Posted on 04/14/2016 7:09:11 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
* Trump convention manager Paul Manafort told Sean Hannity that Cruz will probably finish third in delegates in April. But
Cruz has already won 88 of the 107 delegates awarded in the month.
* There is no way Kasich can catch Cruz.
* Finally, even giving Trump 81 out of 95 delegates in New York, there is a strong likelihood Cruz may still finish first in delegates for the month.
Trump convention manager Paul Manaforts delegate skills may be a little rusty. He claimed on Hannity last night that Ted Cruz will probably finish third in delegates in April. An absurd statement on its face. Of the 107 delegates so far awarded in April, Cruz has won 88 of themthats 82 percent of the delegates. Trump has won seven, or 6.5 percent. Twelve delegates are uncommitted. There is no plausible path for Kasich to overtake Cruz for second, if in fact Cruz ends up in second.
Watch the full clip from the Fox News interview below:
(VIDEO-AT-LINK)
Heres the pertinent quote:
Manafort: I think were doing very well in all those places. All the polls show us leading and were just starting to put our campaigns together there June 7th is going to put us over but were not going to have to win overwhelmingly on June 7th April is going to be a very bad month for Ted Cruz. Hell probably finish third in delegates in April.
So far in April, delegates have been chosen in three states: North Dakota, Wisconsin, and Colorado. In North Dakota, 18 members of Cruzs slate were elected, with Trump getting one delegate, and nine delegates remaining uncommitted. In Wisconsin, Cruz received 42 delegates to Trumps six. In Colorado, Cruz received 34 delegates with an additional three being uncommitted RNC members.
There are 281 delegates left to be selected in April. The majority is in the Northeast, and I detailed how those delegates are likely to be awarded last week. Based on more recent polling, the math may have changed but even the new math wouldnt put Cruz in third.
Wyoming
Wyoming has already apportioned 12 of its 26 non-RNC member delegates. There are 14 more to apportion at this weekends state convention. If the remaining 14 are apportioned at the same ratios, Cruz should garner eleven, Trump two and Kasich one. In addition, three RNC members are unbound by party rules.
The April delegate totals will be 121 by the end of this weekend. Cruz is projected to have 99 delegates (82 percent), Trump 9 delegates (7.4 percent), Kasich 1 delegate (less than one percent), leaving 12 uncommitted.
New York
The dynamics in New York have solidified for Trump since my last delegate projection in the Empire State. The Real Clear Politics polling average has Trump at 54.3 percent, Kasich 21.3 and Cruz 18 percent, with 6.4 percent undecided.
There are a number of reasons that the polling may be high for Trump in New York, the least of all being the deadline to register as a Republican to vote in the primary. New York has not held a competitive Republican Primary in a generation. Most of the polls self-screen respondents, who say they are likely to vote in the GOP primary. If they were not registered as Republicans last October, they will not be able to vote in the GOP primary. Also, Cruz has consistently outperformed his polling numbers, especially in closed primaries; a factor that could help him in the Empire State. With those factors in mind, it is entirely possible that Trump could be kept under 50 percent. For projection purposes, lets say that he gets 50.1 percent of the vote and Kasich and Cruz each get half of the remaining 49.9 percent. That would mean Trump earns the 14 statewide delegates.
There are 27 congressional districts in New York, and each district gets 3 delegates. If a candidate wins over 50 percent of the vote he gets all three delegates. Otherwise, the winner gets two and the runner up gets one delegate.
There are 18 congressional districts in Long Island and Greater New York City. If Trump were to win an outright majority in 14 of them, he would garner 42 delegates. Cruz should win, although not with a majority, the two most heavily Jewish districts in the city, with Trump coming in second. That would be four delegates for Cruz and an additional two for Trump. The two Hudson Valley and Westchester districts should go to Trump at under 50 percent with Kasich in second, which means an additional four for Trump and two for Kasich. After looking at Greater New York City, the delegates would be 62 for Trump, 4 for Cruz, and 2 for Kasich.
That leaves nine other districts in the state. Trump could win three of these with a majority for an additional nine delegates. Trump should win four of the remaining six, without a majority, with Cruz and Kasich splitting second place. Kasich could win the remaining two, with Trump in second place. That means upstate delegate totals should be Trump nineteen, Kasich six, and Cruz two.
Overall, we can expect Trump to win 81 delegates, Kasich 8, and Cruz 6 in New York. That would put the total delegates awarded in April at 216. Cruz would still be in the lead after New York with 105 delegates as compared to Trumps 90, Kasichs seven and 12 remaining uncommitted.
There is almost no possibility, given the already strong lead Cruz enjoys in April, for Kasich to surpass him for second, and there is a very strong likelihood that Cruz will finish in first.
Northeast Tuesday
The Trump campaign is overstating their strength in the remaining northeast states. There are 172 delegates remaining to be awarded on Northeast Tuesday, April 26. My projections from last week should hold up in the remaining states. You can read that article here for background information for the table below.
Trump
Cruz
Kasich
Connecticut
15
11
2
Delaware
16
0
0
Maryland
0
38
0
Pennsylvania
31
32
8
Rhode Island
8
7
4
Total Awarded
70
88
14
Not only will Cruz not finish in third in delegate count in April but there is a very good chance that he will end up finishing in first, even with Trump crushing it in New York. The final delegate count for April could very well be Cruz 193, Trump 160, and Kasich 21, with 12 uncommitted.
For a moment, however, assume that Trump wins all of Maryland, which is highly unlikely. There is no way that Kasich can surpass Cruz for third. Once again, the Trump campaign (this time, its delegate guru) overstates Trumps case, without looking at all of the data.
There is almost no possibility, given the already strong lead Cruz enjoys in April, for Kasich to surpass him for second, and there is a very strong likelihood that Cruz will finish in first.
And this article matters why? The point is, Trump’s going to clean up in the next 6 states. That’s what Manafort meant.
Conservative Review = Mark Levin = Sign up now for LevinTV only 6.99 a month
Bingo. Do we know how many package subscriptions a shady Cruz PAC may have bought?
I’d rather listen to the sound of fingernails being scraped across a blackboard than Levin’s voice. Adding visual would be too much.
Then why didn't he say that? Why are Trump supporters always having to come out after he or his campaign says something to tell us what they really meant? Wouldn't it be less confusing for everyone if they just said what they meant the first time around?
If the Trump campaign is confused about delegates, maybe we should wait until he is sitting down to explain to him about the Electoral College.
I’d rather listen to the sound of fingernails being scraped across a blackboard than Levin’s voice. Adding visual would be too much.
GET OFF THE PHONE YA BIG DOPE
:-)
Projections are just opinions based on some information.
Only the actual votes count, so we’ll see what that result shows.
Cruz didn’t win Colorado. No votes were cast by the people. Stealing is not winning.
This clown has Cruz taking all 38 Maryland delegates. I don’t think so.
“Sign up now for LevinTV only 6.99 a month”
Did he go down in price?
I have no idea what the price is. I was merely illustrating that he has become Glenn Beck Junior.
“Why are Trump supporters always having to come out after he or his campaign says something to tell us what they really meant?”
Why would you give credence to that rag to find out what Trump meant?
Sort of like Cruz saying he won eleven elections in a row. Counting the Colorado “selection” as seven individual elections.
Yes Donald, Colorado Did Vote
On March 1st
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-bloggers/3420282/posts
Yes. Some people really need to engage their brains.
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