Archive

The GOP's Worst Nightmare—a Contested Convention—David Frum

articles/2012/02/20/the-gop-s-worst-nightmare-a-contested-convention/gop-convention_vabhmb
Ethan Miller / Getty Images
articles/2012/02/20/the-gop-s-worst-nightmare-a-contested-convention/gop-convention_jldzvy

In my column for CNN, I explain how a contested convention would hurt the GOP:

What would happen today?

Two possible scenarios:

1) Imagine that Romney falls just slightly short of the 1144 needed to nominate.

In this scenario, an individual party chairman from a smaller state with more old-fashioned rules might be lured to find some way to redirect his state's votes to Romney. That is what happened in 1976, when Gerald Ford narrowly defeated Ronald Reagan by gaining the last-minute support of the Mississippi state delegation; that's the most recent occasion when a convention chose a nominee.

The problem is that there are many fewer such old-fashioned states today than there were in 1976, with the result that the price such "available" states might be able to exact will be considerably higher than it was back then.

Ford only needed to replace his vice presidential candidate, dumping Nelson Rockefeller, anathema to party conservatives, in favor of Bob Dole, then a conservative hero.

But what price would be exacted from Romney? And what effect would that have on the election? Romney badly needs to pivot back to the center for the general election. Would a convention-season deal to get the votes of strongly conservative delegates veto that pivot and doom his hopes?

Click here to read the full column.

Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast here.