Ron Paul Supporters Drive Rowdy Missouri Caucus

 
 
By _Napp Nazworth_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/napp-nazworth/)  , 
Christian Post  Reporter
March 18, 2012|1:38 pm
Missouri Republicans had a raucous Saturday, mostly  due to conflicts 
between Ron Paul supporters and traditional Republicans as they  gathered at 
caucus sites to help decide who will be the party's nominee for  president of 
the United States.
Most of the reported incidents appeared to be the result of a combination 
of  pugnacious Paul supporters and disorganization. 
In St. Charles county, Paul supporters got into an argument with the caucus 
 chair. They had sought to elect their own chair and adopt their own rules, 
 according to caucus procedure. They were also carrying video cameras, 
though,  which is against caucus rules. 
An off-duty police officer, who was hired to provide security for the 
event,  filed a trespassing complaint against Paul supporters. About 10 police 
officers,  including a police helicopter, arrived on the scene. Two Paul 
supporters were  arrested and the caucus was shut down. The caucus for that 
district will have to  be rescheduled for a later date.
 
"It's like the Hatfields and McCoys around here," a former GOP chairman for 
 the county _told ABC News_ 
(http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2012/03/police-intervene-arrest-ron-paul-backers-at-missouri-caucus/)
 . 
A _political blogger_ (https://twitter.com/#!/johncombest)  at the event 
tweeted  that order had broken down in the first 10 seconds and, "Man with 
camera insists  on staying. Officers move in. Crowd goes ape."  
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There were reports of "boisterous" and "obnoxious" Paul supporters in other 
 districts, but St. Charles was the only place where arrests were made. 
In Clay county, the caucus chair threatened to have some voters forcibly  
removed after arguments became intense. The Paul supporters complained that 
they  were following the rules but being ignored by caucus organizers. 
"We raised a number of points of order, points of information, points of  
parliamentary inquiry, many of which have been ignored," John Findlay, a Paul 
 supporter, told The Kansas City Star. 
A blogger who describes herself as an "anarchist guided by biblical  
principles" _posted a message from David C._ 
(http://lorienjohnson.com/2012/03/breaking-election-fraud-in-lincoln-co-missouri-caucus/)
 , a Paul  supporter at 
the Lincoln county caucus. 
"They practically ignored the state GOP guidelines and rules. They severely 
 butchered Robert's Rules of Order," he complained. "We prayed for the 
rules to  be followed and that honesty, integrity and transparency would 
prevail 
 throughout the scheduled event." 
While the state convention is governed by Robert's Rule of Order, each 
county  can use their own rules and new rules can be adopted after electing a 
caucus  chairman. 
In Boone County, Paul supporters were successful in electing their own 
caucus  chair and were able to elect a slate of mostly Paul delegates. 
Inexperience may be partly to blame for the contentious process. Missouri 
is  accustomed to using a primary, rather than a caucus, to select delegates. 
The  state party opted for a caucus this year to avoid a penalty from the 
national  party for scheduling its primary too early. 
Paul is currently in last place in the national delegate count and has not  
won in any states. He is running a mostly insurgent campaign by attracting  
independent, libertarian and young voters who do not generally identify as  
Republicans. Even without winning the nomination, he could have some 
influence  on the party and its platform if he has enough delegates at the 
convention and  if there is no clear front-runner at the convention. 
Rick Santorum easily won Missouri's Feb. 7 primary, but those results were  
non-binding. Most, but not all, counties chose delegates Saturday to the  
congressional district caucuses, which will then choose delegates to the 
state  convention. The district conventions and state convention will then 
choose 49 of  Missouri's 52 delegates to the national convention. 
Since many of the delegates chosen on Saturday were non-binding, there are  
additional steps in the process, and the proceedings were marred by 
contention  and confusion, there was no clear winner.

-- 
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