GOP - Page 13

Trump Detroit Speech Separates GOP Wheat from Chaff

Donald Trump’s speech before the Detroit Economic Club was an economic conservative tour de force and there is no longer any excuse for anyone who claims to be a believer in free enterprise and limited government to not support the GOP nominee.

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump delivers an economic policy address at the

Most California Delegates Reject Ted Cruz’s Speech

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Most of the 172-member California delegation to the Republican National Convention seemed to reject Ted Cruz’s speech on Wednesday evening, in which he refused to endorse GOP nominee Donald Trump, saying instead: “Vote your conscience.”

Ted Cruz (Chip Somodevilla / Getty)

Convention Votes Down Last Ditch NeverTrump Proposal

Cleveland, Ohio – The GOP convention’s long-expected battle to block Donald Trump died with a roar on Monday morning when the convention chairman ruled that the NeverTrump faction did not have enough states to meet the required threshold for debating a motion.

Delegates from Texas oppose a roll call vote on the floor during on the first day of the R

GOP Vice Chair: California Primary Will Pick GOP Nominee

Harmeet Dhillon, who serves as Vice Chair of the California Republican Party and is a candidate for the Republican National Committee, urged the GOP to rally behind whoever the presidential nominee is, adding that the June 7 California primary could decide who that person will be.

Harmeet Dhillon (Twitter)

Huffpo: GOP Has-Runs Who Could Still Become Nominee

“There are no second acts in American lives,” F. Scott Fitzgerald famously said. The legendary author and observer of American society was prescient about Donald Trump: what is The Donald if not the Jay Gatsby of politics? But Fitzgerald’s dictum could be way, way wrong if applied to the 2016 Republican presidential race.

Associated Press

The GOP Sellout Continues

To watch the recent happenings on Capitol Hill, you would think this was just another typical presidential election year—a few bumps here and there, but no sign of a major shake-up, no indication voters were in revolt, nothing to suggest business as usual in Washington was perhaps falling out of fashion among the American public.

The Associated Press