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Watch: RNC’s First MS-13 Ad Against Democrats Starring Pelosi. It’s Brutal.

The Democrats knew it was coming, but that can’t make it any more pleasant to watch. The Republican National Committee has released its first “Democrats defend the brutal MS-13 gang whose motto is ‘Kill, Rape, Control'” ad — and it’s appropriately brutal.

The MS-13 fiasco began with the media falsely reporting on President Trump’s condemnation of the notorious gang as “animals,” which the media distorted to be a condemnation of all illegal immigrants, despite the transcripts of the incident clearly showing that was not his intent. Even after the Associated Press and a few other outlets publicly admitted to misreported his comments, several Democratic leaders continued to claim disingenuously that Trump was “dehumanizing” all illegal immigrants.

The unfortunate star of the ad is none other than Democratic House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, whose “spark of divinity” lecture directed at Donald Trump earned instant infamy. Here’s the key excerpt from Pelosi’s defense of all “undocumented immigrants,” which includes murderous MS-13 members:

We believe — some of us who are attracted to the political arena, to government and public service — that we are all God’s children, there is a spark of divinity among every person on earth, and that we all have to recognize that as we respect the dignity and worth of every person and as we recognize our responsibilities with that spark of divinity within us. And so when the president of the United States says about undocumented immigrants, “These aren’t people, these are animals,” you have to wonder, does he not believe in the spark of divinity, the dignity and worth of every person?

(Read more from “Watch: RNC’s First MS-13 Ad Against Democrats Starring Pelosi. It’s Brutal.” HERE)

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A Day in the Life of a Delegate to the RNC

It’s just after 3 p.m. on the afternoon of the first day of the Republican National Convention, and Art Wittich is leaning up against a red pole on the outskirts of the convention floor, observing the events taking place before him.

Directly to his right, CNN anchors and guests gather around an anchor desk, preparing for a segment. Directly to his left, delegates, members of the media, and Republican National Committee staff move on and off the convention floor.

In front of him, delegates from Texas—all dressed in matching cream-colored cowboy hats and red, white, and blue button-down shirts—danced to a jazz band playing “How Sweet It Is To Be Loved By You” for the 2,472 delegates gathered for the week.

Standing there, watching as thousands moved around him, Wittich had his hands clasped in front of him. In them, he held two booklets: one outlining the order of business for the 2016 Republican Convention, and another listing the rules of the convention.

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The second booklet—the rules of the convention—would prove to be the subject of controversy that would unfold before Wittich’s eyes.

Where the Action Is

Wittich is a first-time delegate to the Republican National Convention. The convention, which kicked off Monday and will run through Thursday, is the first one Wittich has attended.

For some of the more than 2,400 delegates, serving their state at the convention means taking a week off from work and footing the bill themselves to make the trip to Cleveland. Though some state parties helped pay the way for their delegates, others—like one young delegate from Rhode Island—took to crowdfunding websites like GoFundMe to raise money.

Wittich and his wife arrived Wednesday and came strictly on a volunteer basis, meaning they took off from work and paid their own way. For Wittich, though, it was worth it to serve.

“It’s an honor and a privilege to be part of the nominating process,” Wittich told The Daily Signal. “But the RNC has to change and improve and reform so that we give voice but also meaning to grassroots involvement.”

Though the convention in Cleveland is a first for Wittich, he’s no stranger to the political process.

A former state senator and representative in the Montana Legislature, Wittich was defeated in the Republican primary earlier this year.

He lost after a jury found him guilty of violating Montana campaign finance laws for taking illegal campaign contributions during his 2010 run for the state Senate.

But the investigation into Wittich, launched by Montana Commissioner of Political Practices Jonathan Motl, hasn’t been without controversy. It’s been called a “speech mugging” by The Wall Street Journal.

Wittich served as the majority leader in the state Senate and led the charge against Medicaid expansion in the state House. After losing his primary last month, he turned his attention to the Republican National Committee.

“I like to be where the action is,” he said. “When I was in the state Senate, that was leadership. In the state House, that was trying to kill Medicaid when I become House Human Services [Committee] chair. The RNC is the only organization big enough to stop socialism.”

“It’s as simple as that. There is no other organization that can effectively combat it,” he continued.

Wittich will not only serve as a delegate to the convention, but the 23 members of Montana’s delegation further selected him and a female delegate to serve on the rules committee.

He was also elected to serve as a RNC committeeman, a four-year term that starts the day after the convention ends.

Wittich arrived in Cleveland last week, when the rules committee met to vote on the rules for the convention.

