GOP Establishment Stole the Nomination From Ron Paul
by
Jaret Glenn
OpEd News
If you follow
mainstream election coverage, you might think Mitt Romney has coasted
to an honest, easy, well-deserved Republican nomination. Unfortunately
for Republican voters, nothing could be further from the truth.
The primary process has been an all-out slugfest and many of the
delegates Romney has won may be the result of dirty tricks and even
election fraud. The following narrative includes links to reports,
first-hand testimonials, and video evidence highlighting actions
taken by the GOP to ensure a Romney victory, at the expense of fracturing
the party just prior to the general election. Party leaders at the
county and state level have changed or violated party rules, cancelled
caucuses, changed vote counts, thrown out entire counties of votes,
counted public votes privately, called-in the SWAT team, and inexplicably
replaced Paul delegates with Romney delegates to block Ron Paul
from winning the nomination.
Iowa: Days
before the caucuses, Paul held a commanding
lead in
the polls and
all the momentum, with every other candidate having peaked from
favorable media coverage and then collapsed under the ensuing scrutiny.
Establishment Republicans, like Iowa's Representative Steve King
(R), attempted to sabotage Paul's campaign by spreading
rumors he
would lose to Obama if nominated. Even though the Iowa
GOP platform reads
like a Ron Paul speech, shortly before the caucuses, Iowa Governor
Terry Barnstad told
Politico ,
"[If Paul wins] people are going to look at who comes in second
and who comes in third. If Romney comes in a strong second, it definitely
helps him going into New Hampshire". The message from the Governor
to voters of his state was: a vote for Ron Paul was a wasted vote.
Huffington
Post reported that Paul was ahead by one point over Romney and Rick
Santorum in entrance
polls conducted
by Edison Media Research for the AP before the caucuses. For the
first time ever, the Iowa GOP changed the final vote count to a secret
location .
After the caucus, results
from 8 precincts (including those with colleges, in a state where
Paul won
48% of
the youth vote) went missing. Interestingly, these were all precincts Romney
lost in
2008. In addition, GOP officials discovered inaccuracies in 131
precincts. Though polling in a comfortable first place, Paul finished
third in this non-binding straw poll, behind Romney and Santorum.
Iowa originally
reported Romney in first, Santorum in a close second, and Paul third.
After the recount, Santorum was named the winner with Romney in
second. No mention was given to how the recount affected Paul's
vote count. Iowa GOP chairman, Matt Strawn, later resigned and
was replaced by
Paul supporter, A.J. Spiker and Paul went on to win the majority
of delegates.
Florida: The
Florida GOP broke party rules by switching to a winner-take-all state
before the date allowed, which favors the candidate with the most
money for advertising and attack ads. Senior Advisor to the
Ron Paul campaign, Doug Wead, claims this was done specifically
to favor Romney.
Nevada: There
is bad blood between Paul's supporters and establishment Republicans
in Nevada. This dates back to 2008, when Convention Chair, Sue Lowden
and her enlisted delegates got up and walked
out of
the convention when it became apparent Paul's supporters would claim
a majority of the delegates. She claimed she would reconvene at
a later time, but instead approved the McCain slate of delegates.
This year, Paul supporters expected shenanigans; so his State Chairman,
Carl Bunce, planned to win by outworking Romney. Just before the
caucuses, he claimed to have "more
IDs than
Romney had votes in '08". This means through canvassing door-to-door
and phoning voters, he had identified about 25,000 voters committed
to show up and vote for Paul.
On caucus day,
the media was denied
access to
most caucus sites and the few that were permitted were not allowed
to take photos. Others were even ejected from sites. This
CNN clip shows
GOP staff preventing a Paul supporter from entering the premises
to vote at a special caucus that was set up at the last minute for
Newt Gingrich backer, Sheldon Adelson. Here, participants were asked
to sign an affidavit (under
penalty of perjury) stating they were Jewish and couldn't vote earlier
in the day due to "religious reasons". CNN showed live
coverage of
votes being counted at this event, with Paul amassing nearly 60%
of the votes. In some precincts in Clark County, the largest in
Nevada, the number of ballots did
not match the
number of voters signed in at the caucus. Though votes were to be
counted publicly, they were largely counted in private. The vote
count was also inexplicably dragged out for several
days,
leading to a victory for Romney. Nevada State GOP Chairwoman, Amy
Tarkanian resigned the
day after the caucuses.
Another interesting
note is that Paul's 2012 votes had doubled, tripled, and more than
quadrupled his 2008
votes in
every state leading up to the Nevada caucuses, yet Paul received
only 88 more votes there. Of all the places for this to occur, Nevada,
the country's most libertarian state; is the last in which anyone
would expect this.
In spite of
these irregularities ,
Paul won 22
of 25 state
delegates and replaced state party officials with Paul supporters.
Romney supporters then formed their own state party, called "Team
Nevada". The RNC then bypassed the
official state party in order to organize for Romney and send all
funds to Team Nevada.
