Trump
makes overture to Ryan, while Republicans wrestle with party's future
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[March 03, 2016]
By Susan Cornwell and Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Donald Trump,
leading the pack for the Republican presidential nomination, has reached
out to House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan, it was disclosed on
Wednesday, even as some Republicans strategized over how to potentially
knock the billionaire businessman's campaign off its stride.
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The Trump campaign contacted Ryan's office late on Monday, a
spokeswoman for Ryan said, on the eve of the Super Tuesday
nominating contests in which hundreds of delegates were at stake for
the Republican candidates.
The Trump overture also came a day before the Republican speaker
publicly admonished Trump over his failure to repudiate the backing
of his candidacy by a white supremacist group. Trump responded with
a warning to Ryan.
“We have heard from the (Trump) campaign, but the two have not yet
spoken," Ryan spokesman Brendan Buck said in a statement released on
Twitter on Wednesday, one day after Trump swept victories in seven
of the 11 states that held Republican nominating contests on the
biggest day in the primary season.
Ryan spokeswoman AshLee Strong did not describe the subject or
details of Trump's overture to the speaker.
After months of shrugging off Trump's candidacy, Republicans are now
grappling with the distinct possibility that he may be their party's
nominee to take on the Democrats, likely led by Hillary Clinton, in
the Nov. 8 presidential election.
A Republican senator who asked not to be identified, and a senior
aide to another Republican senator, told Reuters that many private
conversations were underway on Capitol Hill about finding ways to
slow or stop Trump.
“People are leaning on people everywhere,” to convince Ohio Governor
John Kasich to exit the race so the party can unify around a single
Trump alternative, either Senator Marco Rubio or Senator Ted Cruz.
Kasich, however, was expected to stay in at least until the Ohio
primary on March 15.
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At the core of such conversations, said the aide and another senior
Senate Republican aide, who also asked not to be identified, is
avoiding a deadlock at the Republican convention, which “would
forever result in the loss of our base,” said one of the aides.
Ryan has until this week avoided commenting on the presidential
race. On Tuesday he said any Republican nominee must reject any
group "built on bigotry." The remark was aimed at Trump after Trump
did not immediately repudiate support from a white supremacist group
over the weekend.
Trump fired back at Ryan in a news conference in Florida on Tuesday
night, warning the speaker would pay "a big price" if he stood in
Trump's way.
Ryan's office did not say on Wednesday when the two men might talk.
But Ryan's spokesman said the speaker planned to be in touch with
all of the Republican presidential candidates soon to discuss the
conservative policy agenda.
(Reporting by Susan Cornwell and Richard Cowan; Editing by Kevin
Drawbaugh and Leslie Adler)
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