Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

GOP chairman resigns at convention

Process concerns slow proceeding­s held at Rio

- By BEN BOTKIN

The Clark County Republican Party held a chaotic convention Saturday that began with long lines of attendees waiting to get registered and ended with an announceme­nt that county party Chairman Ed Williams has resigned.

In between, Clark County Republican­s seated 1,209 delegates, and concerns about the process dogged the convention, held at the Rio. Representa­tives with the campaign of U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, raised concerns about the process of credential­ing delegates.

The purpose of the convention, in part, was to assign delegates eligible to attend the Nevada Republican Party’s state convention on May 14 in Reno. At the state convention, the party picks delegates who will go in July to the Republican National Convention in Cleveland. Thirty Nevada delegates will go to the national convention.

The county event was essentiall­y an extension of the Feb. 23 caucuses, which GOP front-runner Donald Trump won. Cruz placed third behind U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Florida, who has dropped out of the race.

The battle on Saturday is an example of how fierce the delegate fight can get. Cruz has emerged as perhaps the best hope for Republican­s seeking to stop Trump at the national convention. This race is unlike past presidenti­al elections, when a candidate is typically a lock to win the nomination at a carefully choreograp­hed drama-free national convention.

Delegates are bound to vote according to the caucus outcome in the first round of votes at the national convention. But they can switch their vote to someone else if a presidenti­al candidate doesn’t receive at least 1,237 delegates.

In the first round of voting at the national convention, 14 Nevada delegate votes will go to Trump, seven will go to Rubio, six will go to Cruz and two go to Ben Carson. One will go to Ohio Gov. John Kasich, the only other Republican besides Cruz and Trump still in the race. If voting continues afterward, the delegates are free to vote as they wish.

That’s why even now, nearly two months after the caucuses, Cruz’s people were carefully watching the process at the county convention.

“We consistent­ly objected to oversights in protocol that would have protected the integrity of this process,” said Ryan Hamilton, Cruz’s deputy campaign director for Nevada.

For example, the convention allowed delegates to submit forms nominating other potential delegates to the state convention, he said. There are a lot of unknowns, including how many nomination forms were submitted and if the people nominated had attended the precinct-level meetings, he said.

“I’m not saying there’s anything nefarious,” he said. “I’m saying the process leaves a lot to be desired.”

There was also a dispute about whether delegates need to have attended precinct-level meetings to qualify.

Convention Chairman Rob Tyree said, “Due to the silence on the issue in statute, you don’t have to actually attend your precinct meeting to attend the state convention.”

The Clark County Republican Party can send up to about 2,000 delegates to the state convention. About 800 or 900 from Clark County usually go to the state convention, Tyree said.

CHAIRMAN STEPS DOWN

Williams stepped down amid an ethics complaint filed against him by the convention chairman. Tyree had cited concerns about the high costs of the convention and a clause in the contract that gave Williams 40,000 Caesars Reward Credits, a program that can go toward perks such as meals and spa treatments. Williams didn’t mention the complaint in his resignatio­n email and has denied wrongdoing.

The county party had decided to move forward with the complaint and send it to a disciplina­ry committee for a determinat­ion on a potential penalty, Republican officials said. Options would have included removal or censure, though Williams stepping down effectivel­y ends the inquiry.

The county party will pick a new chairman at a May 18 meeting.

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