The $3 million fight to stop Trump in Cleveland runs through Colorado

PBS NewsHour

 

Colorado is Cruz country. Even those loyal to The Donald here admit it.

And so maybe it’s no surprise that a growing national parliamentary effort to try and slam the brakes on Trump’s nomination at the Republican National Convention next week in Cleveland has roots in Colorado.

Kendal Unruh, a self-described anti-establishment grassroots conservative who teaches government at an Englewood Christian school— and is the co-founder of a group called Free The Delegates— says a recent merger with another anti-Trump group has brought in $3 million for their efforts.

Unruh is an elected delegate to the Cleveland convention and has a seat on the 112-member Rules Committee. She plans to propose a rule that would codify what she calls an existing right of each national delegate to vote his or her  conscience. In other words, it would allow delegates who are bound to Trump to vote for someone else.

For the rule to pass, a majority of the Rules Committee— 56 members— would have to vote in favor. That’s where the fight comes in.

In recent weeks, the anti-Trump movement has been gaining media attention, raising money and coordinating efforts among groups that broadly go by monikers such as Dump Trump or #NeverTrump. In an interview with The Colorado Independent, Unruh said a recent marriage between Free The Delegates and another group called Delegates Unbound “brought in about $3 million for a coordinated whip effort,” along with a professionalized infrastructure to aide volunteers.

A July 5 tally by The Washington Post found fewer than 10 committee members willing to publicly commit to the proposed conscience clause rule.

Unruh says she has 28 commitments locked down from members of the Rules Committee and she’s called more than half of the convention delegates so far, reporting 70 percent told her they’re in favor of being unbound. 

“We know what our votes are and we know how many we have,” she told The Independent. She declined to say how many might be on her side if the vote makes it to the convention floor. 

Why? Fears of retribution.

Since she launched her effort to bump Trump in Cleveland, the fiery conservative says more than 1,000 “horrible” online messages have been lobbed her way.

Her effort started, she said, the moment her favored candidate, Texas U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, suspended his campaign in May.

But the presumed nomination of a controversial billionaire entertainer hasn’t exactly brought the Republican Party together— not nationally, and not in Colorado. So, while Unruh has her detractors, she also has backing from what she characterizes as a “silent majority.”

Despite Cruz bowing out, Unruh knew she was still going to Cleveland on July 18, so she started looking for the right monkey wrench to throw in the machine once she got there. She had heard conservative North Dakota businessman and fellow Rules Committee member Curly Haugland talking about an 1880 rule by James Garfield indicating that Republicans may vote their conscience and aren’t necessarily bound to a particular candidate. So she and Guy Short, another Colorado delegate on the national Rules Committee, started talking about proposing a rule in their capacity as committee members in Cleveland.

“All my rule is doing is codifying a right that already exists, I’m not granting permission for a delegate to unbind. They already have that inherent ability to unbind,” Unruh said.“So my conscience clause on Rules was basically going to give them the permission slip they needed to fight back against any pushback they were going to get when they would unbind.”

After a story in The Wall Street Journal highlighted the plan, calls and messages started rolling in from supporters.

“I knew that I had tapped into something,” Unruh says. “I had been working on it for about a month, then overnight — boom — all the interest was there, and so that’s when I started calling friends of mine to help because I knew a movement had started.”

But Unruh says it’s not her place to determine who the nominee should be if her plot to foil Trump’s rise comes to fruition.

“That’s up to the delegates to decide,” she says. “And that’s what this is all about. With free conscience they get to pick whoever they want … . People think their uncle Joe would make a great presidential candidate.”

Unruh’s trip to Cleveland could be a Kamikaze mission or a coup.

And when the dust clears, she knows the party could punish her for whatever she does. This, however, is not her first convention. Cleveland will be Unruh’s eighth in a row as a national delegate— one who has ratcheted up the ranks of the state’s byzantine caucus-assembly system to become a national player typical of Colorado’s uniquely process-oriented conservative base.

“People will say ‘Oh, your career is over,’” she says of what she plans to do next week. But a career in politics was never her goal.

Says Unruh: “I’m a grassroots activist against the establishment.” 

 

[Photo credit: PBS NewsHour via Creative Commons on Flickr]

8 COMMENTS

  1. Unruh has already got her way. Per Colorado’s rules, she can vote her conscience. What she wants is to meddle in the rules of other states on the rights of their delegates.

    What’s the point of a primary if the delegates can vote contrary to the results?

    The Republican Party must decide if they wants Mrs. Clinton or Mr. Trump to be the next president. There’s no other choices. If somehow the party can maneuver the convention to nominate some other candidate (Cruz, Rubio, or whoever), they will disenfranchise all those voters that voted for Trump in the primaries. Those voters would not only be resentful of the Republican presidential nomination, but the whole Republican party, resulting in the loss of many Congressional seats too.

    Both Trump and Unruh needs to grow-up: Trump with his juvenile comments and Unruh who wants to change the rules when she doesn’t get her way.

  2. In my early voting years (which began after Reagan) I was a registered independent, and there has NEVER been a republican candidate that I wanted to vote FOR. I always had to vote republican because the candidate was the lesser of two evils. I then registered as a republican because I thought it was the only way to have a say in the matter. This election season, the republican party of Colorado STOLE that opportunity from me.
    While I do not agree with everthing Trump says, I am 100% against the moron, criminal, useless idiot, politcal hack that the democratic party is running against him. He is definitely the LESSER of the evils we have to chose from this time around. And to listen to the whining from “republicans” of conscience” is more than I can bear.
    I have voted for the lack-luster, self-serving, mental morons the republican party has been foisting upon America for the past few decades. And now you want me to feel sorry for you because your “conscience” cannot allow you to vote for Trump? STFU and suck it up! Welcome to the REAL world. Maybe you should put your efforts into candidates that put the interests of America before themselves. Until you and your like can do that, get in line like good little soldiers, and support the republican nominee.

  3. Perhaps the Republicans should switch to the rigged Democrat version of primaries in which only one candidate had a chance of winning so there would be no question of whom the nominee could be at the convention.

  4. Why do these delegates think they know what is good for the voters who voted for Trump? I’m a college educated adult women and know my own mind and what I feel is right for me, my family and my country. Trump is not perfect… But no one is. He is certainly better than Hillary Clint who lies to congress and to all of us, puts our soldiers and country at risk, and is involved in scandal after scandal.. All because of her and her husbands own doing.

  5. I won’t lob a horrible message at Unruh, but I will donate my money to whoever runs against her in the future. She’s just another politician that doesn’t get it!

  6. These people are really “Republicans for Hillary”. They will elect Hillary, she will stack the supreme court and Unruh’s Republican party will cease to exist. From this point forward I will never vote for anyone who is endorsed by Kendal Unruh.

  7. This type of political garbage is exactly why Trump has been successful. This moron needs to get over herself and know the people have spoken. I did not vote for Trump, but will in the coming election

Comments are closed.