Colorado Republican system changes were made in summer 2015. They aren't new and should surprise no one. The GOP Establishment has made clear its main goal is to remove voters from election results. This isn't "stealing" elections. Voters don't own elections. The GOP makes the rules. This humiliating reality is only coming to light now, in "the most interesting and
surprising nominating struggle in decades." Feb. 2016 Denver Post Editorial Board comments on Colorado GOP changes:
Feb. 2016 editorial:
2/27/2016, "Colorado GOP blundered on 2016 presidential caucus," By The Denver Post Editorial Board
"Republicans made big mistake in abandoning presidential tally"
"The Colorado
Republican Party's decision last summer to jettison a presidential poll
at its caucus on Tuesday looks worse with every passing day.
Except for the actual delegates to July's national convention,
Colorado Republicans who want to have a say in the future of their party
have mostly been stripped of a role in the most interesting and
surprising nominating struggle in decades.
They'll stand on the sidelines on Super Tuesday while other
states determine whether Donald Trump continues his march toward a
possible nomination or whether his rivals can slow him down.
Meanwhile, local airwaves have been featuring ads on behalf of
Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders, since the Democrats are still
holding a traditional caucus at which participants get to signal their
support for a candidate. It's known as democracy. The Colorado
Republican executive committee needs to reacquaint itself with the
concept.
GOP leaders have never provided a satisfactory reason for
forgoing a presidential preference poll, although party chairman Steve
House suggested on radio at one point that too many Republicans would
otherwise flock to their local caucus.
Imagine that: party officials fearing that an interesting race
might propel thousands of additional citizens to participate. But of
course that might dilute the influence of elites and insiders. You can
see why that could upset the faint-hearted.
By contrast, far-sighted party leaders should have welcomed the
extra attention to their caucus and the potential activism on the
party's behalf it would have spawned.
Admittedly, one thing has changed since the GOP executive committee
made its decision on a preference poll: It appears somewhat more likely
today that no candidate will have wrapped up the nomination by
convention time. But even if that ends up being the case, it will be no
great boon to Colorado's uncommitted delegates. If no candidate has
enough votes on the first ballot to secure the nomination, delegates
will be free to vote for anyone they like anyway.
It's bad enough the two parties in Colorado don't have
presidential primaries in which many more voters would participate. The
caucuses already limit participation to a narrow slice of the
electorate. But the fact that the Republican leadership then took
matters a step further and deprived even that narrow slice of voters a
voice in one of the most competitive, consequential political
nominations in memory - and perhaps in history - is mindboggling.
It's likely that some Republicans who show up Tuesday will be
surprised to learn their presidential preference is of no consequence.
Perhaps someone should be on hand to explain to them why party democracy
is apparently too disruptive and unpredictable to be trusted." via Drudge
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Dec. 2013-Corporation purchases batch of annoying right of center outlets. "Sharp elbows independent" outlets are "brought under the same roof:"
12/13/2013, "Conservative Media Empire: Hotair, Townhall Owners To Acquire Red State, Others," BuzzFeed, Benny Johnson
"Salem Communications will now own five major conservative media properties."
....
"The move marks an accelerating shift in the conservative media world, as
a set of boisterous, sharp-elbowed independent digital outlets are
brought under the same roof.... “Virtually all” of the upper management will be let go to avoid redundancy."...
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Added: GOP Establishment hatred for voters grew white hot after June 2014 defeat of Eric Cantor:
"The republican party hatred for their own electorate only
amplified with the (2014 Eric) Cantor defeat."...
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