Colorado: Romney
supporters were caught passing out fake Ron
Paul slates at the state convention. The RNC has not investigated
or even commented on the matter.
Minnesota:
Doug Wead, claims the
state party instructed members not to vote for any delegates under
age fifty because most young delegates support Paul.
Missouri: WXIX
Cincinnati's Ben Swann covered the fiasco in
St. Charles County. Temporary Chairman, Eugene Dokes, started the
meeting by banning video recording devices, a first for this event. Robert's
Rules of
Order require the temporary chairman to accept nominations and elect
a convention chairman to run the event. Instead, he appointed a
chair of his choice. The crowd immediately erupted with booing.
Shortly after, Dokes adjourned the meeting without the required
two-thirds majority, called the police on attendees, and left. In
adherence to state rules, Paul supporter, Brent Stafford, along
with one of the top parliamentarians in the state, reconvened in
the parking lot and attempted to resume the event. Shortly after,
the SWAT team arrived and arrested Stafford, who was following state
party rules. Dokes later admitted on talk
radio that
he and other state
party officials deliberately
broke the rules to prevent Paul from winning.
Maine: Ben
Swann reported on shenanigans
in Maine .
Even though only 84% of votes had been counted; State GOP Chairman,
Charlie Webster, declared Romney the winner over Paul by less than
200 votes. Hancock and Washington Counties hadn't voted yet because
Webster cancelled the caucuses due to an impending snowstorm, promising
they could vote later and their votes would be counted. The snowstorm
never occurred and he later reneged on his promise, telling voters
in those counties their votes would not be counted after all. Washington
County was Paul's strongest in the state in 2008. Though other states
with close outcomes held recounts, this was never a consideration
for Maine.
At least one
of the counties that did vote claims the state party recorded its
tallies incorrectly. Matt McDonald, pastor of a small community
church in Belfast, was nominated as the chairman of his caucus.
He says the state instructed the caucus chairmen not to read any
of the vote totals aloud, but rather to send the results straight
to Augusta without a public reading. McDonald made a motion to change
this rule, and it was approved unanimously. McDonald says 22 voters
showed up, resulting in 8 votes for Paul, 7 for Santorum, 5 for
Romney, and 2 undecided. When he called the votes into Augusta,
he was told they already had the results and the totals read 9 for
Romney, 5 or Santorum, and 2 for Paul. When McDonald told her the
tally had been counted publicly, he says "her voice changed and
she said"we'll record this". Doug Wead claims,
"On every occasion, the votes that were lost were Ron Paul votes
and the person responsible for reporting them were Mitt Romney supporters"in
one case the votes were actually transferred from paper to"a computer
and the lady doing the transfer was a Mitt Romney person". To date,
these tallies have not been corrected and Romney is still credited
with the straw vote win while the media continues to report that
Paul never won a state contest.
Arizona: The
Examiner's Kevin
Kervick reports "ballot
stuffing, rule violations, and improper vote counting that occurred
behind closed doors" at the convention. In addition, Paul supporters allege
threats of
physical violence from Romney supporters.
Michigan: Doug
Wead reports,
" Michigan, unlike any other state"had a special party rule forbidding
any precinct delegate vacancies from being filled at county conventions
until after the state delegates and alternates were chosen. In other
words, countless Ron Paul supporters attending county convention
were forcibly blocked"because they weren't elected precinct delegates
in 2010-long before the Ron Paul 2012 campaign began". Wead also
claims "documented instances in multiple counties where county party
officials "edited" the state delegation lists after the county conventions
adjourned".
Wyoming:
A commenter on Paul supporter website, DailyPaul.com,
explains how members of the Republican Executive Committee (all
Romney supporters) illegally cast votes in the delegate
selection vote.
Washington:
At the state convention , a Ron Paul delegate claimed
bubble ballot sheets were withheld in King County's district
36. He also claims the 37 th district caucus
was forced to conduct the meeting outside because Chairwoman,
Lori Sotelo, was irritated when a Ron Paul supporter was elected
to run the caucus, instead of her choice.
Ben Swann interviewed
a voter in Pierce County, Washington; who claims the local
Republican leadership passed out what they called a "unity slate"
to voters and said it represented an equal distribution of delegates
committed to Romney, Santorum, and Gingrich. The plan was to organize
to block Ron Paul supporters, who outnumbered the other candidates'
supporters, from receiving the lion's share of the delegates. The
Republican leadership prevailed.
Alaska:
In spite of last-minute rule changes and violations of party rules,
Paul supporters ousted longtime state chairman, Randy Ruedrich,
and voted-in Paul supporter, Russ Millette. Ruedrich then
tried to sabotage the state convention and transferred all
of the state party's $100,000 to the local Capital City Republicans
in Juneau, effectively bankrupting the party now controlled by Paul
supporters.
Georgia: This
video shows GOP Chairwoman, Sue Everhart, at the Athens Clarke
County GOP meeting admitting "shoddy treatment of the Ron Paul people
at that [2008] convention" and publicly apologizing. She presents
the rule book that she helped to write and claims it won't happen
again. The video then shows the actual convention and party leaders
breaking those rules to force their pre-selected slate of delegates
and prevent Paul's supporters from electing their own. Party leaders
then adjourned the meeting illegally and ran out
of the meeting.
