While North Dakota is a most unlikely place for the Republican
presidential campaign to take a critical turn, it nonetheless delivered
an apparent setback over the weekend to front-runner Donald Trump in the
behind-the-scenes battle for delegates, as Ted Cruz declared victory at
the northern border state's GOP convention.
Like most states where Cruz has claimed victory,
North Dakota is relatively light on delegates. Trump’s wins in
delegate-rich primary states have kept the billionaire businessman well
ahead, and the events in Fargo won’t change that.
But the North Dakota showdown speaks to the
organizational headwinds Trump is facing – something he’s also dealing
with in Wisconsin, which holds its primary Tuesday and where Cruz is
polling in front. And if nothing else, the North Dakota convention
results could put Cruz in a better position at the party’s July
convention if the nomination is still open going into Cleveland.
"I'm thrilled to have the vote of confidence of
Republican voters in North Dakota who delivered such a resounding
victory today,” Cruz said in a statement. “Whether we defeat Donald
Trump before the convention or at it, I'm energized to have the support
of the vast majority of North Dakota delegates."
The vote in North Dakota was not a traditional
primary or caucus, but a convention. Delegates chosen over the weekend
through an internal party process will not be “bound” to any candidate.
For that reason, there technically was no winner from the weekend’s
gathering.
Yet the presidential candidates still scrambled to
try and get their own supporters elected as delegates, banking on their
loyalty at the July convention.
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In the end, the Cruz campaign claimed that 18 of the 25 delegates selected Sunday are supporters of the Texas senator.
The Trump campaign, though, disputed this, claiming
some of those listed as Cruz supporters were actually undecided. One
Trump source went so far as to call Cruz’s claims “bull,” saying the
senator only has four dedicated supporters of the 18.
The campaign further claimed Sunday that they came
into Fargo with “zero expectations” but were “encouraged by the results”
in the end.
“Nearly one-third of Sen. Cruz's ‘list’ was not
elected, and many of those elected from his ‘list’ are firmly undecided
or support other candidates,” the Trump campaign said in a statement,
while also touting an endorsement from Rep. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D.
The campaign said supporter and former GOP primary
candidate Ben Carson “privately met with many of the undecided
delegates, and we're confident that we will receive strong support from
the delegation in Cleveland.”
And John Weaver, strategist for Ohio Gov. John
Kasich, took to Twitter to claim Cruz’s “strong-arm tactics” failed in
North Dakota, saying he “helped elect delegates who will vote” for
Kasich in Cleveland.
For whom the 25 delegates in Cleveland will vote
remains an open question, as they are not bound to anybody. Some listed
as Cruz supporters were actually “leaning” toward him, and not
necessarily committed.
But the anti-Trump organizing in Fargo was nevertheless robust.
One anti-Trump group, Our Principles PAC, was heavily
involved on the ground in Fargo, deploying a field team to speak to
convention attendees and distribute hundreds of voter guides to make the
case against Trump.
"This campaign is coming down to a ground game battle
for delegates,” PAC senior adviser Brian Baker said in a statement.
“We will fight for every last delegate vote all the way to Cleveland.
We are committed to making sure Donald Trump is not the
Republican nominee and that the GOP wins the White House this fall with a
principled conservative. Republicans at the North Dakota Convention
rejected Trump, just like the entire Republican base will do this summer
in Cleveland."
It’s these forces that Trump also is facing down in
Wisconsin, which holds its primary on Tuesday. Cruz has led in most
recent Wisconsin polls.
Trump is fighting to clinch the nomination before
July with the requisite 1,237 delegates, while his remaining rivals try
to hold him under that threshold.
Yet the front-runner has faced other setbacks in the
grueling battle for each and every delegate. Recently in Louisiana,
Trump has vowed to both file a lawsuit and an internal challenge within
the Republican National Committee over reports that Cruz, despite losing
the Louisiana primary to Trump in early March, could draw the support
of enough “unbound” delegates and from Rubio supporters to actually
overtake Trump in the state by as many as 10 delegates.
And The Tennessean reports
that the Trump campaign is now accusing the Tennessee GOP of trying to
stop pro-Trump delegates from being part of the state’s convention
delegation.
Trump won the state’s primary, but a state party arm
is responsible for appointing 14 of the 58-person delegation. The Trump
camp reportedly alleges “anti-Trump” people have made their way onto the
delegate list.
"They're picking establishment picks who don't
support Donald Trump, and it's just the same effort that they're
conducting all over the country to steal a vote here, steal a delegate
there, to affect the outcome of the convention in July and take the
nomination away from Donald Trump,” Darren Morris, Trump’s Tennessee
state director, told the newspaper.
Tuesday, 12 April 2016
Trump faces new headaches in behind-scenes battle for delegates
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