Conservatives pin hopes on convention fight to stop Donald Trump

Prominent conservatives led by Erick Erickson on Thursday called for a unity ticket and a convention fight to stop Republican front-runner Donald Trump, a sign of the growing desperation in the party establishment to find an alternative to the billionaire businessman.

"If that unity ticket is unable to get 1,237 delegates prior to the convention, we recognize that it took Abraham Lincoln three ballots at the Republican convention in 1860 to become the party's nominee and if it is good enough for Lincoln, that process should be good enough for all the candidates without threats of riots," Erickson wrote in a statement after conservatives gathered in Washington to discuss ways to thwart Trump's march to the nomination.

The long and contentious meeting at the Army Navy Club included discussion about a unity ticket involving Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Ohio Gov. John Kasich, according to a source familiar with the conversation. But the group decided not to commit to that pairing "because of the egos involved," according to the source.

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Around the time the meeting broke up, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio made his first public statements on Capitol Hill after dropping his presidential bid on Tuesday.

"Hopefully there's time to still prevent a Trump nomination, which I think would fracture the party and be damaging to the conservative movement," Rubio said.

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Trump dominated primary contests on Tuesday and has the lead in the delegate count. But his loss in Ohio raises the prospect that he won't secure enough delegates to win the nomination outright before the party's July convention in Cleveland.

Trump's rise has long worried many in the party. But recent incidents of violence and Trump's comment to CNN's "New Day" on Wednesday that riots might erupt in the event of a contested convention have escalated those concerns.

Erickson said his group is "committed to ensuring a real conservative candidate is elected."

"We believe that neither Hillary Clinton nor Donald Trump, a Hillary Clinton donor, is that person," he wrote.

The group left the door open to potentially supporting a third party race if Republicans are unable to stop Trump.

"We intend to keep our options open as to other avenues to oppose Donald Trump," the statement said. "Our multiple decades of work in the conservative movement for free markets, limited government, national defense, religious liberty, life, and marriage are about ideas, not necessarily parties."

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Rep. Trent Franks, a member of the House Freedom Caucus, attended the meeting briefly. So did conservative leader Bill Wichterman.

There was discussion that if Trump became GOP nominee, then "the GOP ceases to be a party for traditional conservatives, who must go elsewhere," according to the source familiar with the discussion. The thought process at this session was to work with "an existing third party instead of trying for ballot access."

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That would probably be the existing Libertarian or Constitution parties.

Not all the attendees appeared to be giving up on Trump's existing challengers.

"I'm there to support Ted Cruz," said Mike Farris, a Republican lawyer. "There's a lot of Cruz support."

Another participant, Deborah DeMoss Fonseca, likened the Trump phenomenon to a "1,000 year flood."

"It happens once every 1,000 years and you don't know how to handle it," she said. "So I think people have been experimenting with different things to see what would work."

News Courtesy: www.cnn.com