Representatives for the GOP presidential candidates huddled on Sunday to organize their demands for future debates, but little seemed to be accomplished.

Meeting in an Alexandria, Virginia hotel, the campaigns agreed on making two-hour time limits, mandatory 30-second opening and closing statements and equal speaking time for all candidates their core demands to networks hosting future debates.

Fox Business will moderate the next GOP debate on Nov. 10.

Also Read: Stephen Colbert Rips CNBC GOP Debate for Being 'Confusing and Boring' (Video)

But more bold ideas, like doing away with the smaller undercard debate in favor of cramming all 14 candidates on stage together wasn't agreed to with Donald Trump's campaign serving as the loudest objector.

Carly Fiorina was the lone campaign not represented at the meeting.

Also Read: CNBC Staffers 'Shell Shocked' and 'Embarrassed' by Debate Debacle

The campaigns decided to send a co-signed letter to networks this week spelling out their demands. They will do so without collaborating with the RNC, who many candidates feel dropped the ball thus far in negotiationg favorable debate conditions.

The power pow wow came after the GOP universally condemned CNBC for what it deemed a terrible debate that lobbed grenades at candidates and showed bias and lack of professionalism throughout.

Also Read: Inside CNBC's Debate Debacle: How Cable Network Dropped the Ball

CNBC has defended itself and told TheWrap on Friday it had plans to host future presidential debates.

Read original story GOP Campaigns Huddle Over Debate Debacle, Sending Networks Demands At TheWrap