Posted on 03/16/2016 10:02:32 AM PDT by Elderberry
Last nights results in the Republican primaries demonstrated the challenge the party faces in stopping Trump. Even with the loss in Ohio he gained significant ground. At this point it seems that only a collaborative strategy can stop him from seizing the nomination.
So why is Ted Cruz resisting such a strategy? It looks like he may have already written off this election and started to position himself for 2020.
Heres where we are so far.
Once the dust settles from last nights count it looks like Trump will have about 708 of the 1489 delegates assigned so far, about 48%. There are 983 delegates remaining to be assigned. Trump needs 54% of them to amass a delegate majority.
The problem going forward is that nearly all of the remaining contests are winner take all by Congressional District, along with a few absolute winner take all states. That means Trump can potentially win large delegate sweeps with tiny margins of victory. Last nights results in Missouri are an example of this. On March 15th Trump won almost 58% of the available delegates while earning barely over a third of the vote.
Most remaining contests are winner take all by congressional district, including the largest one, California (6/7). We still have contests ahead in Trump-friendly geographies like New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. If one candidate could just gain five or six points on Trump, they could very nearly run the table on him in remaining races. But theres a problem.
Making this a two-man race doesnt actually help because neither of the remaining two candidates can be successful nationwide. Each would expect to beat Trump in different regions while losing decisively in others.
In a two-man contest, Cruz could win pretty solidly in places where the Republican Party is dominated by Protestant religious voters, mostly in remaining races in the Far West. Kasich would do better in places where Catholic religious conservatives dominate the party, like the Northeast and Upper Midwest.
If the goal is to stop Trump and play for a convention contest, Kasich and Cruz would have to put aside their differences and divide the map. Rubio recognized this play and told his Ohio supporters to back Kasich, helping to put him over the top. This strategy would probably work, blocking Trump from an outright win and letting the convention decide the nominee.
However Cruz, as usual, is being a real dick about it. He didnt cooperate with Rubios strategy, helping to ruin Florida. Ted Cruz is crazy, but hes not the stupid kind of crazy. It is beginning to look like hes playing to be the 2020 nominee. This would make sense for a number of reasons.
First, it is very hard in the GOP to build the kind of national organization it takes to win a nomination. Candidates accomplish this in almost every case by running consecutively (Romney, McCain, Dole, Bush, Reagan, Nixon). One of the reasons this race is so nutty is that there was no decisive second-place finisher in 2012.
Cruz may be looking at the same math as everyone else and deciding that 2016 is a loser for Republicans no matter who gets the nod. If he goes for broke he risks smashing the party, a party that would otherwise treat him as the presumed nominee leading into a much more promising 2020 race. Notice that Cruz has been very careful to say he will endorse anyone who wins the nomination, including Trump.
Cruz may also be calculating that his chances of taking the nomination in a convention contest are not that great. Hes probably the most likely winner of a convention fight out of the guys in the race, but thats still a very uncertain outcome. Convention delegates could go in dozens of different directions while creating a political atmosphere toxic for the winner.
Plus, the party generally hates him. He might have a fine collection of delegates on the floor, but the partys remaining brokers will be working hard at a convention to make him a loser. Why contribute to that outcome just to lose in a 2016 General Election?
He may have decided to stay in this race and simply accept the outcome. If Trump comes up a little short Cruz might swing his delegates toward Trump to eliminate any doubt. This also sets up a precedent in favor of a plurality-winner, something Cruz might need badly in a subsequent race. Let Trump blunder into the buzzsaw of the General Election. Cruz can stand removed from the defeat and the party apparatus might still remain sufficiently intact to be useful to him in 2020.
Just speculating, but that seems like the best explanation of Cruzs position. Well see.
***By the way, one caveat emerges when you do the math for the upcoming races. If they play out much like the previous ones and Cruz manages to win Indiana (very doable) and a couple of other smaller states, then California becomes the hinge. Based on that scenario, a Cruz win in California would deny Trump a delegate majority and leave Trump leading Cruz by only about 150 delegates.
That is almost certainly Cruzs best potential outcome, one that depends on Kasich winning some Congressional Districts in the Northeast. In that situation, Rubio & Kasichs delegates, if they decided to make a deal, would be enough to give Cruz a decisive and entirely legitimate win on the convention floor. That might also be the play Cruz has in mind.
If Hillary wins, the 2020 election would be useless (if it even happens).
Let’s hope we can get a term-limit constitutional amendment passed before all this nonsense starts all over again.
That’s funny I thought he was ending it
Cruz needs to start worrying about 2018. He did not come close 50% in the Texas primary. I would be worried about getting reelected to the Senate if I was him.
1976.
dunno but I’ll bee Rubio has ;-)
Cruz certainly needs to be thinking along these lines. He’s obviously young.
Not everything he is doing is showing that he’s thinking longer term. He needs to make that shift.
An entire article of foolishness that at last makes sense in the last few sentences.
lol
Cruz will win re-election here in Texas in a landslide.
This might be the stupidest article I have read yet.
If 2016 isn’t set up well to beat the Dems, how could 2020 possibly be any better?
Instead of an old Jewish socialist and an old had who is responsible for Benghazi and about to be indicted....who could they possibly run to make it easier for the GOP to win? I
I think the name GOPLifer says it all. Party above conservatism, Party above country, Party above everything. With this kind of defeatist attitude, the author fits right in.
What garbage.
If Hillary wins, the 2020 election would be useless (if it even happens).
Agree.
Cruz and Trump could join forces with the top delegate holder being the top of the ticket. They would definitely win the nomination.
I am sorry...Kasich reminds me of a weasel. Promising amnesty? is he nukin futz? Has he missed that we do NOT want that in any way shape or form?
I’m resigned to Trump in 2016. Cruz in 2020 doesn’t sound so bad, it would give him time to get his act together.
The GOP demanded that Cruz kiss the GOP-e and McConnell’s ring before they would support him over Trump. Cruz basically told them to kiss his azz and refused to apologize to McConnell for calling him out as the liar that he is. Good for Cruz.
In all honesty, when did he refuse? I hadn’t heard that.
Last I heard they wanted him to kiss the ring.
An entire article of crude foolishness that at last makes sense in the last few sentences.
Fixed it.
“I would be worried about getting reelected to the Senate if I was him.”
Quite possibly the dumbest thing posted on this thread.
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