I disagree. It shows that somewhere in Colorado GOP headquarters there is an anti-Trump staffer. I'm going to go out on a limb, but not by much at all, and say that somewhere in Colorado GOP headquarters there is an anti-Cruz staffer. Both are so obviously true, with or without one tweet, that it's not worth any reaction. I'll be voting for Trump, but my response to #NeverCruz from the same Twitter account would be exactly the same.
The fact that the stupid message was deleted after three minutes proves that (1) the Tweet wasn't a real (outside) hack in the classical sense, and (2) the Tweet was not the actual position of the Colorado GOP. The way I read it, they called it a "hack" because it was an unauthorized use of their Twitter, even though it was an insider (either using an open computer or an account on which he was supposed to send only approved messages), so the effect was the same as in an outside hack. This is politics, and they probably see the lie as spin - something morally equivalent to the truth so not as bad as a real lie.
I’m not going to nuance why it happened or their explanation, it happened, so they are going to have to live with it.
I don’t trust the whole GOP establishment in that whole process to begin with so it resonates very badly with me.
CGato