CLEVELAND, Ohio -- In a normal political convention, the only people who care about the roll call vote -- the reading of state names and pronouncements that "the great state of" (fill in the state's name here) casts so many delegates for so-and-so -- are the delegates from that state.

It's dull and drama-free, just as the political bosses like it.

Will Cleveland 2016 be different?

We'll find out Tuesday night, and you can follow along in real time with cleveland.com's politics team in the tweets below.

Real estate billionaire Donald Trump's name will be put into nomination officially at the Republican National Convention and state delegations will announce, one after the other, that they cast so many delegate votes for him.

Or for somebody else.

Trump will almost certainly capture the 1,237 delegate votes -- representing just over half, or a majority, of the 2,472 convention delegates. (Delegates were determined largely by candidate performances in state primaries and caucuses.) But the mathematical certainty doesn't mean all will go smoothly to that point.

Enough delegates have expressed displeasure with Trump's boastful manner and take-no-prisoners tactics that they want a way to protest his nomination, even if the nomination is inevitable.

Voting for the candidate who won a state is not in itself rebellious. Many delegates say they are bound by party rules or state laws to give their votes to the candidate who wins their primary. Ohio is expected to announce that its delegates are for Gov. John Kasich, who won the state primary.

But some delegates, including individuals from Colorado and Virginia, question the legality and propriety of these rules. They also happen to not like Trump. Although they failed in their effort to change the party rules Monday, they said they hope to raise a fresh challenge during the roll call.

What will happen?

Follow our live coverage below. Before the roll call starts, you can see other tweets from the cleveland.com team.