Massachusetts:
Paul won 16 of the 27 delegates selected so far in Romney's home
state. In addition, he swept all 6 from Romney's home county. As
a result (for the first time ever in the state), delegates were
asked to sign an affidavit stating " I certify under the
pain and penalty of perjury, that on the first ballot at the 2012
Republican National Convention, I will affirmatively Vote for Mitt
Romney, the winner of the 2012 Massachusetts Presidential Primary."
The state GOP then covered up Romney's embarrassing loss
by invalidating ballots and ousting the Paul delegates.
North Dakota: Ben
Swann reports the selection of delegates was unfair: the GOP
handed out pre-printed ballots with a slate of delegates with 60%
of them being Mitt Romney supporters in a state where he won only
26% of the vote.
Oklahoma:
Kevin Kervick of The Examiner reports that the Oklahoma convention had
to be moved to the parking lot because Robert's Rules were ignored,
delegate credentials were not verified, a convention chair was never
appointed, motions made from the floor were ignored, the Chairman
illegally elected a slate of Romney delegates, and the convention
was closed without a two-thirds majority vote. Consistent with Robert's
Rules, Paul supporters reconvened in the parking lot to elect delegates.
Paul supporters have now filed a law suit to ensure their
delegates will be seated.
Virginia: Doug
Wead claims "at a district convention, they coaxed the Ron
Paul delegation outside and then locked the door. The pastor of
the church that was hosting the event was, himself, locked out".
U.S. Virgin
Islands: Ron Paul won his first caucus, only to have the
GOP take down the straw vote results from their website showing
Paul the victor with 29% over Romney's 26% and replaced with a note
from the party claiming Romney won because he won more delegates.
Paul's Official Campaign Blogger, Jack Hunter, explains how
every other contest determined the victor by the straw vote, except
the one straw vote Paul won.
Alabama:
An inexplicable gap exists between Paul's popular vote
count and his delegate vote count. This is odd because voters choose
both on the same day and on the same ballot. Alabama Republican
Party rules state that voters can only vote for one candidate and
then must choose between his delegates. Statewide, Paul received
only about one-third as many votes as his delegates. This means
voters chose another candidate, but selected Paul's delegates. No
other candidate's totals showed a similar pattern.
Louisiana:
Ben Swann reports a clash between the old Louisiana State
GOP leadership and newly-elected leaders who support Paul. Old Chairman,
Roger Villere, angered attendees with last-minute rule changes the
night before the convention. At the start of the convention, Villere
attempted to recognize the former Chair of the Rules Committee,
who had been voted out the night before. When new Chair, Alex Helwig,
rose to address the delegation; Villere instructed security (comprised
of off-duty Shreveport Police) to remove him . They arrested
him for trespassing and broke several of his fingers. Next, an overwhelming
majority elected a new Convention Chair, Paul supporter Alex Helwig.
Members then turned their chairs to face Helwig, with their backs
to Villere. In desperation, Villere instructed the police officers
to remove the duly-elected Herford. They did so and dislocated
his hip in the process, sending him to the emergency room.
The reconvened group followed state party rules and went on to elect
a majority of Paul delegates, which the state party later replaced with
its own slate of Romney delegates. The Paul campaign has appealed
to the RNC, but it is unlikely that the RNC will reinstate the Paul
delegates.
Oregon:
This YouTube video shows establishment Republicans in
Congressional District 4 attempting to steal the ballot box and
leave the premises when it became apparent the Ron Paul supporters
were in the majority. A Paul supporter is chased away from
the ballots and claims he was accosted by an establishment party
member.
Wisconsin:
MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell reports Romney violated state
campaign laws by bribing voters with free subs.
In other
states, Paul supporters claim vote-flipping occurred with
electronic voting machines. Once about 40% of votes are reported,
there is typically little variation in the final numbers. However
on several occasions, at about 40% Romney's trajectory "flipped"
with the leader, which was often Paul. Austin Election Judge,
Anne Beckett, has come forth publicly to claim she witnessed
this firsthand.
Baseless
allegations or a few isolated incidents may not be cause for concern,
but there is enough video evidence in this report to disturb anyone
who cares about fair elections. Rule changes, disregard for
existing rules, cancelling elections, running off with ballots,
secret vote counts, throwing out votes, threats, physical violence,
and arbitrary replacement of delegates are activities unbecoming
of a democratic society. Whether you're a Ron Paul supporter,
or even a Republican, is irrelevant. That the Republican Party
will seemingly stop at nothing to ensure their selected candidate
is the nominee should be deeply troubling for all Americans.
Reprinted
with permission from OpEd
News.
August
8, 2012
Jaret
Glenn is a Central Florida native and a graduate of FSU and Nova
Southeastern university. He's a freelance political writer and activist.
Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 OpEd
News
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