August 16/17, 2023 -
Information Clearing House
- "
The Hill"
-- Former President
Trump’s refusal to sign the Republican
National Committee’s (RNC) loyalty pledge is
putting the organization in a bind as next
week’s GOP primary debate approaches.
Trump said he wouldn’t sign the pledge
last week and is expected to announce in the
coming days whether he will attend the
event.
RNC chairwoman Ronna McDaniel must now
navigate the thorny situation of appeasing
Trump — both a ratings draw and the clear
front-runner in the primary — while
maintaining her control as head of the
party.
“It’s a distinct possibility that the
Republican nominee for president could
simply decide to shun the RNC itself,” said
Brian Seitchik, a Republican strategist and
Trump campaign alum. “When a candidate
refuses to play by the rules, it obviously
weakens the RNC’s position.”
However, McDaniel has given no indication
that the RNC will make any exceptions for
the former president.
“It’s the Beat Biden Pledge,” McDaniel
told CNN’s Chris Wallace in an interview
last month. “And what we’re saying — and the
debate committee has met for over two years
people from Alaska to Illinois to Tennessee
— is if you’re going to stand on the
Republican National Committee debate stage
you should be able to support the nominee
and beat Biden.”
“Everybody has to sign the Beat Biden
Pledge. Everybody,” she added, when asked by
Wallace if that applied to Trump as well.
“It’s across the board. The rules aren’t
changing. We’ve been very vocal with them.”
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The pledge states that the candidate will
support the eventual nominee of the party’s
primary and that the candidate will not
participate in any debate the RNC has not
sanctioned. The pledge is a part of the
criteria Republican candidates must meet to
qualify for the first presidential primary
debate set for Aug. 23.
This isn’t the first time Trump has gone
against the RNC’s push for primary
candidates to rally around the eventual
nominee in the name of party unity. In
August 2015, then-candidate Trump was the
only candidate on stage at one of the
debates to not raise his hand to show that
he would support the eventual nominee in the
2016 primary. At the time, there were 17
Republicans competing for the nomination.