The panel gathered for 16 hours on Thursday, Wittich said, and saw intense debate over an attempt to unbind delegates from voting for the candidate who won their state and instead allow them to vote their conscience.

Republican Sen. Mike Lee of Utah, who is at the convention as a delegate also on the rules committee, was one of the loudest voices behind the effort.

Wittich doesn’t consider himself to be a disrupter, but he said he was moved and impressed by three speeches Lee gave last week during the committee meeting.

The committee met again on the fourth floor of the Quicken Loans Arena on Monday and cast one vote—to pass the rules debated the prior week.

Though rules committee Chairwoman Enid Mickelsen, a delegate from Utah, said there had been ample time for debate and discussion on those rules, Wittich disagreed.

“People weren’t even allowed to speak,” he said. “[The RNC] eliminated dissent and rejected reforms by the states to make the RNC more grassroots.”

Wittich said the rules committee leaders pushed through a series of procedural motions last week, effectively shutting down debate.

“When you know that there are people who are frustrated with the process, you can take one of two approaches. One is you can hear them out and have the debate, and the other approach is just to try to push it through with procedural motions in a long day,” he said, continuing:

The RNC has to reform and has to evolve. I think it’s going to get there, I really do. I’ve talked to a number of new RNC members who want that to happen. I’m optimistic that the institution will start evolving.

The First Day

Wittich, his wife, a guest to the convention, and his fellow Montanans stayed in a hotel outside of Cleveland, in Westlake, Ohio.

At 11 a.m. on Monday morning, the Montana delegation boarded buses bound for the Quicken Loans Arena for the start of the 2016 convention.

When looking out at the floor from the convention stage, the Montana delegates were seated in the back, left corner, next to delegations from Texas and Colorado.

Montana delegates and guests who traveled to Cleveland donned denim vests with their state name sprawled across their backs in red and white lettering. Stickers proclaiming “Unlock Our Lands”—a call for the federal government to give land back to the people living out West—were plentiful, and Montana’s delegates were quick to hand them out.

Wittich, though, bucked his state’s attire, at least for the convention’s opening day.

On Monday, he said his lineup of meetings and events called for a tan sport coat and navy slacks. His “Montana,” he called it, will come out as the week goes on, when he trades in his business attire for denim and cowboy boots.

When Wittich arrived at the arena around 12:30 p.m., he quickly made his way to his seat on the convention floor.

The convention kicked off at 1 p.m. that afternoon with a short speech from Chairman Reince Priebus calling the convention to order. Then, the delegates broke out to meet with their respective committees.

Wittich joined a throng of fellow delegates on the rules committee and members of the media who gathered to pass the rules for the convention.

The Montana delegate said that the committee had previously been divided into four factions: pro-Trump, anti-Trump, pro-RNC, and RNC reformers. Eventually, though, the groups were whittled down to two: pro-Trump and anti-Trump.

Wittich, himself, advocated for reforms that would lessen the power of the committee’s chairman and give more power to the grassroots. He also introduced a measure to explicitly bind the delegates, which Wittich said was an effort to codify what so many committee members were pushing in the first place.

Ultimately, the rules committee passed a package similar to those passed during the 2012 convention, with minimal changes.

It was when Wittich and the delegates arrived back on the convention floor, though, that the chaos started.

Giving a Voice to the Grassroots

It was just after 3 p.m. when Wittich returned to his seat on the convention floor.

First, the delegates voted to pass a report from the credentials committee, one of three that met Monday.

It was when Rep. Steve Womack, R-Ark., chair of vote procedures, arrived on stage to call for a vote on the rules package passed by the 112-member committee that there was uproar among a group of delegates opposed to New York businessman Donald Trump.

Anti-Trump delegates called for a roll call vote from all 2,472 delegates on the rules package after gathering the signatures needed to do so.

But after chants of “Roll call vote” and “U-S-A” broke out in the arena, efforts to force the roll call vote failed.

The discord centering on the convention rules caught many onlookers by surprise, as delegates typically pass the package with little fanfare.

Wittich, though, said it highlights the disunity not only among convention goers, but also in the country.

“The party is split and the country is split, so it makes sense for the convention to reflect that a little bit,” he said. “I didn’t expect this particular thing, but it just shows the level of frustration inside the party.”

For his part, Wittich didn’t partake in the debate on the convention floor, but he did admit the RNC has some soul-searching to do.

“[The RNC is] not listening to the people,” he said. “It’s a top-down organization. It’s really about speech. It’s association. It’s having authority and varying viewpoints and not being afraid to discuss and debate and change.”

