Evan McMullin and Donald Trump |
As soon as I heard that the latest Never Trump conservative “Independent” candidate, Evan McMullin, did his undergraduate work at Brigham Young University, the Never Trump strategy came into focus. I am sure they know it is a Hail Mary, but their entire approach may be to pour their resources into Utah, where Donald Trump is extremely unpopular, behind a Mormon candidate whose background (Mormon missionary AND CIA operative) fits the conventional wisdom of the Utah sensibility. And the final goal will be to place Mike Pence in the White House.
Why pin their hopes on Utah? Because if McMullin were to secure a
plurality of the Utah presidential vote and thus Utah’s six electoral votes,
there is a possibility, however remote, that the election could be thrown into
the House of Representatives. Just take
a look the Real Clear Politics Create Your Own Presidential Map. Given the recent gains made by the Clinton
Campaign, this scenario is not terribly likely, but it is possible, and this is
what the Never Trump conservatives are hoping for.
As all political junkies know, 270 electoral votes are needed to win the election.
If Clinton wins all the electoral votes in the Northeast,
down the coast through Virginia (including Vermont and D.C., which have no
coast), Michigan, Illinois, Minnesota, Colorado, New Mexico, Washington,
Oregon, California, and Hawaii, she will have a total of 263.
Trump could lose Utah’s 6
electoral votes to McMullin. It is
significant that the latest Utah poll, completed August 4, has Trump at only 37%
to Clinton’s 25%
If Trump wins all the other states, he would have a total of
269. This means he would have to win
North Carolina, Ohio, Florida, and Wisconsin.
If he loses any of them to Clinton, Clinton wins. But a sweep of these four states is not
inconceivable.
As I explained this past March in A Primer for Understanding Some Possible Ramifications of the Upcoming Republican Party Crackup, if no one secures a
majority of the electoral college votes, then the President is selected by the
House of Representatives among the top
three vote-getters, with each state
getting one vote. A majority of state
delegations are now, and are likely to be, controlled by Republicans. But the fracturing of the Republican Party
could easily result in no candidate securing a majority of 26 state delegations.
Also, if no one secures a majority of the electoral votes,
then the Vice President is selected by the Senate among the top two vote-getters. If the Democrats win back a Senate majority,
Tim Kaine would be elected Vice President; if there is a tie, then Vice
President Biden would break the tie (this vote would take place before the end
of his term in office), presumably selecting Kaine.
But if the Republicans keep the Senate, then Mike Pence
would be elected Vice President. And,
more to the point, the Vice President would be Acting President unless and
until the House deadlock ended, as explained in the aforementioned Primer for Understanding.
This last scenario is the Never Trump desperate attempt to
stop Donald Trump and place in the White House Mike Pence, a “traditional” anti-choice,
anti-LGBT President. Not a likely outcome, but the best the traditional right-wingers (as opposed to the new, "populist" right-wingers) could hope for.
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