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Anti-Trump forces claimed they had enough votes to force a roll call vote

Written By CCMdijitali on Monday, July 18, 2016 | July 18, 2016

Guns outside, chaos on the floor inside: Stars take the stage to support Donald Trump at the Republican National Convention after dramatic last-ditch attempt to block his nominations caused uproar
  • Party leaders offer call up rules package for a vote and declare it passed without a role call vote

  • There was a sustained mix of boos and cheers when the chair called the vote

  • 'In the opinion of the chair, the ayes have it,' said Rep Steve Womack as he gavelled the motion through

  • Anti-Trump forces claimed they had enough votes to force a roll call vote

  • The ruling led to some sustained boos – until pro-Trump forces shouted them down with chants of 'USA'

  • Nine state delegations had requested a roll call vote – but arm-twisting got three states to peel off

  • Scenes inside hall will displease party managers - while outside open carry activists paraded assault rifles

  • Soap star endorser suggests democracy should be suspended and Trump given the White House without a vote


By Geoff Earle, Deputy Us Political Editor For Dailymail.com In Cleveland, Ohio and David Martosko, Us Political Editor For Dailymail.com In Cleveland, Ohio

A string of high profile Donald Trump backers took to the floor at the Republican National Convention on Monday hours after it descended into chaos as an ugly rift over the presumed nominee erupted.

'Duck Dynasty' star Willie Robertson led off a series of speeches about Trump during the opening night in Cleveland, making the case that the billionaire politician can be trusted to protect the American public.

'America is in a bad spot, and we need a president who will have our back,' he said.

'If you're looking for a job, or trying to grow a business like I am, Donald Trump will have your back,' Robertson's prepared remarks continue, with that tag line as a recurring refrain.

'If you're a serviceman fighting overseas, or a cop who is risking their lives to help keep us safe at home, Donald Trump will have your back.'

Robertson was followed at the podium by 'Happy Days' and 'Charles In Charge' star Scott Baio, former Navy SEAL Marcus Luttrell and Pat Smith, mother of Sean Smith, one of the four Americans killed in the September 11, 2012, terror attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya.

 
'Duck Dynasty' star Willie Robertson led off a series of speeches about Trump during the opening night in Cleveland, making the case that the billionaire politician can be trusted to protect the American public.

'America is in a bad spot, and we need a president who will have our back,' he said.

'If you're looking for a job, or trying to grow a business like I am, Donald Trump will have your back,' Robertson's prepared remarks continue, with that tag line as a recurring refrain.

'If you're a serviceman fighting overseas, or a cop who is risking their lives to help keep us safe at home, Donald Trump will have your back.'

Robertson was followed at the podium by 'Happy Days' and 'Charles In Charge' star Scott Baio, former Navy SEAL Marcus Luttrell and Pat Smith, mother of Sean Smith, one of the four Americans killed in the September 11, 2012, terror attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya.

 UPDATED The Republican National Convention began in Cleveland, Ohio, on Monday - and within hours the gathering descended into chaos because of a split in the party over its presumptive nominee, Donald Trump. An anti-Trump movement made a last-ditch attempt to force a vote on the floor about making him candidate. There were yells from both sides of the floor from pro- and anti-Trump protesters. But when the acting chair, Steve Womack, declared that the 'ayes had it' - meaning there would be no vote - the anti-Trump activists erupted in boos (center) and jeers (left). The chaos will have disheartened party managers who had hoped to have a public show of unity behind Trump, who is to take to the floor later. 'Duck Dynasty' star Willie Robertson (top right) led off a series of speeches about rump. Former Navy SEAL Marcus Luttrell (bottom right) also took to the stage. Outside where Second Amendment activists displayed handguns and assault rifles (inset) and 5,000 police and law enforcement officials swamped the city to keep peace. 


