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		Glitzy parties, bowling: Scenes from the 
		other Republican convention 
		
		 
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		 [July 22, 2016] 
		By Emily Flitter 
		 
		CLEVELAND (Reuters) - Bourbon flowed, a 
		jazz band played, and pink and violet lights bathed the vaulted stone 
		ceilings at a party thrown by a liquor producers' lobby group on Monday 
		for attendees of the Republican National Convention. 
		 
		Seven blocks away in Cleveland, in the arena where Donald Trump was to 
		officially accept his party's nod for the White House, a fight boiled 
		over between Trump supporters and foes about the rules concerning his 
		nomination. Delegates shouted at each other. The chairman tasked with 
		keeping order briefly abandoned the podium. Microphones went dead. 
		 
		Typically, the Republican convention that takes place every four years 
		is a tale of two conventions. At the official one, activists from all 50 
		states come to hear testimonials about their party's presidential 
		nominee and watch the candidate's official coronation. 
		 
		At the other, Republicans in the professional class - strategists, 
		lobbyists, pollsters, lawmakers - rub elbows at cocktail hours and 
		concerts, woo donors at power breakfasts and toss back booze at night, 
		all the while conducting informal business, swapping pledges of support 
		and plans for the future. 
		 
		This year, the disconnect between the two conventions seemed more 
		pronounced, several lobbyists and activists said, and some parties were 
		more subdued. The Distilled Spirits Council's soiree, normally a 
		jam-packed affair, drew a more modest crowd this year, according to some 
		Republicans who have attended it at past conventions. 
		
		  
		
		The council's senior vice president, Frank Coleman, pooh-poohed the idea 
		that attendance was down. "It was a very large venue," he said, saying 
		that the party still attracted about 700 people over the course of the 
		evening. 
		 
		Republican strategist Ron Bonjean said there was a muted tone at some 
		Cleveland gatherings, which he attributed to the unique relationship 
		between Trump and his party's establishment. 
		 
		Mitt Romney, the 2012 Republican presidential candidate and a former 
		Massachusetts governor, and Senator John McCain, the party's 2008 
		nominee, hailed from the establishment and had extensive ties with 
		businesspeople and strategists who are convention regulars. 
		 
		By contrast, Trump, a real estate developer and former reality TV star 
		who has never held elective office, clinched the Republican nomination 
		by touting his outsider status.  
		 
		"You have a non-politician, a Hollywood entertainer trying to show 
		Americans he's fit for office, and you have Republicans who are used to 
		coming to these things for years," Bonjean said. The two groups, he 
		said, weren't mixing so smoothly. 
		 
		SEEKING CORPORATE DONORS 
		 
		Inside the convention arena on Thursday evening, Trump fans cheered, 
		danced to a band and roared support for a succession of speakers as they 
		awaited the event's finale - Trump's speech formally accepting the 
		nomination. But in bars and parties nearby, there was hardly any 
		clapping and cheering as those same scenes flashed across televisions. 
		 
		Some Republicans flew in to Cleveland for only for a day or two, to host 
		events for lawmakers and clients, then left before Trump's Thursday 
		night speech. 
		 
		
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			Danny Hutton (M) performs with Three Dog Night during a Rock the 
			Night kick off party on the sidelines of the Republican National 
			Convention in Cleveland, Ohio, U.S., July 17, 2016. REUTERS/Aaron 
			Josefczyk/File Photo 
            
			  
			One lobbyist for a large industrial conglomerate, who spoke on 
			condition of anonymity, had a mission in Cleveland that had little 
			to do with Trump: mingling with congressional Republicans and 
			showing support for their re-election efforts. 
			 
			The informal convention did still take place, although more subdued. 
			One strategist skipped a night of speeches and pageantry to gamble 
			at a nearby casino. He won $8,000. A group of three made quick 
			glances at a TV screen as Trump's wife, Melania, spoke on Monday 
			night, checking on her progress between turns at a bar with bowling 
			lanes that had been converted to a private lounge. 
			 
			But there were constant reminders that Cleveland was different. 
			 
			As an outsider, Trump lacks the kind of donor network that is 
			typical of major party candidates and only recently has begun to 
			ramp up his fundraising. 
			 
			Before the convention started, companies that habitually donate to 
			the RNC withheld pledges or withdrew them, leading organizers to ask 
			casino mogul Sheldon Adelson, a generous party benefactor, for an 
			urgent donation. 
			 
			A strategist who asked for help to raise a last-minute $15,000 to 
			sponsor food and drinks at a country music concert for delegates 
			could not find any corporate donors willing to pony up. Eight of the 
			12 people he contacted said they were skipping the convention 
			entirely. 
			 
			On Tuesday, Trump passed up a chance to forge closer ties with more 
			big donors when he failed to appear at a breakfast held on the field 
			of the new football stadium in town, according to a report in Time 
			magazine. 
			 
			Later that day, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie met with donors 
			to brief them on plans for a team that would ease Trump into office 
			if he wins the Nov. 8 election against Democrat Hillary Clinton. 
			Such gatherings often attract billionaires and other moneyed 
			luminaries. 
			
			
			  
			
			A man in charge of fundraising surveyed attendees in the modestly 
			sized conference room and declared, "I think I see about $600,000 in 
			here." 
			 
			(Reporting by Emily Flitter; Editing by Caren Bohan and Leslie 
			Adler) 
			
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