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Charles Koch Is Privately Committed To Getting Paul Ryan …
Charles Koch is confident House Speaker Paul Ryan could emerge from the Republican …
Charles Koch is confident House
Speaker Paul Ryan could emerge from the Republican National Convention
as the party’s nominee if Donald Trump comes up at least 100 delegates
shy, he has told friends privately.
Koch believes Ryan would be a
“shoo-in” at a contested convention, should the campaign get to that
point. Though Koch’s wealth gives him significant influence within the
Republican Party, it does not necessarily translate into skill in
political prognostication. Still, he and his brother David are fond of
Ryan. As a source close to the brothers told The Huffington Post, they
appreciate the agenda he has pursued as speaker, including opposition to
tax extenders and heightened warnings against corporate welfare —
positions that contrast with the admittedly vague portfolio pushed by
Donald Trump.
One source close to Ryan said he would only be interested in it if
the party could unite behind him, a scenario he can’t envision. “I don’t
know what to tell you? He doesn’t want the nomination. And can you
imagine the backlash from the Trump forces if someone who didn’t run for
president wins the nomination? It would be complete chaos,” he said.
A second source close to the Koch brothers said he wasn’t aware of a conversation about Ryan, but it didn’t surprise him.
Emails to Charles and David Koch were not returned.
Mark Holden, general counsel for Koch Industries, told HuffPost the claim was “completely false.”
“Let me be clear, we never have advocated for a specific candidate in
a presidential primary, and we have no plans to do so now,” Holden
said.
People close to Ryan continue to
insist publicly that he has no interest in the nomination. And one
associate of the speaker said he “guarantees” there has been no
conversation with Charles Koch about the possibility, “because Paul has
not had any conversation about it. He won’t engage any conversation
about it.”
Despite the repeated denials of interest,
speculation about an 11th hour Ryan nomination has only grown louder.
Part of it is nervous chatter from Republicans over the prospect of
Trump or Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) being the party nominee.
But part of it is driven by Ryan’s
own history and by perceptions of politicians in general. It would be
strange indeed if the same man who was the Republican nominee for vice
president in 2012 — typically the position that is a springboard to the
nomination for president — would not accept a shot at the top job. That
is especially true considering the weak position in which Democrats find
themselves. Hillary Clinton, the party’s likely nominee, has
staggeringly high unfavorability numbers, which are only masked by
Trump’s even higher unfavorability with everybody other than older white
men.
On Monday morning, Mike Allen, writing in Politico’s Playbook, quoted unnamed establishment Republicans talking up Ryan’s chance
of claiming the nomination. And in a column Sunday, Republican
strategist Alex Castellanos backed off his earlier prediction that Trump
had the thing locked down, and used the same figure of 100 votes that
Koch has used privately.
[I]f Mr. Trump is one hundred or more
votes away from the nomination, it is unlikely he can find the
delegates to get the ball in the end zone on the first ballot. He will
turn the ball over on downs though nearly at the goal line. (OK, no more
sports metaphors.) On the second ballot, he drops 200 or 300 votes or
more and starts bleeding. Ultimately, he bleeds to death on the
convention floor — which you think would be good news for the candidate
in second place, Senator Ted Cruz, unless, of course, you’ve met Senator
Ted Cruz.
Cruz, Castellanos argues, is only
attractive as an alternative to Trump, and as Trump fades, so does
Cruz’s rationale. As attention moves to John Kasich, he adds, the
question changes:
If GOP delegates start looking for an
alternative to both Trump and Senator Cruz, why settle for Miss Ohio
when you could marry Miss America? Why not wipe the slate clean and go
for what delegates really want, the Republican Speaker? Former
Vice-Presidential candidate Paul Ryan is a larger political figure. He
has national experience and appeal. The Speaker has also managed to
bring together unruly Republicans in the House, the Capitol’s hotbed of
insurrection. Most importantly, he is a fresher face, a new and more
promising generation of Republican. He would have a better shot at
uniting the Republican Party.
A Ryan associate dismissed the
convention scenarios as conspiratorial folly spread by people who’ve
watched too much TV drama. “This is where ‘House of Cards’ has totally
changed things,” said the associate. Ryan “views himself as a check on
the madness. As this Rock of Gibraltar during the chaos. And if he
suddenly becomes part of the circus, it is hard for him to play that
role.” (It’s unclear whether Charles Koch watches “House of Cards.”)
To that point, there are many serious
hurdles that would need to be cleared in order for Ryan to even be in
the realm of consideration for the Republican nomination. First and
foremost, Trump would have to end up with roughly 1,137 delegates — or
100 short of the necessary 1,237.
The second hurdle is the rules. Under
current bylaws, for a candidate to be nominated, he or she must have a
majority of the delegate votes in each of at least eight states. That
rule, 40(b), can be changed: The Rules Committee would have to suggest
an alteration or amendment and then a majority of the delegates who vote
at the convention would have to affirm it. But Cruz’s campaign has
moved deftly to put allies on the Rules Committee. And it is hard to
imagine that both he and Trump would not instruct their delegates (which
will very likely constitute a majority when combined) to defeat any
effort to undo Rule 40(b), since maintaining the eight-state threshold
would limit the potential nominees to just themselves.
“The easiest way for someone like a
Paul Ryan is you have to change the rules to allow nominations from the
floor, which means you have to eliminate 40(b), and put in a line in
there that nominations would be accepted from the floor,” said a
Republican source involved in managing the convention process for the
party.
The source went on to acknowledged
that Rule 40(b) could be challenged after the first ballot — as in, if
no one wins in the first round of voting, an argument would be made that
the eight-state threshold no longer applied. But even doing that would
risk tremendous backlash from the very fervent supporters of Trump and
Cruz.
“It’s an extremely difficult
proposition. Not impossible. But extremely difficult,” the source said.
Asked what would happen if it succeeded, the source replied: “Days of
rage.”
Conservative radio personality Hugh Hewitt asked Ryan about the convention rules during an interview in Israel on Monday. “You
are going to be chairman, and there is quite a lot of talk about Rule
40(b). Do you think the rules of the 2012 Convention ought to bind this
convention, Mr. Speaker?”
“You know, I don’t know, that’s not
my decision,” Ryan said. “That is going to be up to the delegates. I’m
going to be an honest broker, and make sure that the convention follows
the rules as the delegates make the rules. As you probably know, the
Rules Committee meets the week before the convention. I believe it’s two
delegates from each state and territory, about 112 people who’ll set
the rules, and I’m not going to make an opinion or a judgment one way or
the other, because it’s their decision, the delegates’ decision, who
are the grassroots of the party, by the way. It should not be our
decision as leaders. It is the delegates’ decision. So I’m not going to
comment on what these rules look like or not. But I do believe people
put my name in this thing, and I say get my name out of that. This is —
if you want to be president, you should go run for president. And that’s
just the way I see it.”
Matt Fuller contributed reporting.
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