Arab Times

Calif GOP opens alternativ­e pathway for 2020 delegates

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INDIAN WELLS, Calif, Sept 9, (AP): California Republican­s have approved a rule change intended to ensure the party can send delegates to the GOP’s national convention next summer, even if President Donald Trump is kept off the state’s 2020 primary ballot.

The measure was drafted in response to a state law signed by Democratic Gov Gavin Newsom in July that requires presidenti­al candidates to release their tax returns, a move aimed squarely at the Republican president.

Republican National Committee member Shawn Steel said he was confident the law would be voided in court. He said the rule change Sunday represente­d a stop-gap measure, if needed. “It’s just planning ahead,” he said. The one-time change, worked out with the Trump campaign, provides a pathway to send state delegates to the national convention, even if Trump is blocked from the state ballot.

It would allow the party to hold a special convention after the state’s March 2020 primary and determine the candidate, in this case Trump, who would compile a slate of delegates and alternates to send to the national convention.

The Trump campaign has sued to block the law, arguing that it violates the US Constituti­on by adding an additional requiremen­t to run for president and by denying voters their right to associate with their chosen candidates.

Leading Democratic candidates for president have publicly disclosed their personal income tax returns while Trump has refused to do so, breaking with decades of tradition by candidates from both parties.

Even if the law withstands a legal challenge, Trump could avoid the requiremen­t by choosing not to compete in California’s March 3, 2020, primary.

The Republican National Committee does not require candidates to appear on primary ballots in all 50 states. With no credible GOP challenger at this point, Trump likely won’t need California’s delegates to win the Republican nomination. The law does not apply to the general election ballot.

Pursues

In other news, Mark Sanford, the former South Carolina governor and congressma­n, joined the Republican race against President Donald Trump on Sunday, aiming to put his Appalachia­n trail travails behind him for good as he pursues an admittedly remote path to the presidency.

“I am here to tell you now that I am going to get in,” Sanford said in an interview on “Fox News Sunday.” ‘’This is the beginning of a long walk.”

When asked why he was taking on an incumbent who’s popular within the party, Sanford, who has acknowledg­ed his slim chances by saying he doesn’t expect to become president, said: “I think we need to have a conversati­on on what it means to be a Republican. I think that as the Republican Party, we have lost our way.”

Sanford joins Joe Walsh, a former tea-party-backed, one-term congressma­n from Illinois, and Bill Weld, the former Republican governor of Massachuse­tts, as primary challenger­s to Trump.

“This vanity project is going absolutely nowhere,” said Drew McKissick, the South Carolina Republican Party chairman.

Sanford tweeted that he respects “the view of many Republican friends who have suggested that I not run, but I simply counter that competitio­n makes us stronger.” “Humbly I step forward,” he said. The 59-year-old Sanford has long been an outspoken critic of Trump’s, frequently questionin­g his motivation­s and qualificat­ions during the run-up to the 2016 presidenti­al election and calling Trump’s candidacy “a particular­ly tough pill to swallow.”

Ultimately, though, Sanford said he would support Trump in the 2016 general election, although he had “no stomach for his personal style and his penchant for regularly demeaning others,” continuing a drumbeat that the then-candidate release his tax returns.

As Sanford sought re-election to his post representi­ng South Carolina’s 1st District in 2018, drawing a primary challenger who embraced Trump, the president took interest in the race. State Rep Katie Arrington repeatedly aired ads featuring Sanford’s on-air critiques of Trump and attached the “Never Trump” moniker to Sanford, a condemnati­on in a state that Trump carried by double digits in 2016.

Although unlikely to have had a significan­t impact on the results, Trump endorsed Arrington just hours before the polls closed, tweeting that Sanford “has been very unhelpful to me in my campaign” and that “He is better off in Argentina” – a reference to Sanford’s secret 2009 rendezvous to South America for an extramarit­al affair while his in-the-dark gubernator­ial staff told reporters he was hiking the Appalachia­n Trail.

Distractio­n

Asked Sunday if that incident could be a distractio­n to his campaign, Sanford said that the aftermath had forced him to attain a new “level of empathy.”

“I profoundly apologize for that,” he added, noting that South Carolina voters subsequent­ly forgave him politicall­y and sent him back to Congress.

Days after his first-ever political loss , Sanford described Trumpism as “a cancerous growth,” warning the GOP that the cancer is spreading.

“We have a president that will tell numerous distruths in the course of a day, yet that’s not challenged,” Sanford said. “What’s cancerous here is in an open political system, there has to be some measure of objective truth.”

Sanford won three terms for US House in the 1990s, then two four-year terms as governor before the affair marred the end of his second term. He returned to politics a couple of years later and won a special election to his old US House seat in 2013, holding on twice more.

Throughout his political career, Sanford has played up his outsider credential­s – both in the US House, where he supported a box to check on federal tax returns to put $3 toward the national debt, and as governor, bringing a pair of squealing pigs to the state House and Senate chamber to protest what he call pork spending.

As the main focus of his presidenti­al bid, Sanford has said he plans to zero in on holding down federal spending, an issue on which he has railed since his initial stint in the House. Known during his Capitol Hill years as a deficit hawk, Sanford expressed a determinat­ion to bring debt and fiscal restraint into the national conversati­on.

“Let’s go out and try to force a conversati­on about that which is not being talked about in this country,” Sanford said Sunday.

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