
The
turmoil inside however threatened efforts by the Trump campaign to show
the party had united behind the businessman-turned-politician and
distracted from the day’s theme of “Make America Safe Again,” meant to
depict Trump as a strong leader capable of shielding the country from
violence and Islamist militancy.
The anti-Trump forces wanted to change the party’s nominating rules
to allow delegates to support alternative Republican candidates over
Trump.

Party leaders held a voice vote, then declared the
opponents lacked enough votes. Pandemonium erupted on the floor of the
Cleveland basketball arena where Trump is due to be formally nominated
this week for the Nov. 8 election.
Many delegates began chanting
“Roll Call. Roll Call,” effectively calling for a lengthy process that
would allow every state to weigh in. Representative Steve Womack of
Arkansas, who was chairing the session, declared there was not enough
support for a roll-call vote, drawing a chorus of boos.
Some, including the Colorado delegation, walked off the convention floor saying they had to assess their next steps.
“This
is really appalling,” Ken Cuccinelli, a delegate from Virginia who
favoured a roll-call vote, told MSNBC afterward. “This is the party of
law and order. … If you won’t obey your own rules there is no reason to
think you’ll obey any others.”
While delivering a sudden jolt to the highly scripted programme, the anti-Trump forces failed, their rebellion quashed.
The
convention then approved the party policy platform and took a scheduled
break ahead of a lineup of evening speakers due to include Trump’s wife
Melania and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani.
But the furore,
an embarrassment to Trump, put a spotlight on the deep divisions within
the party that have emerged over his candidacy. A string of senior
Republicans, worried about Trump’s temperament and policies, avoided the
convention.
Among the boycotters are Presidents George H.W. Bush
and George W. Bush aren’t attending. The GOP’s 2008 and 2012 nominees,
John McCain and Mitt Romney, are also skipping as are Jeb Bush and Ohio
Gov. John Kasich, Trump’s primary rivals.
Donald Trump’s daughter Ivanka slammed the boycotters, saying they will be left in the dust as the party moves on without them.
‘That’s their choice if they don’t want to be part of the narrative, if
they don’t want to be part of the future,’ Ivanka told ABC News’ Lara
Spencer today, in an interview set to air on GMA Tuesday.
‘But
this really is about a forward-looking moment.My father is an outsider
and we went through a very tough primary,’ Trump added. ‘And he emerged
from that the winner, but there were certainly ruffled feathers along
the way.”
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