Fox News: Paul’s ‘Renegade campaign’ Targets GOP State Conventions

Fox News

Despite Ron Paul having essentially no shot at winning the GOP presidential  nomination, his renegade campaign has embarked on a new tactic that his  supporters hope can get the Texas congressmen elected – or at least get him a  larger role at the party convention and cause headaches for likely nominee Mitt  Romney.

The Paul campaign is attempting to secure convention-bound delegates in  district- and state-level contests to vote for their candidate, though Paul has  failed to win a single primary or caucus.

Primary math typically adds up to the winner getting the most delegates,  which puts Romney far ahead of Paul.

However, Paul campaigners think a strong presence at state-level contests  could help them influence and win enough remaining delegates to help their  candidate perhaps win a brokered nomination at the national convention, should  Romney not get enough votes in the first round. It at least could get Paul more  attention for his tiny-government platform.

“Our campaign strategy has always been to amass the maximum amount of  delegates possible, and continuing work in state caucus-conventions is part of  that,” Paul spokesman Gary Howard said Thursday.

Even so, some Republican strategists say such tactics are hurting the party  and its efforts to unify for the general election.

“The bottom line is any attempt to gather more delegates (for Paul) is not  likely to yield success,” said Taylor Griffin, a GOP strategist at the  Washington, D.C.-based Hamilton Place Strategies. “The only person it’s going to  help is Barack Obama.”

(Last) weekend, the Paul campaign appeared to be eyeing 25 delegates up for  grabs at the GOP convention in Nevada, where Romney won the state caucus with  roughly 50 percent of the vote in February.

The notion that the Paul campaign might try to tinker with the Nevada  delegate count has prompted the Republican National Committee’s top lawyer to  send a letter to the Nevada state party.

Chief counsel John R. Phillippe Jr. told party Chairman Michael McDonald on  Wednesday that such maneuvering could result in the entire Nevada delegation not  getting seated at the convention.

Phillippe made clear the letter was “purely advisory” but said it was “highly  likely” that a committee with jurisdiction over these matters might find such  changes improper.

In Iowa, Paul could win a chunk of the 28 delegates available next month at  the district-state convention, after finishing third and receiving just one  delegate in the January caucus.

Last week, Paul dominated the Louisiana state caucus, though he won just 6  percent of the primary vote, and he could do the same at the June 2 state  convention.

Paul campaigners also appear to be focusing on at least three other states – including Maine, Massachusetts and Washington – which could give them enough  delegates to at least make some noise on the convention floor.

[And Oklahoma, where the state convention is being held today (May 12).]

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/05/03/paul-campaign-has-new-tactic-to-win-delegates-highjack-gop-convention/#ixzz1ueDuysV4


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