Fury: The 'never Trump' movement reacted in fury as their attempt to force a roll call vote was blocked by the podium

Willie Robertson of the 'Duck Dynasty' franchise led off Monday night's Republican National Convention festivities with a short speech in support of Donald Trump Read

 Former Navy SEAL Marcus Luttrell speaks at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, Ohio

 Pat Smith, mother of Benghazi victim Sean Smith, speaks during the opening day of the Republican National Convention in Cleveland


Delegates become emotional while listening to the speech of Pat Smith, mother of Sean Smith, one of the four Americans killed in the September 11, 2012 terror attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya

 Former Governor Rick Perry of Texas speaks during first day of the Republican National Convention in Cleveland

 Antonio Sabato Jr. delivers a speech on the first day of the Republican National Convention on July 18 at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio

'Happy Days' and 'Charles In Charge' star Scott Baio addresses the delegates during the opening day of the Republican National Convention

Republican Party leaders and forces trying to secure a smooth nomination for Trump jammed through a package of rules for the convention Monday, dodging a contentious roll call vote on the floor with arm-twisting and heavy use of the gavel - but prompting fury from anti-Trump activists.

The so-called '#NeverTrump' forces sought to insert a measure in the rules allowing individual delegates to vote 'their conscience' instead of supporting the candidate their states' voters preferred. But a last-gasp maneuver failed, leaving his intra-party enemies with no other procedural options to oppose him.

Outside open-carry activists paraded assault rifles and handguns while one wore a t-shirt comparing the Muslim God to Satan, a provocation which came as 5,000 police officers flooded Cleveland in the hope of keeping order.

The scenes did little to reassure party managers that the convention will promote a unified party ready for victory in the November elections, and came amid mounting recriminations over the decision by many senior party figures – including both its living former presidents – to snub Trump's coronation.

In the brightest flash of discontent on the convention floor so far, party leaders called for approval of a rules package – a normally routine procedure, which this year became a flashpoint as anti-Trump forces worked to force a 'roll call' that would allow them to show their disapproval on the floor.

When the package came up for a vote, Rep. Steve Womack, who was in the chair, asked the convention whether the package was approved – a question that resulted in a mix of cheers and boos.

'In the opinion of the chair, the ayes have it and the resolution is agreed to,' Womack declared with a swift boom of his gavel that reverberated throughout the Quicken Loans Arena where the convention opened Monday.

His prompt ruling – a judgement call that was hard to discern from the crowd noise – led to a loud chorus of boos from the floor.

Then pro-Trump delegates started drowning out the boos with chants of 'USA! USA!'

Amid the chaos on the floor, forces running the convention cued up generic blues music and piped it into the arena, and left the podium completely vacant for several minutes.

Anti-Trump forces had believed they had secured enough support to force a roll call vote – a move that would have allowed states to register disapproval through a no vote before party leaders shut it down.

After a few minutes of pause, Womack returned to the podium to conduct a new vote.

Donald Trump and his wife Melania arrive at the Republican National Convention on Monday hours after it descended into chaos

 Rebellion: Former Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli (center) was among delegates from the state chanting for a rule call vote which would have allowed them to express discontent at Donald Trump

 Attack on Trump: One of the Virginia delegation reacted in fury at the rules motion being refused by the chair

 Chaos: The plan for an orderly convention went wrong not long after the start, with delegates boo-ing as a rules motion was demanded and rejected

 Leading the charge: Utah Republican senator Mike Lee (front) and Phil Wright, the vice-chair of the state's delegation, shouted in dury when the rules were adopted without a roll call vote. They object to Trump

 Gavel: Steve Womack, a member of Congress from Arkansas, used his power to decline to hold a vote on the rules motion.

'Without objection he chair will put the question of adoption of the report from the committee on rules de novo,' he said.

This time, he took a separate poll of the convention giving ample town for yells of support or opposition. Those in favor of the package yelled out a sustained chorus of 'Ayes!' Then, opponents yelled out a sustained chorus of 'No!'

But Womack, an Arkansas representative, once again declared the ayes the winner.

'In the opinion of the chair, the ayes have it,' he said – killing the roll call vote and declaring the winner himself. He then explained that while 9 states had turned in petitions seeking the roll call vote, 3 had subsequently lost the majority of delegates needed, meaning the number was now insufficient.

It prompted delegates from Colorado to walk off the floor in protest.

Even if the anti-Trump forces had gotten the roll call vote, it was unlikely to change the outcome. 'So you have a roll call. What's the difference,' one Trump campaign insider told DailyMail.com before the floor chaos erupted.

Nevertheless, such a vote could have served as a forum for airing grievances against the presumed nominee, while also putting on a display of some of the deep divides within the Republican Party at a time when the candidate and the Republican National Committee are trying to put on a display of unity.

Under rule 39, a roll call vote can be called if a majority of 7 delegations demand the vote.

