Medill News Service
  • Home
  • News
    • Business & Tech
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Health
    • Immigration
    • National Security
    • Politics
    • Living
    • Sports
  • Special Reports
    • SOS for Democracy
    • Urban Indian Healthcare
    • Climate Change and the Ecocide Campaign
    • Nonvoters 2020
    • Special Reports
    • Campaign 2020
    • Coronavirus
    • GITMO
    • Inauguration
    • Minor League Baseball
  • Podcasts
    • Foreign Policy Weekly
    • Week in Congress
    • Mideast Minute
  • Reporters
  • About
  • Events at Medill DC
Select Page

Skeptical Washington state GOP leaders warming to Trump post-nomination

by Hannah Rank & Siri Bulusu | Jul 21, 2016 | Politics, Topics

Skeptical Washington state GOP leaders warming to Trump post-nomination
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

CLEVELAND–Despite lingering reservations against their party’s nominee, Washington state’s GOP leaders are warming to the idea of a Donald Trump presidency, seeing a new side of the nominee through convention speeches from his family.

Over the first two days of the convention, some delegates have experienced an “existential crisis:” choosing between lingering loyalty to Texas Sen. Ted Cruz or uniting behind the official Republican nominee. Trump’s aggressive manner of public speaking has kept delegates from siding completely with the New York businessman. During the primary process, Trump often targeted Cruz personally, which did not sit well with Washington state “Cruzers.”

“(Trump) was always going for the sound bites and reactions,” said Kelly Lotze, an alternate delegate and political consultant from Spokane. “He’s been a celebrity and an on-air personality so he knows how to get reaction.”

Lotze said that up to this stage of the election, Trump has not presented in a manner that felt presidential, engaging in feuds with other celebrities and presidential candidates, behavior Lotze feels doesn’t do anything to help unite the GOP.

But hearing Trump’s family present “great speeches and great content” was a turning point for Lotze. He said they’ve poised the candidate for an acceptance speech Thursday that will showcase a more genuine side. If Trump goes too far the other direction, it would raise a “red flag.”

“I’d be happy with a mild transition,” Lotze said. “But at least just trying to be a little more personable.”

During the primaries, Trump was not even in the top 10 picks for Mathew Patrick Thomas, a state committeeman from King County who’s attending the convention as a guest. Still, he’s been impressed by Trump’s ability to win thus far and hopes that Washington state will flip to a red state behind Trump.

“This is day one of him officially being the party’s nominee,” Thomas said Wednesday. “People are going to come around him, and they’ll come from the top off all sides of the government.”

“I do see his ship getting really tight, and things are going to get more scripted — and hopefully they write their own scripts,” he quipped, referring to a plagiarism scandal over Melania Trump’s speech Monday.

Thomas said Cruz’s speech Wednesday night at the convention would be crucial for any Washington state delegates still looking to him for guidance.

“He’s a smart guy, and I think he’s a team player,” Thomas said. “A lot of his supporters are going to need that reassurance from Ted.”

Marc Perez, a delegate from Puyallup, co-founded the Cruz campaign in Washington and still feels hurt by Trump’s attacks on the rest of the presidential hopefuls during the primary process. Perez said he also bristled at efforts by Trump’s campaign Monday to suppress a delegate movement to change certain party rules.

Though Perez formally supported Trump on the convention floor and “respect(s) the process” that granted him the nomination, he remains a Cruz follower. He said he will most likely write in Cruz’s name in November.

“I really don’t see any way that (Trump’s) going to apologize to Cruz and (John) Kasich and (Carly) Fiorina for the things he’s said,” Perez said. “And I don’t see him doing anything to make things right for how we were silenced on Monday.”

This story was published in The News Tribune in Tacoma, Washington

Medill Today | June 11, 2025

Medill on Twitter

Tweets by Medill News

Medill School of Journalism

Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications
www.medill.northwestern.edu

Northwestern University

www.northwestern.edu

Search Stories

Latest Stories

  • Trump Threatens 100% Secondary Tariffs on Russia, Announces NATO Arms Deal for Ukraine July 14, 2025
  • U.S. guts sophisticated efforts to return abducted Ukrainian children June 11, 2025
  • Veterans speak out as VA seeks new health and benefits leadership June 11, 2025

About Medill Washington

The stories here were reported, written and produced by Northwestern University graduate journalism students in the Washington program of the Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications . Most also were published or broadcast by media organizations served by the school's unique news distribution plan. We specialize in enterprise reporting, multimedia and online journalism, as well as on accountability, working to uncover misbehavior by people in power.
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
Medill School of Journalism ©2017 | Northwestern University