Not under current Republican rules. That's the Democrats. For the GOP they are bound until the convention is over and can't switch.Vince wrote:So a number would be freed up on subsequent votes.
That's as may be, but by their own rules they'd have to nullify any delegates that switched their votes. If they didn't they'd be open to a lawsuit from Trump in which he could claim his entire campaign budget to date as damages. No idea if he'd win or not, but that's a big risk to take, and just having that lawsuit would be yet another PR mess to deal with. And Trump is not shy about suing people.It's possible that the NRP could try to nullify the delegates doing that, but they would risk losing much more than the Presidency going that route.
There is one potential escape. The RNC rules are only set "until the next convention", so they could start the convention with rewriting the rules in order to make a loophole they can work with. However at the same time there's this rule: "The Republican National Committee shall have the power to declare vacant the seat of any member who refuses to support the Republican nominee for President of the United States or Vice President of the United States". If it comes to a fight there had better be a majority of the RNC members in on it from the beginning or it will become a slap-fight of trying to oust each other right out of their chairs before things even get underway.
No matter how it goes down, if they try to use tricks to take it away from Trump at the convention it will be a mess that could cripple the party for quite some time. Probably better to just not even fight it and make some more tricky rules for next time.