‘An Honor and a Privilege’

After the delegates passed the rules package by voice vote, they proceeded to pass the party’s platform with no controversy.

The convention then stood in recess until 8 p.m. Monday night, when delegates and attendees gathered to hear from a lineup of speakers including actor Scott Baio; Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark.; and Melania Trump, with speeches centered around the theme “Make America Safe Again.”

During the hours-long break, Wittich and his wife headed to a reception hosted by the Republican National Lawyers Association and returned to the arena later on for the evening’s events.

Though Wittich admitted his first convention as a delegate wasn’t what he expected, he said he doesn’t regret serving as a delegate and attempting to challenge the status quo within the party committee.

“Right now I’m pleased to have spent time on the rules committee. If you’re going to be on the RNC, you might as well be on the rules committee,” he said. “The RNC is a very important institution for protecting enhancing the country as far as conservative principles.” (For more from the author of “A Day in the Life of a Delegate to the RNC” please click HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE.

#NeverTrump Delegates Disrupt RNC After Rules Report Is Presented

As the Republican National Convention kicked off Monday in Cleveland, it was clear from the outset that presumptive presidential nominee Donald Trump still faces serious backlash from critics within the party. A number of GOP delegates have petitioned for a rule change allowing them to vote their conscience instead of serving as a rubber stamp for their home states’ choice.

Making a final effort to effect such change, anti-Trump delegates attempted to secure a vote on the issue. Though media reports and party sources described the push as nearly impossible to pull off, protesting delegates nevertheless made their point.

That forecast appeared accurate when the rules committee report was finalized and denied the change being sought. According to exclusive reports from the convention, anti-Trump delegates were still determined to disrupt the convention proceedings.

M. Dane Waters, whose Delegates Unbound group has been at the forefront of this effort, predicted that delegates would “take this fight to the floor.”

Norvell Rose, reporting for Western Journalism from Cleveland this week, was on hand to witness the moment they did exactly that.

A revolt on the floor reportedly began shortly after the committee’s report was presented and caused a temporary disruption in the day’s scheduled events.

When those voting “yes” were declared the majority following a floor vote on the rules’ passage, anti-Trump delegates reportedly erupted in a chorus of booing and loud chants of “no.”

At one point, the convention’s band was instructed to begin playing as the fracas played out on the floor. Shortly after the display, prominent Virginia anti-Trump delegate Ken Cuccinelli was surrounded by inquiring attendees.

Cuccinelli reportedly reacted to the decision by tossing his credentials on the convention floor and leaving.

A motion for a roll-call vote on the rules has since been denied. (For more from the author of “NeverTrump Delegates Disrupt RNC After Rules Report Is Presented” please click HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE.

‘God’s Not Dead 2’ Billboard Nixed at GOP Convention After Being Called “Incendiary”

Attendees arriving in Cleveland for the Republican National Convention next week will be greeted by a giant billboard with President Ronald Reagan’s image, quoting him saying, “We establish no religion in this country.” The sign was purchased by an atheist group called the Freedom From Religion Foundation.

What convention attendees won’t see, though, is an even larger sign with a pro-religion message that would have advertised the DVD release of God’s Not Dead 2. That’s because, after two months of back-and-forth with the movie’s distributor, the billboard company, Orange Barrel Media, may have deemed the Christian-sounding messaging needlessly provocative.

The sign, which would have measured 32 feet by 60 feet, would have draped down one side of a large building in downtown Cleveland and was to feature a picture of Melissa Joan Hart, who plays a teacher in trouble for invoking scripture in the classroom. Alongside the image of the actress was the text: “I’d rather stand with God and be judged by the world than stand with the world and be judged by God.”

Orange Barrel told Pure Flix, the distributor, it didn’t like the “judged by God” message, calling it “too political” and “way too incendiary,” according to emails obtained by The Hollywood Reporter. On another occasion, insiders said the billboard company complained that even the title of the film was considered problematic.

Early on, Orange Barrel cited Republican National Committee rules barring “scandalous” signage, though Pure Flix argued that the RNC would have no problem with their message, especially since former GOP presidential candidate Mike Huckabee is in the movie. In fact, the GOP has partnered with Pure Flix for a worship service the night prior to the start of the convention, followed by a screening of the movie (with food provided by Chick-fil-A). (Read more from “‘God’s Not Dead 2’ Billboard Nixed at GOP Convention After Being Called “Incendiary” please click HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE.

