Ted Cruz and John Kasich are joining forces in a last-ditch effort to deny Donald Trump the Republican presidential nomination.
Within minutes of each other, the pair issued statements late Sunday saying they will divide their efforts in upcoming contests with Cruz focusing on Indiana and Kasich devoting his efforts to Oregon and New Mexico. The strategy -- something the two campaigns have been working on for weeks -- is aimed at blocking Trump from gaining the 1,237 delegates necessary to claim to GOP nomination this summer.
The extraordinary moves reflect the national strength Trump has shown and the inability of Republicans who oppose the New York billionaire to come together to stop him. Dividing up some of the remaining primary states by putting forward one strong alternative to Trump in each could be enough to take away delegates and curb Trump's run to the nomination.
Trump is the only candidate who can realistically get a first-ballot victory -- there's no mathematical path for Cruz or Kasich to clinch the nomination heading into the convention. The billionaire is poised for a strong performance Tuesday, when Republicans in Maryland, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Connecticut and Rhode Island head to the polls.
Cruz campaign manager Jeff Roe said in a statement the Texas senator will focus on the May 3 Indiana primary. He called Trump at top of the GOP ticket "a sure disaster."
He added: "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."
Why is Kasich staying in the race?
Kasich's chief strategist, John Weaver, said in a separate statement: "Due to the fact that the Indiana primary is winner-take-all statewide and by congressional district, keeping Trump from winning a plurality in Indiana is critical to keeping him under 1,237 bound delegates before Cleveland. We are very comfortable with our delegate position in Indiana already, and given the current dynamics of the primary there, we will shift our campaign's resources West and give the Cruz campaign a clear path in Indiana."
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Trump blasted the arrangement on Twitter.
"Wow, just announced that Lyin' Ted and Kasich are going to collude in order to keep me from getting the Republican nomination. DESPERATION!" Trump wrote Sunday night.
Trump social media director Dan Scavino also blasted the deal on Twitter. "Two losing politicians-mathematically eliminated from receiving the nomination-trying something NEW! They will FAIL!" he tweeted.
Kasich's camp has been working for weeks to get Cruz on board with a divide-and-conquer strategy against Trump.
Initial overtures started about a week after Kasich won the Ohio primary but were initially met with silence, according to a senior Kasich official. But talks -- primarily between Weaver and Roe -- started in earnest during the following weeks, as both campaigns saw a need to work something out, even before Trump's big win in the New York primary, the source said.
The two top strategists met to hash out the details during last week's Republican National Committee meeting in Hollywood, Florida, according to a source. In fact, even as Cruz publicly called Kasich a "spoiler" and the two campaigns were literally a few rooms apart holding private meetings to woo individual and state delegates, the advisers were negotiating their plan. The deal wasn't finalized until Sunday, when they hammered out the last of the specifics.
Sunday's move is what many in the GOP have urged on for a while -- a combined "Never Trump" strategy. Both campaigns have each sought to be the one that denies Trump a first-ballot win at the Republican convention. Each has offered their own rationales for why GOP delegates would then turn to them as the party standard-bearer.
But these strategies by Kasich and Cruz have fallen short as Trump has proved a nearly unstoppable force in the Republican primary season. Kasich has won only his home state of Ohio, more than a month ago, and is far back in the delegate chase.
Cruz has remained a steady second behind Trump, but his victories have been sporadic. His initial strategy to sweep the South with heavy support for evangelical voters fell flat. Cruz has in recent contests focused more on the delegate game, picking off support in individual congressional districts even as he lost statewide in several places.
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The two statements were the only public comments Sunday night from the campaigns, and notably only refer to three states -- Indiana, New Mexico and Oregon. California, with its treasure trove of delegates, Nebraska and West Virginia are among the states not included.
Weaver, in a tweet, indicated the campaign still plans to compete in other states besides Oregon and New Mexico, but declined to elaborate beyond the statement.
For Kasich, this arrangement also makes financial sense. The campaign finished March with only $1.2 million in the bank, and limiting its focus to two states in cooperation with Cruz is good cover to essentially shrink its footprint to a more manageable level. The cash Kasich expected after his Ohio victory never came. A big California donor presentation swing in California a few weeks ago was received positively, according to a senior official, but with limited big bundling commitments.
As Trump continues to lead, and especially following his romp in New York last week and expected victories in northeastern states this week, tensions have been mounting, especially for Cruz. According to CNN estimates, Cruz would have to win every available delegate to reach 1,237 on the first ballot, a virtual impossibility.
Cruz has consistently called for Kasich to move aside, touting the fact that only he and Trump have won multiple states and have a way to secure the delegates needed.
The pro-Cruz Trusted Leadership PAC has continued to hit Kasich. Friday, it announced it was planning to spend $1.6 million against Kasich in Indiana. The advertisement airing in Indiana features President Barack Obama praising the Ohio governor for expanding Medicaid, which is anathema to the GOP's conservative base. A version of the ad also aired before the New York primary.
"The primary has done the job it's supposed to do, it has narrowed the field. As we stand here today, there are two people with any plausible path whatsoever to the nomination, me and Donald Trump," Cruz said Sunday in Terre Haute, Indiana.
An audience member then shouted out, "John Kasich."
Cruz's response: "As I said, plausible path."
CNN's Betsy Klein and Theodore Schleifer contributed to this report
Post by sugarglider on Apr 25, 2016 15:02:22 GMT -5
This is an appropriate strategy as expressly promoted by Romney weeks ago. I just would not want to be in a Cruz state. I'm hoping Kasich is taking CA.
This is, again, totally missing the point. Him winning the nomination is the symptom, not the disease. And if you keep ignoring the real issue here, you're never, ever going to fix your party.
This is an appropriate strategy as expressly promoted by Romney weeks ago. I just would not want to be in a Cruz state. I'm hoping Kasich is taking CA.
CA is not winner take all, it's district by district, like NY.
That said, Trump is in the lead, followed by Cruz. Kasich barely has a pulse out here.
This seems like an effort that will only solidify support for Trump among people who are generally distrustful of government and looking to disrupt "politics as usual." Cruz/Kasich are handing Trump a narrative wherein he has washington insiders "running scared" of the change he will bring to politics, and where Trump is the outsider being bullied but won't back down, etc.
This is an appropriate strategy as expressly promoted by Romney weeks ago. I just would not want to be in a Cruz state. I'm hoping Kasich is taking CA.
CA is not winner take all, it's district by district, like NY.
That said, Trump is in the lead, followed by Cruz. Kasich barely has a pulse out here.
Ha! I read it was winner take all for the Rs, but I guess I didn't read all the way since it's a combo.
Disappointed by the polls. I think I was just thinking Kasich did better in NY, which is similar in liberalism, but Trump won NY because it's his home state. I forget how southern CA can be, though. And also fewer people here read the NYTimes.
Ha! I read it was winner take all for the Rs, but I guess I didn't read all the way since it's a combo.
Disappointed by the polls. I think I was just thinking Kasich did better in NY, which is similar in liberalism, but Trump won NY because it's his home state. I forget how southern CA can be, though. And also fewer people here read the NYTimes.
I think Cruz pissed off the entire state with his New York values comments, so the anti-Trump crowd rallied around Kasich. Cruz doesn't have the same baggage here, plus there's a ton of evangelicals in Southern California. I imagine this state has a lot more conservatives who also happen to be Latino, which may help Cruz out.
I also think that Kasich doesn't really have an audience here. California has a ton of moderate Republicans, but the kinds of people that love Meg Whitman are going to find more in common with Hillary Clinton than anything the national GOP is selling this year.