I’m going to need a republican to explain this stuff to me.
So y’all making pledges? You know cults do that.
Children cannot consent, sign contracts, or make pledges. It is just propaganda.
People who sign contracts with the RNC and don’t follow through will be in trouble.
This isn’t fully true. In very narrow circumstances a child can indeed be required to give consent, sign contracts, or make pledges.
Very low hanging examples: Employment contracts when working under the age of 18, drivers license/state ID related applications, and children 16 or older are typically able to give consent and sign documentation for healthcare.
Not to mention, emancipation exists.
February 2023
RNC Chair: All candidates will pledge to support GOP nominee ahead of debate
https://www.axios.com/2023/02/26/rnc-chair-candidates-support-gop-nominee-debate
The parties run their own primaries however they want. They don’t even need to have a vote at all, in fact at least the Democrats party leaders used to just select the person who is running in the general election. Over the years the Democrats have handed more of the power over to their base.
So that being said, Republicans can run their primary however they wish and can make this a requirement for getting on stage in the debates.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Ambassador Nikki Haley no longer feels bound by a pledge made to the Republican National Committee that she would support the GOP presidential nominee, she said in an interview that aired Sunday.
Asked by NBC News’ “Meet the Press” moderator Kristen Welker, “So you’re no longer bound by that pledge?” Haley responded that she was not obligated to endorse former President Donald Trump if he becomes the Republican nominee.
Asked why abortion shouldn’t be a decision made by people and their doctors, Haley argued that the issue should be decided at the state level.
Her remarks come after the Alabama Supreme Court last month decided that embryos are people, making access to IVF uncertain in that state.
Just days later, Alabama’s House and Senate passed Republican-proposed bills intended to protect IVF.
Last week, Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith, R-Miss., blocked legislation that would have created federal protections for IVF nationwide, calling the measure “vast overreach.”
The original article contains 792 words, the summary contains 153 words. Saved 81%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
She never needed to be bound to do so
Please split the republican vote please split the republican vote ple
Too late for that. She already said she would vote for him even if he was convicted of a felony. Sure she could have changed her mind, but it’s not like that Trump got suddenly and substantially worse since the summer. (He’s been terrible for a long time now)