By

Ed Kilgore /

The New Republic/ February 8, 2012, 3:03 PM

Brokered convention not in the cards for GOP

Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum arrives at a campaign rally Feb. 7, 2012, in Blaine, Minn.

Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum arrives at a campaign rally Feb. 7, 2012, in Blaine, Minn. / Getty Images

Another week, another set of primaries -- and soon enough, undoubtedly, another cascade of speculations about the prospect of a brokered convention. Predictions of an unpredictable fight-to-the-finish have become an unfortunate refrain -- not to say, cliche -- of our presidential election campaigns.

Enough! I hate to be the one to have to break it to my fellow political junkies, but the truth must be told: Not only isn't there going to be no brokered convention this year -- there probably isn't going to be a brokered convention ever again.

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For starters, there's a reason it hasn't happened in either party since the advent of the modern nomination system in 1972. With virtually all delegates being selected in scheduled primaries and caucuses, there are no longer any blocs of uncommitted or "favorite-son," or machine-controlled delegates who can prevent a front-runner from accumulating a majority well before the convention. All the great "smoke-filled room" conventions--including the classic 1920 GOP session in Chicago which gave America a Harding administration, and the 1924 Democratic convention that required 103 ballots -- occurred when primaries were marginal events that mainly consisted in influencing the party bosses who controlled a sizable majority of delegates.

The only way to produce a "deliberative" convention now -- barring some cataclysmic event like the death, disability, or disqualification of the putative nominee -- is via an extended primary season in which multiple candidates remain viable to the bitter end. Sure, it could happen, but only theoretically. Candidates on the edge of elimination often say they will stay in the contest until the bitter end (as noted in my last column on Gingrich's actual odds of victory), but they typically don't, because they quickly realize they've lost the media attention and the financial donors that they need to win primaries and delegates in significant numbers.

One element of confusion that has entered the conversation this year is the supposed adoption of "proportionality" in Republican delegate allocation rules, which, it is argued, will make it harder for front-runners to lock down a majority of delegates. As Davidson College's Josh Putnam has explained repeatedly, while the first-ever intervention in state delegate selection systems by the RNC this cycle is a big deal, the actual changes in these systems required in 2012 are actually pretty small: states holding binding primaries and caucuses prior to April 1 cannot award delegates according to statewide winner-take-all procedures. But they can award (and one state, South Carolina, has already awarded) delegates by congressional district winner-take-all rules, which are a long way from "proportional" representation at the convention. Moreover, after April 1, the rules are exactly the same as before. In short, there hasn't been any procedural revolution that has made a "brokered convention" more likely.

Another largely false issue is the scenario whereby a "late entry" candidate jumps into the primaries and hoovers up delegates in sufficient numbers to deny Romney a majority. Primary filing deadlines have now passed for nearly all the primaries before mid-April, with new deadlines popping up every week. As the failure of Newt Gingrich to get on the ballot in Virginia has shown, even well-established candidates often struggle to meet complex filing conditions. There is nobody out there who is going to jump in late and have enough general support to leap the barriers to entry; all the "white knights" usually mentioned -- Jeb Bush, Mitch Daniels, Chris Christie, etc. -- didn't run for very good reasons (Bush's surname; Daniels' "truce" insult to social conservatives; Christie's various ideological heresies, from abortion to gun rights).

Finally, it's worth examining the actual resistance to Mitt Romney's nomination that is the essential premise for most of the "brokered convention" scenarios. Certainly he is not the ideal candidate for most conservative activists. But it is remarkable how few of them have failed to pledge allegiance to him if he does win the nomination. And he remains relatively popular among GOP voters: a NBC-Wall Street Journal survey (PDF) of Republican voters taken well before the Florida primary, showing Gingrich leading Romney nationally, also showed Mitt with a better favorable/unfavorable ratio than Newt.

And even if you buy my learned TNR colleague Walter Shapiro's idea that Gingrich could yet make a comeback and smite Romney in later primaries, that's not the same as suggesting a "brokered convention" is likely. Should Newt somehow romp in February, March and April, then he might well romp all the way to the nomination, leaving Romney in the dust.

As still another TNR regular, Jonathan Bernstein, has noted, a "brokered convention" depends on "brokers." Party leaders have a lot of ways to influence the selection of delegates in the primaries, but beyond that, their powers are limited. In the extremely unlikely event no winner heads to Tampa with a majority of delegates, we are looking not at a "brokered" convention, but a "deadlock" where the actual delegates, once their legal and moral commitments are discharged, can do what they want. "Brokering" is much too tame a metaphor for what would take place in that scenario. It would be a lot more like herding feral cats. Fortunately, it probably won' t-- no, it definitely won't -- come to that.

Ed Kilgore is a special correspondent for The New Republic, a blogger for The Washington Monthly, and managing editor of The Democratic Strategist. The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.

The New Republic. All rights reserved.
11 Comments Add a Comment
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retiredgustav says:
Lets see what super Tuesday brings, then we will discuss whetere or not there will be a brokered convention.
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auvacom says:
Well .... Mr Kilgore ... the taste of CROW must be to your liking.

The PROBABILITY of you eating CROW is more likely than not.

Dr. Paul has already acquired at a "minimum of four times" as many convention delegates as MAIN STREAM MEDIA is willing to acknowledge.
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maistir says:
The sad fact is that real, contested conventions (Taft v. Eisenhower or Smith v. Rossevelt) often produced more deserving candidates than our money-driven primaries do. See the essay "It Was Good Enough for Granda" at <sober2ndthoughts.blogspot.com>
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maistir replies:
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Roosevelt
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cannuc says:
Why won't the democrat party use the GOP real name? "GRAND OLD PARTY' That label/name has such a stink that even they won't use it for fear of being called "Juriasic"
The DEMOCRAT PARTY is so lame it has no "LARYNX"
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newz4me says:
Brokered convention? No. Perhaps broken is a better way to characterize a gathering of GOPers.
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omnibus66 says:
Another NRO garbage article. Given the flavor of the month cycles that the Republican nominating process is experiencing, a brokered convention is a very real possibility. But if that were to happen, the nominee would end up being none of the current candidates. They might even nominate someone who was actually willing to care about America and it's people. Wouldn't that be a blow to the party hierarchy?
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imnho says:
As wild as the tea party people are it could be a brokered convention. They would happly vote for gridlock if the don't get there way. Newt Gingritch has a my way or highway mentality. If he does not win the nomination he will try to throw a monkey wrench into the GOP electorial machine
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jimbom121 says:
Romney is the only one with the money and organization to win the nomination.
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kcl1s replies:
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I agree. . . Big money buys the elections theses days. John Q. Public does not have a voice. Too bad.
retiredgustav replies:
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If he wins the GOP nomination, that is as far as he will go. Many republicans and independents just don't like him. They will just stay at home.
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