Donald Trump met behind closed doors with about two dozen congressional allies and GOP influencers at a Washington D.C. law firm Monday for what attendees described as a session to discuss political strategy and “party unity.”
Several lawmakers, many of whom who had previously announced support for the GOP frontrunner, attended the meeting at Jones Day law firm near the U.S. Capitol.
“Party unity is critical if we’re going to win,” said former Rep. Bob Livingston of Louisiana, who joined the meeting. “Once these Republicans who are balking right now stop and reflect about the alternatives, and that we could actually be faced with four years of Hillary Clinton, they’re all going to unify. That’s a good reason to come in and get behind Donald Trump.”
Sen. Jeff Sessions, the candidate’s most prominent congressional voice on national security and immigration policy, attended. So did Arkansas Sen. Tom Cotton, Rep. Renee Ellmers of North Carolina, Rep. Scott DesJarlais of Tennessee and Trump endorsers Rep. Tom Reed of New York and Duncan Hunter of California.
Rep. Scott DesJarlais (R-TN) says he's "in the dark" as what today's meeting with Trump is about. pic.twitter.com/DhAC5pVY13
— Luke Russert (@LukeRussert) March 21, 2016
Former Speaker of the House and 2012 presidential candidate Newt Gingrich, who has not yet formally endorsed a presidential candidate, joined the meeting along with his wife, Callista.
Attendees called the discussion “frank” and said it included exchanges about the GOP frontrunner’s path to the GOP nod.
“I think he has the clearest path to the nomination and it only makes sense that he unify the party and get the people behind him,” said DesJarlais.
But GOP congressional leaders, including top members of the House and Senate leadership teams, were not part of the gathering.
Trump’s courtship of D.C. Republicans – which will be coupled Monday with an afternoon address to the high-profile American Israel Public Affairs Committee’s annual policy conference – was met with derision from Trump’s foes within the party.
This article first appeared on NBCNews.com.
Carrie Dann
Alex Moe
Luke Russert
Luke Russert is the host and creative director of MSNBC Live. He first joined NBC News in August 2008 as a correspondent based in Washington, D.C.. Russert reported from Capitol Hill on the House of Representatives for “Nightly News with Brian Williams,” “TODAY,” MSNBC and NBCNews.com. He has also served as a guest host on various MSNBC programs.








