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(s)Elections See other (s)Elections Articles Title: Ted Cruz Gains in Louisiana After Loss There to Donald Trump Despite coming up short in states Republican presidential primary, Texan controls key convention roles Donald Trump beat Sen. Ted Cruz earlier this month in Louisianas Republican presidential primary by 3.6 percentage points, but the Texan may wind up with as many as 10 more delegates from the state than the businessman. Mr. Cruzs supporters also seized five of Louisianas six slots on the three powerful committees that will write the rules and platform at the Republican National Convention and mediate disputes over delegates eligibility this summer in Cleveland. The little-noticed inside maneuvering that led to this outcome in Louisiana is another dramatic illustration of the inside game that could have an outsize influence on the bitter race for the GOP nomination. A similar process played out three weeks ago in Coweta County, Ga. Related Video If Donald Trump fails to reach 1,237 delegates, and has to fight for the nomination at a contested convention, he might have a problem: some of his own delegates may be at risk of fleeing and tilting the election. WSJs Jason Bellini reports. Photo: Getty While Mr. Trump leads in winning primary and caucus elections, and has won more delegates, the Cruz campaign is proving superior at the arcane game of picking the people who will be the actual delegates to the convention, where they will help write the rules and ultimately choose the nominee. That means that if Mr. Trump fails to reach the delegate threshold to claim the GOP nomination on the conventions first ballot, committees dominated by Cruz supporters could work to block him from winning enough delegates to claim the nomination on any subsequent ballots. The Republican race for the White House got personal between Donald Trump and Ted Cruz after a racy ad featuring Trump's wife Melania was released online. WSJ's Shelby Holliday has the play-by-play in WSJ's Campaign Fight Club. Kay Kellogg Katz, a Trump supporter who sought unsuccessfully to win a position on a key panel at the convention, summarized the Trump campaigns predicament this way: I do not know Mr. Trump, I do not know his staff people. Quite frankly, we dont have much of a campaign in Louisiana. All we have is voters. In other states, Trump supporters have missed out on the early process of becoming convention delegates because they are relatively inexperienced in the party processes. But in Louisiana, Mr. Trump won broad support among elected officials despite a bare-bones campaign infrastructure. Still, he has lagged behind on delegate selection. With 20 states left to vote, Mr. Trump has won 739 delegates out of 1,237 required to clinch the GOP nomination. He has to win about 55% of the remaining delegates to avoid a contested convention. Stacking the convention and its committees with supporters is critical for Mr. Cruz, because a contested convention is his only viable path to the nomination. The Texan must win 85% of the remaining delegates to win outright, a highly unlikely scenario with many states awarding delegates proportionally. The Trump campaigns first problem is in the overall delegate count from Louisiana. Messrs. Trump and Cruz each won 18 delegates apiece based on the Louisiana results in the primary on March 5. But the five delegates awarded to Florida Sen. Marco Rubio are now free agents because he ended his campaign, and Louisiana Republicans expect them to swing behind Mr. Cruz. Meanwhile, the states five unbound delegateswho are free to back the candidates of their choicealso are more likely to back Mr. Cruz than Mr. Trump, according to GOP officials in the state. MORE ON ELECTION 2016 Donald Trump Wins Arizona, Ted Cruz Dominates in Utah Ted Cruz Channels American President in Defending Wife Donald Trump Threatens to Spill the Beans on Rivals Wife Arizonas Independents are the Silent Plurality In Focus Group, Trump Supporters Worry About GOP Betrayal Wisconsin Primary to Test Ted Cruz, Bernie Sanders Bernie Sanders Lags Hillary Clinton Despite Winning Two State Caucuses Brussels Attacks Will Jolt 2016 U.S. Presidential Race The second step in the process is for those delegates to decide who will represent Louisiana on the three important convention committees rules, credentials and the party platform. To make those choices, most of Louisianas delegates gathered at a March 12 state convention to elect two members to each panel. No Trump backers won any of those slots. Five of the six committee members chosen back Mr. Cruz, and the sixth is uncommitted to a presidential candidate. Louisiana is the first state to name delegates to serve on the three committees. Those panels would become critical in a contested convention, which would take place if no candidate wins a majority of delegates on the first ballot. The rules panel will determine which candidates are eligible to be nominated for president, the platform panel will write the partys agenda, and the credentials panel will mediate disputes about which delegates can be seated. Such fights are already taking place in the U.S. Virgin Islands and Guam, and may happen as well elsewhere. Ms. Katz, a former state legislator from Monroe, La., who then-Gov. Bobby Jindal appointed to a state tax commission, sought a position on the credentials committee. She lost a 22-5 vote to Kim Fralick, a Cruz supporter who has never before been involved in a major political campaign. Ms. Katz, who said she has attended every GOP convention since 1984, said the Cruz forces out-organized Mr. Trumps campaign, whom she said showed no concern about helping their supporters win the committee slots. Ms. Fralick, a veterinarian from the Baton Rouge suburb of Central, said she was asked by a Cruz official if she could serve on the panel, which entails arriving in Cleveland days before the convention begins. They were looking for someone who could come up a week early, Ms. Fralick said. I might have been a default choice. Ed Brookover, the Trump official leading the campaigns delegate team, said Thursday that he wasnt aware that the Trump campaign had been shut out of Louisianas committee slots. He expressed optimism that other spots where this is taking place, we now have programs and plans in place to make sure that Mr. Trumps supporters are getting to county, district and state conventions. Mr. Brookover added that the good news is that when we let Mr. Trumps supporters know about these things, they are enthusiastic and go running to them. The one Trump supporter appointed to a senior post in the Louisiana convention delegation is Eric Skrmetta, the campaigns state co-chairman who was named vice chairman of the states GOP convention delegation, a largely ceremonial position that carries no statutory responsibilities. Mr. Skrmetta, who is an elected member of the Louisiana Public Service Commission, didnt respond to requests for comment this week. Tony Perkins, the president of the Family Research Council, is a Cruz supporter who was named one of Louisianas two members on the platform committee. Mr. Perkins said the Cruz campaign sought to get its members appointed to the rules and credentials panels to protect itself in the event of a contested convention. Its more of a defensive posture than anything, Mr. Perkins said. They dont want the rules to be used against them. Its more of knowing how potent the rules can be and making sure they are fair. Write to Reid J. Epstein at Reid.Epstein@wsj.com Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Ada (#0)
Don't trust a Zionist christian with anything.
If anyone other than Trump is the Republican nominee, Hillary Clinton is guaranteed to be the next president of the United States. And that is what these people truly want apparently. Do they really think they'd have even an ice cube's chance in hell of a Republican establishment "chosen" candidate prevailing in the general election after disenfranchising the vast majority of actual voters? Not a chance. I'm for Trump, and he will not try to take our guns, either. Obummer is washed out and a failed President. ;) "When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one." Edmund Burke
BTP, they're certainly TRYING to steal the election from Trump, and/or destroy any chance of anyone OTHER than Hillary becoming the next president.
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