Gordon J. Humphrey
Gordon J. Humphrey | |
Republican National Convention, 2016 | |
Status: | Delegate |
State: | New Hampshire |
Bound to: | John Kasich |
Delegates to the RNC 2016 | |
Calendar and delegate rules overview • Types of delegates • Delegate rules by state • State election law and delegates • Delegates by state |
Gordon J. Humphrey was a delegate to the 2016 Republican National Convention from New Hampshire. Humphrey was one of four delegates from New Hampshire bound by state party rules to support John Kasich at the convention.[1] Kasich suspended his campaign on May 4, 2016. At the time, he had approximately 156 bound delegates. The winner of the Republican nomination needed the support of 1,237 delegates.
Humphrey wrote an op-ed on CNBC.com on July 12, 2016, in which he called for delegates to the Republican National Convention to "dump Trump." He said, "Donald Trump is a classic sociopath. He lacks a conscience. He never feels guilt, shame, embarrassment, regret or remorse. He is untroubled when causing others pain. He never apologizes." Humphrey also stated that delegates to the convention are unbound. "Every delegate arriving in Cleveland next week arrives unbound, free to exercise his or her best judgment. In a normal year, delegates would give heaviest weight to the preference expressed in state primaries. But this is not a normal year, because Donald Trump, himself, is abnormal," said Humphrey.[2]
Delegate rules
In New Hampshire, presidential candidates were required to submit lists of preferred delegates prior to the state primary election on February 9, 2016. After the primary, if a candidate was allocated any delegates, he or she was allowed to select an official delegate slate from the list they submitted prior to the primary. New Hampshire delegates were bound on all ballots. Delegates were to be released and unbound if a candidate "withdraws" from the race.
New Hampshire primary results
New Hampshire Republican Primary, 2016 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Vote % | Votes | Delegates | |
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35.6% | 100,735 | 11 | |
John Kasich | 15.9% | 44,932 | 4 | |
Ted Cruz | 11.7% | 33,244 | 3 | |
Jeb Bush | 11.1% | 31,341 | 3 | |
Marco Rubio | 10.6% | 30,071 | 1 | |
Chris Christie | 7.4% | 21,089 | 0 | |
Carly Fiorina | 4.2% | 11,774 | 0 | |
Ben Carson | 2.3% | 6,527 | 0 | |
Rand Paul* | 0.7% | 1,930 | 0 | |
Total Write-ins | 0.5% | 1,398 | 0 | |
Jim Gilmore | 0% | 134 | 0 | |
Totals | 283,175 | 22 | ||
Source: New Hampshire Secretary of State |
*Rand Paul dropped out of the race on February 3, 2016, but his name remained on the ballot in New Hampshire.[3]
Delegate allocation
New Hampshire had 23 delegates at the 2016 Republican National Convention. Of this total, six were district-level delegates (three for each of the state's two congressional districts). District-level delegates were allocated on a proportional basis; each candidate who won at least 10 percent of the statewide vote was entitled to receive a share of New Hampshire's district delegates.[4][5]
Of the remaining 17 delegates, 14 served at large. At-large delegates were allocated on a proportional basis; each candidate who won at least 10 percent of the statewide vote was entitled to receive a share of the state's at-large delegates. In addition, three national party leaders (identified on the chart below as RNC delegates) served as bound delegates to the Republican National Convention.[4][5]
See also
- Republican National Convention, 2016
- 2016 presidential nominations: calendar and delegate rules
- RNC delegate guidelines from New Hampshire, 2016
- Republican delegate rules by state, 2016
- Presidential election, 2016
- Presidential candidates, 2016
Footnotes
- ↑ NH SOS, "Republican Delegates and Alternates to 2016 National Convention," accessed May 3, 2016
- ↑ CNBC, "Dump Trump in Cleveland," July 12, 2016
- ↑ Politico, "Rand Paul drops out of White House race," February 3, 2016
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Republican National Committee, "2016 Presidential Nominating Process," accessed October 6, 2015
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 CNN.com, "Republican National Convention roll call vote," accessed July 20, 2016
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