RNC Strikes Back Against Delegates Unbound

A key confidant of GOP Chairman Reince Priebus today fired a shot directly at the #FreetheDelegates and #DelegatesUnbound movements. Priebus’ hand-picked general counsel for the Republican National Committee, John Ryder, forcefully came out against the notion that delegates could be unbound. His remarks constitute legal advice to the RNC Standing Committee on Rules. It was the strongest language to date by an official of the RNC against the effort to deny Donald Trump the nomination here in Cleveland next week.

The key question is will it matter either way?

Earlier today I met with Delegates Unbound cofounder Dane Waters. In a Facebook Live interview, Waters acknowledged that the battle his group is waging is a tough and uphill fight. They fully expected the RNC to align with the Trump campaign to try and stop any attempt to open the convention and stop Donald Trump.

Today’s opinion by Ryder, who also serves as the National Committeeman from Tennessee, confirms that the RNC is gearing up to quash any movement against Trump.

Ryder opened his legal advice by saying, “the Rules of the Republican Party both permit and require the binding of delegates.” Ryder went on to say that the new Rule 16 of the Republican National Committee, as adopted by the 2012 convention, requires that delegates are bound if there is a primary in their state. He further stated that it is his opinion that the decision in Correll v. Heller, issued yesterday, confirmed that rule 16 is in effect.

Conservative Review obtained a statement emailed to all RNC members after the committee meeting. In the statement, Ryder’s office said:

We are pleased that the court correctly found that Rule 16 of The Rules of the Republican Party is in effect and that delegates remain bound in accordance with their states’ presidential preference votes. The court recognized long-standing precedent that gives primacy to national party rules in the selection of delegates to the national convention. This ruling also makes clear that the rules of the Republican Party of Virginia are in conformity with The Rules of the Republican Party regarding binding and allocation. In light of the court’s decision, all party rules regarding binding and all state laws consistent with those rules are in effect.

Ryder’s remarks were pointedly aimed at Curly Haugland, the Republican National Committeeman from North Dakota. Ryder countered Haugland’s assertion that the delegates are unbound due to the longstanding history of the party. He countered that early Twentieth Century language supplanted language from the late 1800s that instituted a so-called “conscience clause.”

Haugland forcefully fired back. Haugland reminded the counsel that there are no current rules for the convention until the delegates adopt them on Monday, an assertion with which Ryder disagreed. Haugland then undercut Ryder’s argument that Rule 16 and Rule 37 were synergistic, meaning that Rule 16 required delegates to be bound through the nominating vote. Haugland recanted a point of order that he brought up during the 2012 Rules Committee debate regarding the two sections.

Haulgland said, “I raised the question of order saying that 16 conflicts with 37 He [2012 Convention Rules Committee Chairman John Sununu] said, ‘are you suggesting 16 conflicts with 37, is that your point of order?’ I said yes. He said, ‘there’s no conflict, rule 16 deals with delegate selection, and rule 37 deals with voting.’ We can only vote in one place, we either vote in the primaries or we vote in the convention. I submit we vote in the convention.”

The reality of what happened today is that it will be tough for the forces who want to both unseat Donald Trump as the presumptive nominee of the Republican Party and replace him at convention. It has been a tough fight for that side from the beginning. Today’s legal advice, offered by a close Reince Priebus confidant shows that the party apparatus is taking the side of Donald Trump in that fight.

It will be a tough floor fight to try and enforce the view that all delegates are unbound and can vote their conscience. Free the Delegates, and Delegates Unbound have a strong floor strategy with 38 state whips, and a robust delegate communication method for the days of the convention. Waters, of Delegates Unbound, also claims they have identified a majority of delegates who do not want to see Trump as the nominee. Will those delegates have the desire to translate that dislike of Trump into action?

That’s the question on everybody’s mind, and today’s proceedings showed that the Trump camp has come to Cleveland ready to take on that fight. (For more from the author of “RNC Strikes Back Against Delegates Unbound” please click HERE)

Follow Joe Miller on Twitter HERE and Facebook HERE.

RNC Chair Calls for MSNBC Guest Appearance Boycott Over Race Tweet

Photo Credit: Breitbart

Photo Credit: Breitbart

Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus is launching a boycott of MSNBC over an incendiary tweet from the network that suggested “the rightwing” would “hate” a television ad featuring a biracial family, Breitbart News has learned.

“Until you personally and publicly apologize for this behavior, I have banned all RNC staff from appearing on, associating with, or booking any RNC surrogates on MSNBC. I have asked Republican surrogates and officials to follow our lead,” Priebus told MSNBC President Phil Griffin in a letter sent today.

