In the end, if the rump convention works or if the campaign can use it as leverage to get 10 national delegates, we're aren't kicking these people out of office. Ron Paul still isn't President. We aren't taking over LaGOP. THEY will still be in power in Louisiana.
But this is an important stand, obviously, because the new governor is working on ethics reform and even though the GOP is a *private* organization, I think the campaign can work the angle of ethics reform within the GOP.
But as I said: these people will still be in power in Louisiana when this is all done. Independents don't get elected here: Republicans supported by the GOP get elected. The Rump Convention COULD make it harder for "the evolution of the revolution" to happen.
We all had dinner together last night and with Matt Chancey and Dimitrius. They understand this, and they understand that when all is said and done, they will fly home and we will be left to work WITH the GOP.
We can't be blind to these facts when even the National Campaign sees this; the lawyers even brought it up yesterday after the meeting.
That's what I mean when I say it may LOOK like some of us aren't on board, when it is more like a "craps" game with a few things going on at one time. We have to leave some people behind to work with the GOP. If people here don't like that, then that's too bad. If people here start calling other RP people "traitors" because of it, then that's too bad as well.
The Campaign never intended for the Rump Convention to DIVIDE Ron Paul supporters--- there's just several issues going on at the same time.
And, BTW, the rump convention isn't guaranteed to happen today according to the national campaign. Several factors have to come together for the call to be made for it. In fact, the campaign's ULTIMATE goal is to AVERT a rump convention through dialogue and concessions.