No, I will not vote for a party folks.
No, you must not vote for a “party.”
Nor can you support any party that does something like this.
Party leaders in Virginia and North Carolina told Politico.com that they are considering a push to require candidates entering their respective Republican primaries to pledge their support for the eventual nominee and not run a third-party candidacy — a pledge Trump, the current frontrunner, would not make when asked to during the Fox News debate earlier this month in Cleveland.
“Anybody who wants to seek the Republican nomination should have to commit to supporting the ultimate Republican nominee,” Virginia’s former Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli told Politico. “I don’t see anything wrong with that.”
Oh really?
So what you’re saying is that if even one of the candidates contending for the Presidential nomination is unacceptable to another candidate that second candidate must pledge to support someone they find unacceptable as a President?


“Party over principles” is a nice capsule summary of how the Democrats have operated since FDR, if not since the Wilson Administration. But wait: there’s more! Because success breeds emulation, the Republican Party has moved in that direction as well — and may soon enforce such a pledge as a condition of inclusion in its party roster, its party functions, and its party debates.
What’s next, Heil Hillery???
Nuts!
And if said party doe’s not represent those that elected said party?
Why then they should forever be banned from holding office in any position.
We should be able to vote on that, and this years list of purposed political traders include….