But then the RNC fought back.
For more than an hour, RNC and Trump whips — many of them wearing fluorescent green hats — cajoled and even threatened delegates in an effort to convince them to withdraw their signatures.
Yahoo News saw Rick Gates, a deputy to Trump adviser Paul Manafort, berating a young delegate from Virginia named Tommy Valentine. “I’m gonna remember how Virginia was an embarrassment at the national convention,” said Gates, who was “identified as an agent of a Ukrainian oligarch” in a 2011 racketeering lawsuit that also named Manafort.
Valentine recounted the confrontation moments later.
“I was asking, ‘Are you threatening me, personally, or my state?’” Valentine told Yahoo News. “[Gates] was saying how if Trump becomes president… he’s going to remember what happened in Virginia during the convention. And I just said, ‘Well, that’s corrupt politics that Trump is embracing. He’s going to punish states because they didn’t vote according to his standards?’”
Elsewhere, RNC whips tried to convince Maine delegate Ashley Ryan that she was “giving the left ammunition” by supporting a rules fight on the floor.
“No we’re not — we’re absolutely not,” Ryan said. “The convention is the ultimate authority on the party, and it needs to be treated as such.”
When the time came for the full convention to weigh in, Arkansas Rep. Steve Womack, the RNC’s presiding officer, refused to acknowledge the petition. Instead, he launched directly into a voice vote. And rather than asking the “ayes” and “nos” to take turns — customary procedure — Womack simply let everyone shout at once.
“Clearly, the ayes have it,” Womack said, banging the gavel.
That’s when bedlam broke loose on the floor. Delegates cried, “Turn on the mics!” and “Point of order!” in a futile attempt to be recognized by Womack. Howls of outrage filled the arena. The demonstration went on for several minutes, with Trump supporters trying to drown out the insurgents by chanting their candidate’s name.
Initially, Womack left the stage. The convention seemed to shut down. The rules vote appeared to be over.
“I have no idea what’s going on right now,” said Sen. Mike Lee of Utah, who helped lead the failed uprising from the floor. “This is surreal.”
But a few minutes later, Womack reappeared on stage and took the unusual step of calling for a second voice vote, presumably to clear the air. This time, the “ayes” and “nos” took turns.
“Clearly, the ayes have it,” Womack said again. But the “nos” sounded louder.
And so Womack recognized Phil Wright, the chair of the Utah delegation, who stood ready at the microphone. Lee was beside him. It was, in its own small way, an accomplishment for the insurgents — getting Womack to acknowledge their existence.
Wright demanded a roll-call vote.
But Womack immediately burst their bubble, leaning into the microphone to announce that three of the rogue states had withdrawn their signatures. Translation: The rebellion had collapsed.
The 11 states that collected signatures were Maine, Colorado, Montana, Wyoming, Iowa, Virginia, Utah, Minnesota, Washington, Vermont and Alaska. The District of Columbia also took part.
Humphrey submitted only nine, but did not say which states were included in his batch. But Alaska was not one of them, and their signatures were not counted, according to delegate Fred Brown, who told Yahoo News in an email that he could not find the convention secretary when he tried to submit them.
“I was told I could also present the signatures from the floor. Nevertheless, when the vote occurred, my mic was not turned on. When I attempted to present these signatures at the stage, my effort was ignored by the chair, and the security guard turned me away,” Brown said.
With the number of states down to 10, RNC and Trump whips succeeded in getting enough delegates in three states — Maine, Iowa and Minnesota, along with D.C. — to withdraw their support, and defeated the motion, according to the chair of the convention. An RNC official said a parliamentarian would provide evidence of the signatures withdrawing support for the roll-call vote, but that had not happened as of late Monday night.
After the convention moved on to other business, the entire Colorado delegation walked out of the Quicken Loans Arena. Half the Iowa delegation followed.
RNC Chairman Reince Priebus probably calculated that ripping off the rules Band-Aid in one fell swoop would be better for the party than inviting thousands of delegates — with lots of different feelings about Trump — to express themselves in front of the national television cameras. But at the same time, the roll call might have given the #NeverTrump forces an opportunity to let off some steam before Trump’s big prime-time speech later this week.
Now they’re angrier than ever.
Lee told Yahoo News that the RNC’s refusal to allow a roll-call vote may have generated so much frustration and resentment among the delegates that anti-Trump floor demonstrations could continue for the rest of the week.
“They’ve certainly created the possibility for that,” he said. “I think they could have avoided that possibility had they handled this in the appropriate way — had they just allowed some of this steam to be released, allowed for a roll-call vote, allowed people to air their grievances about this.”