Cruz, Kasich team up to stop party frontrunner Trump

Cruz, Kasich team up to stop party frontrunner Trump

CONNETICUT – Agence France-Presse
Cruz, Kasich team up to stop party frontrunner Trump

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks at a rally in a hangar at Rider Jet Center on April 24, 2016, in Hagerstown, Md. - AFP photo

Ted Cruz and John Kasich have agreed to join forces to try to deny frontrunner Donald Trump the Republican Party’s presidential nomination, their campaigns said April 24.

The sudden alliance, revealed in short statements, arose due to the pressing timing of the Republican party’s presidential primary season.

Trump, a wealthy property developer and reality television star, has pushed close to amassing the number of delegates to the party convention that would ensure he will be the Republican standard-bearer.

Cruz’s campaign manager Jeff Roe said the campaign would “focus its time and resources in Indiana and in turn clear the path for Governor Kasich to compete in Oregon and New Mexico.” Kasich’s team put out a similar statement.

“Both know their best shot at preventing Trump from clinching the nomination outright is to team up to block his path and force a contested convention. And it may still be too late,” Politico reported.

A dismissive Trump said 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!”  

Some influential party figures such as 2012 nominee Mitt Romney have aligned with a Stop Trump movement, which may or may not be benefiting Trump’s chief rival Cruz, an arch-conservative U.S. senator from Texas.

Cruz told reporters Trump has been “lying to us” and is pretending to be a conservative in order to “fool gullible voters.” 

Barely 36 hours before voters in five states head to the polls, Trump lashed out at Cruz, accusing him of “bribing” all-important delegates as part of the convoluted primary system for choosing the Democratic and Republican nominees.

Trump has repeatedly described the process as rigged, and has mocked the party for allowing campaigns to bestow gifts such as flights and dinners on delegates.

Hillary Clinton is increasingly seen as the presumptive Democratic Party choice.

Earlier, Trump and his presidential campaign pushed back April 24 against accusations by rivals in both parties that the celebrity billionaire is a political fraud who has been misleading American voters.

The Republican frontrunner’s new senior advisor Paul Manafort raised eyebrows when he told Republican heavyweights at a closed-door meeting that Trump has been playing a “part” in front of rally audiences and that the role was “evolving” into a more serious and policy-focused one.

Manafort went on the same channel to try to quell the furor over his remarks, which leaked April 21.
He insisted that Americans were seeing “the real Donald Trump in campaign mode talking to people,” and that the New York real estate mogul was not out to mislead anyone.

“We were evolving the campaign, not the candidate, and the settings were going to start changing,” he told Fox.