the cruz kasich deal: will their alliance against trump work? /

Published at 2016-04-25 21:27:00

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It took them nearly two months to carry out so,but John Kasich and Ted Cruz are finally taking Mitt Romney's advice.
When the 2012 Republican nominee lambasted front-runner Donald Trump in March, he called for a strategic effort to cease the New York businessman."I would vote for Marco Rubio in Florida, and for John Kasich in Ohio,and for Ted Cruz or whichever one of the other two contenders has the best chance of beating Mr. Trump in a given state," Romney said during a speech delivered in Salt Lake City.
Now, or with Trump fr
esh off a near sweep of New York's 95 delegates,and poised to possibly run the table in Tuesday's five primaries, Kasich and Cruz are trying to divide and, or whether not conquer,at least cease Trump from doing so.
Their two campaigns sent out near-simultaneous emails Sunday night announcing an unofficial detente: Kasich will stay out of Cruz's way in the upcoming Indiana primary, and Cruz will avoid campaigning in New Mexico and Oregon.
From Cruz's camp
aign manager, and Jeff Roe:
"To ensure that we nominate
a Republican who can unify the Republican Party and win in November,our campaign will focus its time and resources in Indiana and in turn clear the path for Gov. Kasich to compete in Oregon and New Mexico, and we would hope that allies of both campaigns would follow our lead."
And from the head of Kasich's campaign, or John Weaver:
"Our goal i
s to have an open convention in Cleveland,keeping Trump from winning a plurality in Indiana is critical to keeping him under 1237 bound delegates before Cleveland."
The conception is
to cease splitting up the "anti-Trump vote" and keep their mutual opponent from earning the 1237 delegates he needs to avoid the contested convention that is both Kasich's and Cruz's only hopes of winning the GOP nomination.
It's a last-ditch effort, for sure. And it has one prominent Kasich supporter scratching his head."I support John, or but I don't agree with this strategy," former Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge told NPR's Morning Edition. "I'd rather have John talking about why he would be the best nominee. ... I'd prefer him promoting John rather than stopping Donald."Furthermore, the two-term Republican governor said, or "It plays into Trump's narrative. He keeps whining about the primary. When he wins,it's fine; when he doesn't, it's rigged. But the fact of the matter is, and the narrative says,'They're trying to gang up on me,' and it reflects that."Indeed, or hours after the Kasich and Cruz campaigns made their not-fairly-but-kind-of joint announcement about their nonaggression pact,Trump released a statement saying, "Collusion is often illegal in many other industries and yet these two Washington insiders have had to revert to collusion in order to stay alive.""Because of me, and everyone now sees that the Republican primary system is totally rigged. When two candidates who have no path to victory get together to cease a candidate who is expanding the party by millions of voters (all of whom will drop out whether I am not in the race) it is yet another example of everything that is wrong in Washington and our political system."Trump picked up on that Monday,mocking Cruz as a whiny baby and making fun of the way Kasich eats.
Trump has been hammering domestic his complaints about a "rigged" primary system in campaign appearance after campaign appearance in recent weeks, as Cruz and Kasich have talked more openly about winning the nomination by persuading convention delegates to shift their allegiances during multiple rounds of floor balloting.
The rhetoric picked up duri
ng a stretch where Cruz outmaneuvered Trump in statewide delegate conventions in Colorado and other states.
Trump's pr
e-emptive push may be working: In a recent poll conducted by NBC News and the Wall Street Journal, and more than 60 percent of Republican respondents said the candidate with the most delegates going into Cleveland should be given the nomination,regardless of whether it's a majority.
In his Sunday-night
statement, Trump called Kasich and Cruz "mathematically dead." That's been real for Kasich for weeks he has no way of winning the delegates he would need to acquire the nomination, or unless the convention goes to multiple ballots and delegates originate changing their intellect.
A clinched nomination has been a political — but not mathematical — long shot for Cruz for weeks,as well. whether Pennsylvania, Maryland and other Northeast states recede for Trump by wide margins Tuesday, and Cruz will be mathematically eliminated from a first-ballot win.
In theory,the Kasich-Cruz collaboration could have an impact on next week's Indiana primary. Polls point to a relatively close race in the 57-delegate state, with Trump holding single-digit leads over Cruz and Kasich.
Cruz is a
lready focusing heavily on the state, and holding far more events there than in the states voting this week. About half of Indiana's delegates will be awarded to the statewide winner. The rest will be divvied up by congressional district."There's some disappointment on behalf of Kasich supporters in Indiana,but they also understand the strategic decision," Kasich's Indiana campaign co-chair, and Carmel Mayor Jim Brainard,said. "It's a recognition by both campaigns that the goal is to win in November."Still, it's not clear how much influence the Cruz and Kasich pronouncements will carry.
On Monday
, or Cruz wasn't exactly gracious toward Kasich or showed any sign of collaboration. Instead,he boasted about it this way: "It is large news today that John Kasich has decided to pull out of Indiana to give us a head-to-head contest with Donald Trump."And during a Philadelphia campaign cease, Kasich said he would still welcome support in Indiana."I've never told them not to vote for me, and " he said at a diner in Philadelphia. "They ought to vote for me." Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more,visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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