 Fury: The floor erupted as pro- and anti-Trump forces clashed in public over a rules motion

 Not as planned: The scenes of chaos on the floor were hardly the face the party wanted to present but underline deep fractures over the candidacy of Donald Trump

Trump fury: Delegates in favor of the candidate voiced their displeasure at the anti-Trump movement's attempts to force a roll call vote

Delegates Unbound co-founder M. Dane Waters vowed in a statement Monday, 'Now we take this fight to the floor.'

Just moments before the chaos on the floor, Dr. Ben Carson, a leading Trump supporter, declared himself unfazed about the effort.

'It'll work out just fine,' he told DailyMail.com.

The show of raw emotion on the floor galvanized a convention that got off to an otherwise ordinary start, recitation of the pledge of allegiance, and invocation by a rabbi, speeches by Republican officials.

 'Call the roll! Call the roll,' the silenced anti-Trumpers shouted as the rules package was being rammed through.

'I have never in all my life, certainly in six years in the United States Senate, prior to that as a lifelong Republican, never seen anything like this,' said Utah Senator Mike Lee moments after it happened.

'There is no precedent for this in parliamentary procedure. There is no precedent for this in the rules of the Republican National Convention. We are now in uncharted territory. Somebody owes us an explanation,' added Lee, who supported Texas Senator Ted Cruz in the primaries.

'I have never seen the chair abandoned like that. They vacated the stage entirely,' Lee said.

Virginia attorney general Ken Cuccinelli, who is a delegate, tore off his credentials in protest.

The states that submitted signatures in the doomed effort to try to force a roll call were Colorado, Utah, Washington, Minnesota, Iowa, Virginia, Maine, and DC.

After it became clear that there would be no roll call vote, anti-Trump forces on the convention floor fumed.

'Everybody involved with the RNC that was involved in that travesty should be ashamed of themselves. Absolutely shameful!' yelled Eric Minor, a Ted Cruz delegate from the state of Washington who had helped organize anti-Trump plotting.

'We wanted to have a roll call vote! You prevented that from happening!' he blared at a fellow delegate wearing a Trump button – who quickly made his exit.

'That's not how it works in America!' Minor continued. 'What you just did is what happens in Venezuela, or in the Soviet Union in the 1980s. It doesn't happen in America – except under Donald Trump!'

Finger pointing: The anger and frustration on the faces of delegates was clear to see as the clash unfolded on the floor

 What's it all about: The motion for a roll call vote which led to the shouts of fury on the floor

 Playground quality: Florida delegate Dana Dougherty brought her Donald Trump Apprentice doll to the floor during the first day of the 2016 Republican National Convention

Saul Anuzis, a Michigan delegate, told DailyMail.com that 'there are a lot of grassroots conservatives around the country who were denied the opportunity to have a debate. I think that upsets a lot of people.'

Anuzis said the procedural maneuvering was 'unnecessary.'

'We should have had a debate, and had a roll call vote. They probably would have won anyway. But at least that way delegates would have felt they had a say in something.'

Asked it he believed the committee chair's announcement that three delegations had withdrawn their petitions, he laughed loudly.

'Right.' he smirked.

'Nine states wanted to have a roll call vote and they pulled them out,' he said, referring to pro-Trump factions and Republican National Committee fixers.

'This is the establishment trying to have a calm, quiet convention. And it doesn't always work that way.'

Minor, too, doubted the official story.

'They could say anything they want,' he told DailyMail.com.

'I have no doubt that after we turned in petitions from nine states, that the Donald Trump campaign and the RNC went around to every single delegation and strong-armed them and tried to get people to take their names off of the petition.'

'Why would you be afraid of taking an actual, accurate vote to see if we want the rules up or down?' he asked.

'We got enough signatures to get a roll call vote and they delayed and delayed and delayed, and they probably went around and got people to take their names off the petitions.'

 Michigan delegate Saul Anuzis called the maneuvering 'unnecessary'

 Washington delegate Eric Minor declared his faith in democracy 'tarnished' by the brash power play

 MAKING A LIST: Minor kept tabs on the 9 delegations who wanted a roll call vote – but arm-twisting got it down to six

 As Minor held court loudly with two dozen journalists, Trump loyalists grew impatient.

'WE WANT TRUMP!' they chanted.

'My faith in democracy is severely tarnished,' Minor said, adding that the Cleveland convention was his first.

