Cruz getting all of Colorado and Indiana delegates. Woot woot!

browsing deer

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Jul 11, 2015
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Through incompetence, ineptitude, and sheer hubris Trump kicked away all of Colorado's delegates.

Indiana has sent a convention delegation evenly divided between those who hate Trump vs those who loathe Trump. Cruz may get all Indiana's delegation as an afterthought.

Trump is staying In New York looking to save districts from collapsing to Cruz.

I am enjoying this
 
Yo,
765f0c361b8d2f77d0f947f01515132c.jpg

"GTP"
 
Through incompetence, ineptitude, and sheer hubris Trump kicked away all of Colorado's delegates.

Indiana has sent a convention delegation evenly divided between those who hate Trump vs those who loathe Trump. Cruz may get all Indiana's delegation as an afterthought.

Trump is staying In New York looking to save districts from collapsing to Cruz.

I am enjoying this


Where's the deal maker?:dunno:
 
From Politico


Indiana hasn’t cast its ballots for president yet, but Donald Trump is already losing.

Republican Party insiders in the state will select 27 delegates to the national convention on Saturday, and Trump is assured to be nearly shut out of support, according to interviews with a dozen party leaders and officials involved in the delegate selection process. Anti-Trump sentiment runs hot among GOP leadership in Indiana, and it’s driving a virulent rejection of the mogul among likely delegates.


“If Satan had the lead on him and was one delegate away from being nominated as our candidate, and Donald Trump was the alternative, I might vote for Donald Trump,” said Craig Dunn, a local GOP leader who is running to represent Indiana’s 4th Congressional District at the national convention in Cleveland. “I’ve always wanted to own a casino, but he couldn’t give me a casino and have me vote for him.”

Indiana GOP insiders are working to engineer slates of delegates — three from each of nine congressional districts — that will turn their backs on Trump at a contested convention in July. Another 27 will be elected at a state committee meeting next week.

Indiana’s delegates will be bound to the results of the state’s May 3 primary on the first vote in Cleveland, and Trump is expected to be competitive in that contest. (There is no current public polling of the state, but several GOP leaders suggested he'd be competitive in at least a couple of the state's nine Congressional districts.) But if Trump fails to clinch the nomination, they’ll be free to vote their conscience — and that means a rapid rejection of Trump. The state’s Republican national committeeman, John Hammond, has vocally called to reject Trump as well.

That would mark just another blow to Trump’s chances, should the convention go to a second ballot as expected. Though he’s won more votes and state primaries than rivals Ted Cruz and John Kasich, Trump has failed spectacularly to win separate delegate selection battles to his better-organized rivals. Though in most cases, he’s lost because of Cruz’s superior organization, Indiana appears to be a break from the norm. Most of the hostility to Trump there is homegrown.




Read more: Trump’s getting trounced in Indiana
Follow us: @politico on Twitter | Politico on Facebook
 
From Politico


Indiana hasn’t cast its ballots for president yet, but Donald Trump is already losing.

Republican Party insiders in the state will select 27 delegates to the national convention on Saturday, and Trump is assured to be nearly shut out of support, according to interviews with a dozen party leaders and officials involved in the delegate selection process. Anti-Trump sentiment runs hot among GOP leadership in Indiana, and it’s driving a virulent rejection of the mogul among likely delegates.


“If Satan had the lead on him and was one delegate away from being nominated as our candidate, and Donald Trump was the alternative, I might vote for Donald Trump,” said Craig Dunn, a local GOP leader who is running to represent Indiana’s 4th Congressional District at the national convention in Cleveland. “I’ve always wanted to own a casino, but he couldn’t give me a casino and have me vote for him.”

Indiana GOP insiders are working to engineer slates of delegates — three from each of nine congressional districts — that will turn their backs on Trump at a contested convention in July. Another 27 will be elected at a state committee meeting next week.

Indiana’s delegates will be bound to the results of the state’s May 3 primary on the first vote in Cleveland, and Trump is expected to be competitive in that contest. (There is no current public polling of the state, but several GOP leaders suggested he'd be competitive in at least a couple of the state's nine Congressional districts.) But if Trump fails to clinch the nomination, they’ll be free to vote their conscience — and that means a rapid rejection of Trump. The state’s Republican national committeeman, John Hammond, has vocally called to reject Trump as well.