Priebus also sent a memo to Republican officials and surrogates urging them not to appear on the network until Griffin apologizes.

MSNBC’s tweet, sent from the network’s official account last night at 8:06pm, said, “Maybe the rightwing will hate it, but everyone else will go aww” and linked to a Cherios ad “w/ biracial family.”

Read more from this story HERE.

With Pro-Life Rally Plans, RNC Delivers Big Statement on Abortion

Photo Credit: Associated Press

Photo Credit: Associated Press

In an unprecedented show of opposition to abortion, Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus is delaying the start of the party’s annual winter meeting so he and other committee members can join the March for Life on the Mall, The Washington Times has learned.

Mr. Priebus, a plain-spoken Greek Orthodox lawyer from Wisconsin, will join members of his party’s national committee and thousands of other abortion opponents in the annual right-to-life march scheduled for Jan. 22, the anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision that declared abortion a constitutional right.

“I saw that there was a real interest among a significant portion of our members to attend and support the Rally for Life,” Mr. Priebus said in an email to The Times. “This is a core principle of our party. It was natural for me to support our members and our principles.”

Mr. Priebus, in his second term as elected chairman of the Republican National Committee, chose to delay the start of the four-day winter meeting of the GOP governing body, also scheduled in Washington, to allow himself and RNC members to attend the march. The delay is unprecedented for a major U.S. political party, several state Republican Party chairmen and other RNC members said in telephone interviews.

Read more from this story HERE.

At RNC Event, Speaker Says African Americans Have Taken a Back Seat to Gays, Immigrants

Photo Credit: Washington Post

Photo Credit: Washington Post

The Republican National Committee commemorated the 50th anniversary of the March of Washington and Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech with a luncheon Monday.

The most rousing speech of the luncheon came from Bob Woodson, the head of the Center for Neighborhood Enterprises. Woodson criticized black leaders over Trayvon Martin, the black Florida teen who was shot to death by George Zimmerman. Zimmerman was acquitted in Martin’s death. Woodson, who is black, said groups including gays and immigrants have been prioritized over poor black people in American society.

“Everybody has come in front of them on the bus — gays, immigrants, women, environmentalists,” Woodson said. “You never hear any talk about the conditions confronting poor blacks and poor people in general.”

Woodson also criticized the “moral traitors” who mourned the death of Martin but not Chris Lane, the Australian baseball player who prosecutors allege was shot to death in Oklahoma by three boys, two whom are black.

Read more from this story HERE.

RNC Chief: GOP May Partner with Conservative Radio on 2016 Debates

Photo Credit: APThe chairman of the Republican National Committee says he is open to having conservative talk radio hosts moderate 2016 GOP presidential primary debates, an expansion of his threat to boycott CNN and NBC if the networks go ahead with planned programs on former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

Reince Priebus, while speaking Wednesday on air with conservative radio host Andrea Tantaros, said partnering with conservative talk radio on debates was “a very good idea.”

“There’s a lot of good people out there [in talk radio] that can actually understand the base of the Republican Party, the primary voters,” Priebus said.

Read more from this story HERE.

RNC Threatens Boycott of CNN and NBC Over Hillary Clinton Shows

Photo Credit: Getty ImagesThe Republican National Committee has threatened a boycott of CNN and NBC in the runup to the next presidential election unless the networks cancel films they have planned on Hillary Clinton.

Reince Priebus, chair of the RNC, wrote to the heads of CNN and NBC on Monday. He warned both networks that he would seek a binding committee vote next week to “neither partner with you in 2016 primary debates nor sanction primary debates which you sponsor”, unless they cancel the Clinton shows.

Last week NBC announced plans for a four-hour mini-series on Clinton, with Diane Lane in the starring role. Two days later CNN revealed it had commissioned its films division to make a big-budget documentary on Clinton to air in 2014.

“I’m writing to express my deep disappointment in your company’s decision to air a miniseries promoting former Secretary Hillary Clinton ahead of her likely candidacy for the Democratic nomination for president in 2016,” Priebus wrote to NBC Entertainment chairman Robert Greenblatt. The opening of his letter to CNN president Jeff Zucker substituted “miniseries” for “film” but was otherwise identical.

Priebus accused both networks of a “thinly-veiled attempt at putting a thumb on the scales of the 2016 presidential election”. The programming would be unfair to others who might compete for the Democratic nomination, he said, “and to the Republican nominee, should Clinton compete in the general election”.

Read more from this story HERE.