John Kasich
Strategist Wanted A Contested Convention Four Years Ago
by Patrick Howley18 Mar 2016
John Kasich’s new top
strategist, Stu Spencer, wanted a contested Republican convention in
2012.
“We need a donnybrook of a convention,” Spencer told
Real Clear Politics in early March 2012, at exactly around this
point in the primary process. At the time, Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum were
battling to reach the majority threshold for delegates, and Spencer thought
that the convention could be brokered to deny them both the nod.
Spencer is one of many establishment GOP people readying
for a convention fight that would reject Donald Trump’s bid for the nomination.
For example, Romney’s top 2012 strategist, Stuart Stevens, is
also trying to persuade various GOP leaders and groups to force a contested
convention.
In 2012, Real
Clear Politics reported:
Spencer says that if neither Mitt Romney nor Rick
Santorum goes to the Republican convention in Tampa with sufficient delegates
to be nominated, their supporters might unite on an outsider nominee because
they share the common goal of “beating Obama.”…
…[Bill] Roberts and Spencer were tagged as moderates
after the Rockefeller campaign, but two years later signed up with the
conservative Reagan, then an underdog, and managed his successful campaign for
California governor. Spencer, by then on his own, stuck with President Ford in
1976 and played a key role in derailing Reagan’s challenge for the nomination.
He was back with Reagan in 1980, brought into the campaign by Nancy Reagan at a
time it was faltering. The rest, as they say, is history.
Spencer’s efforts to stop Ronald Reagan in 1976 are now
being touted by the Kasich campaign. Team Kasich announced that Spencer was
joining the campaign’s National Strategy Council immediately after Kasich won
the Ohio primary Tuesday night. The Kasich team’s press release played up the
Ford’76 bit:
Stu Spencer served as chief political
strategist for President Ronald Reagan’s California gubernatorial
campaigns in 1966 and 1970 and presidential campaigns in 1980 and 1984. As
chief political strategist to President Gerald Ford, Spencer played a central
role in helping Ford secure the Republican nomination at the Kansas City
Convention in 1976.
Spencer joined Kasich alongside fellow strategists
Charlie Black, Vin Weber, and Tom Ingram, who are all veterans of Republican
Party politics. The Kasich campaign also announced an Arizona leadership team
on Friday to bring to that state’s primary.
As Breitbart News reported,
Kasich is angling to help keep Donald Trump below the 1,237 delegates he needs
to clinch the nomination on the first ballot, and then trying to claim the
nomination on later ballots after pledged delegates are allowed to vote on
their own. It is mathematically impossible at this point for Kasich to reach
1,237 during the primary voting.
On the topic of a contested convention, Kasich said in
the Fox News Republican debate in Detroit that “We are already there.”
Breitbart News spoke to Kasich surrogate John Sununu Jr.,
of the New Hampshire Sununu dynasty, in the Spin Room after that debate about
the possibility of a brokered convention for Kasich.
Sununu told Breitbart News that Kasich will gain
delegates in the northern states, hold Trump to less than a majority share of
delegates, and then win it all in Cleveland.
Stu Spencer
Stuart K. Spencer
is the chairman at Hecht, Latham,
Spencer & Associates, and John
Kasich’s new top strategist.
Note: Thomas Latham is a
partner at Hecht, Latham, Spencer &
Associates, and a friend of John A.
Boehner.
REPORT: John Boehner Calls Cruz ‘Lucifer’ After Endorsing
Paul Ryan for President (PAST RESEARCH)
Thursday, March 17, 2016
John A. Boehner is
a friend of Thomas Latham, a member
of the Burning Tree Club, and was a member
& speaker for the U.S. House of
Representatives.
Jack
Valenti was a member of the Burning
Tree Club, and a trustee at the Aspen
Institute (think tank).
Foundation
to Promote Open Society was a funder for the Aspen Institute (think
tank), and the Economic Policy
Institute.
George Soros
was the chairman for the Foundation to Promote Open Society, is the
founder of the Soros Fund Management,
and the founder & chairman for the Open
Society Foundations.
Open
Society Foundations was a funder for the Economic Policy Institute.
John Kasich took $202,700 from George Soros
March 14, 2016
http://www.conservativeoutfitters.com/blogs/news/92961857-john-kasich-took-202-700-from-george-soros
Robert A. Johnson was a managing director for the Soros
Fund Management, and is a director at the Economic Policy Institute.
National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility
and Reform is a paid for
staff by the Economic Policy Institute.
Paul Ryan is a member of the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and
Reform, and a member & speaker for the U.S. House of Representatives.
John A. Boehner was
a member & speaker for the U.S.
House of Representatives, a member of the Burning Tree Club, and is a friend of Thomas Latham.
Thomas Latham is a
friend of John A. Boehner, and a
partner at Hecht, Latham, Spencer &
Associates.
Stuart K. Spencer
is the chairman at Hecht, Latham,
Spencer & Associates, and John
Kasich’s new top strategist.
No comments:
Post a Comment