That would mark just another blow to Trump’s chances, should the convention go to a second ballot as expected. Though he’s won more votes and state primaries than rivals Ted Cruz and John Kasich, Trump has failed spectacularly to win separate delegate selection battles to his better-organized rivals. Though in most cases, he’s lost because of Cruz’s superior organization, Indiana appears to be a break from the norm. Most of the hostility to Trump there is homegrown.




Read more: Trump’s getting trounced in Indiana
Follow us: @politico on Twitter | Politico on Facebook


so in other words lyin ted propaganda

thanks
 
Sometimes I wonder if Trump really wants the nomination.

I picture Trump at the end of the day thinking....
Geez what the hell else do I have to do to get out of this mess....
I thought Jeb would have shown some balls and taken this thing.
 
  • Current Polls Favor A Trump Delegate Majority
    Princeton Election Consortium ^ | April 9th, 2016, 4:59pm | Sam Wang
    This week in the Republican nomination race, Ted Cruz’s win in Wisconsin triggered buzz about how front-runner Donald Trump might be in trouble. Doubtless today’s win in Colorado will intensify the chatter, and will involve words like “momentum.” It is best to ignore all of that coverage – at least until some national polling data shows a sustained change. Why? Because states differ from one another, mostly in demographics but also in rules and various local factors. It is almost impossible to learn something new from a single race. To know where the race stands as a whole, it is...
 
.
Soo...anyway, I flew into town and the car rental agency only had two cars left on the lot. There was a Chevy Cruze and some foreign job called a Triumph. The Trump car only had one gear, so I rented the Chevy.
 
I'll vote for Ted if he's the nominee, but I see no way he could win the general election. Not in America 2016.
 
Colorado GOP decided NOT to have the public vote since if they did allow the vote, the electoral votes would have to go to the majority. Instead, they are holding a state caucus only with no public voting involved. This has pissed off many and I suspect that if Trump is denied the nominaton if he has the most Electorates, then there is going to be one hell of a swing away from the GOP. Some the staunchest anti hillary people are revisiting that idea.
 
From Politico


Indiana hasn’t cast its ballots for president yet, but Donald Trump is already losing.

Republican Party insiders in the state will select 27 delegates to the national convention on Saturday, and Trump is assured to be nearly shut out of support, according to interviews with a dozen party leaders and officials involved in the delegate selection process. Anti-Trump sentiment runs hot among GOP leadership in Indiana, and it’s driving a virulent rejection of the mogul among likely delegates.


“If Satan had the lead on him and was one delegate away from being nominated as our candidate, and Donald Trump was the alternative, I might vote for Donald Trump,” said Craig Dunn, a local GOP leader who is running to represent Indiana’s 4th Congressional District at the national convention in Cleveland. “I’ve always wanted to own a casino, but he couldn’t give me a casino and have me vote for him.”

Indiana GOP insiders are working to engineer slates of delegates — three from each of nine congressional districts — that will turn their backs on Trump at a contested convention in July. Another 27 will be elected at a state committee meeting next week.

Indiana’s delegates will be bound to the results of the state’s May 3 primary on the first vote in Cleveland, and Trump is expected to be competitive in that contest. (There is no current public polling of the state, but several GOP leaders suggested he'd be competitive in at least a couple of the state's nine Congressional districts.) But if Trump fails to clinch the nomination, they’ll be free to vote their conscience — and that means a rapid rejection of Trump. The state’s Republican national committeeman, John Hammond, has vocally called to reject Trump as well.

That would mark just another blow to Trump’s chances, should the convention go to a second ballot as expected. Though he’s won more votes and state primaries than rivals Ted Cruz and John Kasich, Trump has failed spectacularly to win separate delegate selection battles to his better-organized rivals. Though in most cases, he’s lost because of Cruz’s superior organization, Indiana appears to be a break from the norm. Most of the hostility to Trump there is homegrown.




Read more: Trump’s getting trounced in Indiana
Follow us: @politico on Twitter | Politico on Facebook


so in other words lyin ted propaganda

thanks

Yo,
_trump-vindicated.jpg

1448345588257.cached.jpg

TrumpLies.jpg

"GTP"
 
Through incompetence, ineptitude, and sheer hubris Trump kicked away all of Colorado's delegates.

Indiana has sent a convention delegation evenly divided between those who hate Trump vs those who loathe Trump. Cruz may get all Indiana's delegation as an afterthought.

Trump is staying In New York looking to save districts from collapsing to Cruz.

I am enjoying this
Not going to matter when Trump WINS Indiana's delegates since they haven't even voted yet and puts him closer to the nomination BEFORE the convention.
 

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