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Republican Pledge to Back 2024 Nominee Draws Growing Criticism

2023-06-19 00:18
Republican presidential contender Chris Christie said the Republican National Committee’s requirement for candidates to support the eventual 2024
Republican Pledge to Back 2024 Nominee Draws Growing Criticism

Republican presidential contender Chris Christie said the Republican National Committee’s requirement for candidates to support the eventual 2024 nominee is a “useless idea,” adding to criticism following the indictments of GOP front-runner Donald Trump.

“It’s only the era of Donald Trump that you need somebody to sign something on a pledge,” the former New Jersey governor said in on CBS’s Face the Nation on Sunday. “So I think it’s a bad idea.”

The RNC will require presidential candidates to pledge support to the party’s nominee, whoever that may be, if they want to take the stage at the first primary debate in August. Meanwhile, Trump’s legal woes are growing after he became the first former US president to be indicted on federal charges, even as polls suggest Republican voters still favor him over other candidates.

Read more: Trump’s 2024 Rivals Offer Pardon, Condemnation Over Indictment

Christie, who backed Trump in 2016, has propelled his 2024 campaign by criticizing the former president. Despite the pledge requirement, he says he plans to take the debate stage this year in an effort to prevent Trump from taking office.

Former Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson has called on the RNC to back off the pledge for a nominee convicted of “espionage or a serious felony.” Hutchinson’s 2024 presidential campaign team met was rebuffed in a meeting with RNC officials, Politico reported.

He and voters at large wouldn’t support a candidate in a presidential election “who is under indictment, that is potentially convicted at that time,” Hutchinson said Sunday on ABC’s This Week.

“But we’re going to make that debate stage, and Donald Trump will not be the nominee of the party and I’m sure that’s how those who participate in it will view that,” he said.

The first Republican presidential primary debate is set for Aug. 23 in Milwaukee. Under rules announced by the national committee on June 2, participation criteria include a “signed pledge agreeing to support the eventual party nominee.”

“The RNC is committed to putting on a fair, neutral, and transparent primary process and the qualifying criteria set forth will put our party and eventual nominee in the best position to take back the White House come November 2024,” Republican National Committee chairwoman Ronna McDaniel said in a statement at the time.

Trump’s legal woes haven’t deterred die-hard supporters in the past. About a third of Americans say the Justice Department should not have charged Trump, according to a recent ABC News/Ipsos poll. Most Republicans viewed the indictment as politically motivated in a CBS News/ YouGov poll.

--With assistance from Gregory Korte.