What Will Ron Paul Say on Leno Show?
by Joe Wolverton, II
The
New American
In the wake
of his rude
treatment at the Republican National Convention last week in Tampa,
several Internet sites are repeating rumors that Ron Paul (R-Texas)
will announce a third-party run for the White House.
Adding fuel
to this fire is Dr. Pauls scheduled
appearance Tuesday night on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno.
A representative from the Tonight Show told The
New American that it was not their policy to predict or publicize
a guests purpose for going on the show.
Although during
the primaries he repeatedly denied an intent to mount a third-party
campaign, Dr. Paul may have reconsidered given the Republican National
Committees hijacking of the Republican Party at the convention.
The affronts
to the Paul campaign specifically and to the electoral process in
general were many.
First, the
RNC denied credential to 10 Ron Paul delegates from Maine, robbing
Paul of a majority of that states delegation. One disgusted
Maine delegate described this decision as a huge slap in the
face.
Next, as the
Convention Rules Committee met August 28, the Romney campaign lawyer,
Ben Ginsberg, showed up and pressured members to accept radical
changes to the partys rules governing the binding of delegates
and the way rules are to be revised in the future.
According to
the revised Rule 15 (to be renumbered as Rule 16 in the new rule
book) as proposed by Ginsberg, every state must amend its nominating
process to ensure that their delegations are bound to vote in accordance
with the winner of the popular vote as cast at state caucuses or
primaries.
Ginsbergs
version of Rule 12 empowers the RNC to bend its own rules to suit
their needs at any time without submitting the changes to party
members gathered at the quadrennial convention. This unprecedented
revision places the control of the GOP in the hands of the Establishment
candidate without suffering the inconvenience of listening to dissenting
voices. In the future the nomination of an incumbent Republican
president is guaranteed and upon leaving office, he will be able
to name his chosen successor through manipulation of the party rules.
Curiously,
the driver of a bus carrying the delegate holding the official objections
to the proposed rule changes circled the venue refusing to stop,
causing that delegate to arrive too late to file the objections.
Speaker of the House John Boehner (R-Ohio) then proceeded to call
for a vote on Ginsbergs rewrite of the Republican rulebook.
Standing at
the podium and reading from a teleprompter, Boehner instructed those
in favor of the rules to say aye and those opposed to
say nay.
Video
of the vote clearly demonstrates that those against the adoption
of the Romney-friendly rules numbered at least as many as those
in favor. In light of the closeness of the voice vote, Boehner should
have called for a roll call vote rather than a voice vote. But in
another example of unexplained deviation from applicable Republican
Party protocol, Boehner ignored the dissenting votes, declaring,
The ayes have it.
More shocking
than the Speakers ignoring of the dissenting votes is the
revelations that came through cell phone video posted to the Internet
only minutes after this vote. These
videos record the script scrolling on Boehners teleprompter
and reveal that the adoption of the rules was scripted and that
the new rules werent voted on at all. Regardless of how long
before Boehner's appearance the script was written and entered into
the teleprompter, the undeniable fact is that the outcome of the
vote was decided in advance by whoever typed that text into the
teleprompter.
Put simply,
the passage of a radical new rulebook rewritten by a lawyer from
the Romney campaign was predetermined and the voice vote taken at
the convention was a sham, sound and fury signifying nothing.
This was not
only an insult to those duly elected Republican delegates who in
good faith opposed the revised rules, but was irrefutable proof
that the fix was in and that despite winning a plurality of the
delegates in at least five states, Ron Paul was never in the running
for the nomination.
The big tent
has collapsed leaving only ringmaster Romney standing safely next
to the Establishment's center stake.
Outside the
Tampa Bay Times Forum where the convention was held, Ron Pauls
senior campaign adviser Doug Wead said that the RNCs attack
on Ron Paul was more vicious and planned than it appeared.
Read
the rest of the article
September
4, 2012
Copyright
© 2012 The New American
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