​Reince Priebus: Donald Trump Making It Difficult To Earn Republican Presidential Nomination

Author: John LesterBy:
Staff Reporter
Apr. 4, 2016

Reince Priebus said that Donald Trump is making it harder for himself to win the Republican presidential nomination by threatening to run as an independent if he is not treated fairly, and the Republican Party Chairman isn’t too quick to confirm his pending nomination.

In several television interviews, Reince Priebus said candidates sometimes make such statements in hopes of gaining leverage over the party, but that it would not work, according to Raw Story.

“Those kinds of comments, I think, have consequences,” Priebus, who chairs the Republican National Committee, said on ABC’s “This Week.” “And so when you make those kinds of comments and you want people to fall in line for you, it makes it more difficult.

“… And certainly, you know, if you were running for president of the Kiwanis Club or the Boy Scouts and you said you don’t know if you like the Kiwanis or the Boy Scouts, I think that makes your challenge even greater to ultimately win those kinds of posts,” Reince Priebus told reporters. “It’s no different for the Republican Party.”

On Tuesday, Trump backed away from the loyalty pledge he signed in September promising to support the party’s eventual nominee and not to run an independent campaign for the White House.

The RNC pledge has unraveled as Donald Trump’s remaining rivals, U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and Ohio Gov. John Katich, also indicated they were unlikely to observe the pledge if Trump was the nominee.

Reince Priebus said Republican candidates who signed the loyalty pledge as part of a deal in which the RNC agreed to provide data about voters. “We expect that when candidates make commitments, that they keep them,” Priebus stated..

Donald Trump’s relationship with Reince Priebus and the RNC has been contentious at times. Talking to Fox News Sunday, Trump once again did not rule out running as an independent if he does not get the Republican nomination.

“We’re going to have to see how I was treated,” Trump said. “I want to be treated fair.”

Reince Priebus said that if one candidate, including Donald Yrump, gets the support of 1,237 delegates before the Republican convention opens in Cleveland in July, that candidate will win the party’s presidential nomination.

But if no one wins on the first ballot, delegates can switch their allegiances and “they can vote for who they want,” Reince Priebus stated.

Nonetheless, Reince Priebus said the nominee is likely to be one of the three people now running and not someone such as House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan, who some have speculated could be a dark-horse candidate - mainly because “he doesn’t want to do it.”

While Donald Trump met privately with Reince Priebus on Sunday, the RNC head also cited some practical reasons that the nominee most likely would have to be Trump, Cruz or Katich: “That candidate would have to have a floor operation [in Cleveland] and an actual campaign going on to make that possible.”

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