Men wearing earpieces who said they represented the Committee on Arrangements, the convention's organizers, tried to clear Minor and the growing media scrum away from the main entryway to the convention floor.

They wouldn't identify themselves, sending Minor into conniptions.

'These are the Trump people trying to prevent the media from reporting on this!' he boomed. 'Because we're protesting against Trump, essentially.'

'Based on character, based on his policy proposals, he is not fit to be the nominee of the Republican Party,' Minor added.

DailyMail.com was speaking with Muriel Toucey, an alternate delegate from Massachusetts, when the decision – and the resulting catcalls – rang out.

'Are they trying to pull the Ted Cruz thing? I don't like that!' Toucey said.

'They're trying to steal the nomination from Donald Trump, and he got over 1,500 delegates.'

'I talk to these people online and they constantly – they think they're saving the country or something, she said. 'But if Ted Cruz can't win against Republicans, he can't win against Hillary. I'd tell them to put their big boy panties on.'

Scene outside: Steve Thacker, of Westlake, Ohio, a Marine Corps veteran carries an AR-15 chambered in .556 and a handgun during an open carry rally in downtown Cleveland on Sunday. More activists demonstrated on Monday

 On show:  Jessey Rodriguez stands with his AK-101- rifle on his back outside the Republican National Convention in Cleveland on Monday as open carry activists make their stand 

 First amendment: Preacher Jim Gilles was spoken to by senior officers but not arrested. He said he intended people to be offended by his anti-Muslim message. 


 He has the right: Elan Stoltzfuz holds his rifle up at Settlers Landing Park after an attempt by police to stop open carry of weapons failed


Ready to roll: An officer from Akron Police, deployed to Cleveland to back up the local force, used his bike to move back anti-Trump protesters outside the RNC

WHY BOTHER WITH AN ELECTION - JUST GIVE IT TO DONALD NOW, SAYS SOAP STAR ANTONIO SABATO JR

 'I think Trump should just win it now so we can just move on and get our country back on track,' Sabato said today on MSNBC. Asked whether voters should even get to go to the polls, Sabato replied in the negative. 'No, I don't think so,' the actor said.

Soap star and Donald Trump fan Antonio Sabato Jr., who's speaking tonight at the Republican National Convention, would like to simply bypass the election and let Trump win.

'I think Trump should just win it now so we can just move on and get our country back on track,' Sabato said today on MSNBC.

Asked whether voters should even get to go to the polls, Sabato replied in the negative.

'No, I don't think so,' the actor said. 

Sabato is part of a trio of star power at tonight's Cleveland-based convention, joining Duck Dynasty's Willie Robertson and Charles in Charge star Scott Baio onstage.

In recent weeks, Sabato has come out as one of the strongest celebrity voices supporting Trump.

Explaining his fandom on television today he said, 'That's the only choice. There is no one else.'

Sabato said he supports Trump ' in every way, and I believe that what he's been talking about is the truth – nothing but the truth.'

'And I've been supporting him for over a year now,' the General Hospital regular pointed out. 'I've watched. I've heard. And also I've met him several times over the last 20-some years and he's the same guy,' Sabato continued.

'So I don't have to worry about if he's fake, if he's lying to me every time I talk to the guy. He's real, he's a real American, he loves his country.'

Initially when Trump talked about what he envisioned for his convention he said it would be more 'showbiz'-themed than previous GOP fetes, which usually just showcase back-to-back political speeches.

But as the convention approached a number of supposed Trump backers said they would not attend.

Actor Jon Voight, a mainstay at the last two conventions, wasn't making the trek.

There would be no Tom Brady, no Ben Roethlisberger and no Tim Tim Tebow, all football stars who were floated to appear.

Asked why there were so few celebrities supporting a candidate who's a former reality television star, Sabato shrugged the question off.

'You have to ask them. I can speak for myself,' Sabato said.

'I'm very thankful. I thank Christ every day for giving me this opportunity to be here and speak,' he continued.

'I believe our president will be Mr. Donald Trump and I'm very 

'You have to ask them. I can speak for myself,' Sabàto said. 'I'm very thankful. I thank Christ every day for giving me this opportunity to be here and speak. I believe that our president will be Mr. Donald Trump, and I'm very excited because we're gonna get this nation back to where it should be. And hopefully, we'll forget the last seven-and-a-half years.'
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