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Locked on 07/20/2015 10:27:41 AM PDT by Jim Robinson, reason:
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Posted on 07/20/2015 7:55:55 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Republican presidential candidate Sen. Ted Cruz is the only major Republican in the field who isnt jumping all over Donald Trump for his series of provocative comments regarding immigration and John McCains war service. In fact, Cruz even recently went to bat for Trump.
Cruz and Trump had a private meeting together last week at Trumps New York City office, the Daily Mail reports, so its clear that the two are already talking strategy.
Trump has stolen some of Cruzs thunder, and probably some of his vote share, early in this campaign. The latest Suffolk University poll puts Trump at 17 percent, Jeb Bush at 14, Scott Walker at 8, Cruz at 6, and Rubio at 5.
But despite trailing the billionaire by eleven points, Cruz refuses to attack Trump.
When Trump said that McCain might not be a war hero because he got captured (a Chris Rock line) Cruz asserted that McCain was indeed a hero but decided not to hit Trump, like many of his fellow candidates did.
You know I recognize that folks in the press love to see Republican-on-Republican violence, and so you want me to say something bad about Donald Trump, or bad about John McCain or bad about anyone else, Cruz told reporters, according to CNN. Im not going to do it.
When Trump gave an impassioned speech against rapists and criminals coming over the U.S.-Mexico border, sparking boycotts in the process, Cruz said, I salute Donald Trump for focusing on the need to address illegal immigration.
What is Ted Cruzs strategy here? Why is he not attacking Trump?
Trump allows Cruz to say things he wants to say without having to say them
Cruz, who led the fight to defund President Obamas executive amnesty action, knows as well as anyone how much crime is being trafficked into America over our southern border. But why not let Donald Trump get the picket signs and the boycotts directed at him? Cruzs firebrand status is a benefit but also a liability in a presidential race. Positioning himself as the second most-vocal and heavily-quoted conservative in the race actually does him a service especially as Trump considers just how many hundreds of millions (and hell need that much) of his own money hes going to spend if he wants to go the distance. If the Hillary Clinton people look to Bernie Sanders as a kind of unofficial voter-mobilization force for Democrats on the left, Cruz could easily use Trump the same way.
A Trump-Cruz battle in the primary would be too divisive for November voters
While both candidates have a lot of fans, they also have a lot of detractors. The last thing Cruz and Trump need is a battle of personalities between each other especially when they agree on most issues. Too much Cruz-Trump back-and-forth during the primary, and independents will be turned off by November.
Cruzs fundraising allows him to act like the conservative front-runner
Ted Cruzs campaign has raised $14.3 million so far against Jeb Bushs $11.4 million, and his super PACs have netted $37 million to Bushs $103 million. Cruz also has a strong ground game in Iowa, where he is immensely popular with Christian voters and Trump is not (remember: Cruz also spoke and did well at the same Iowa forum where Trumps McCain dig made headlines). Cruz can rightly claim that hes the conservative front-runner in the race against Bush. Rand Paul isnt giving Cruz much fundraising or polling competition on the tea party right, so Cruz needs to just keep raising money, keep setting up his ground apparatus in early states like Iowa and South Carolina, and keep watching Trump steal all the attention away from Scott Walker, who has the lowest public profile of the contenders.
Trump can weaken Jeb Bush, Cruzs most formidable foe
The more Trump hammers Bush, calling him an unhappy person and promising Republicans that Bush wont get them to the promised land, the less significant Bushs $103 million in PAC money becomes. Cruz has always known that the road to the nomination goes through Bush. So let Trump weaken Bush
and then wait for Trump to implode.
That's a silly question.
You should know better than to ask a question to which you don't already know the answer.
I'll pick two easy pieces of evidence.
First, he is carefully, and wisely, not only NOT attacking Trump, he is supporting him. That's what the back-up, second place, kind of people do.
Second, Trump is the guy who bullied the illegal problem to the center stage. Cruz and Trump both have similar positions, but Cruz struggled for 3 years, and failed to do what trump did in less than 3 weeks.
“...Why dont people use so much effort to get Dems to criticize Hillary....”
Because it’s so much easier to get the weak-spines in the GOPe to do the dirty work for them.
Trump and Cruz are the only two folks who realize what’s at stake in this... and both are working to save the Country.
The others... well, they’re just being typical moderate Republicans - running around beating on each other at the of their Dem “colleagues”.
“...That’s what the back-up, second place, kind of people do....”
I have a gut feeling that you are correct. I think that strategy has already been put in place.
Can’t prove it, of course, but it’s a good hunch.
Of course they do, your blinders prevent you from looking at things rationally.
NFHale, posting immediately before you, obviously looking at things critically, could see the point.
There’s nothing wrong with being all in for your guy, but you’ve got to flip the blinders back from time to time, it will help you.
Blinder again, blinders.
Gotta flip them back.
Immigration isn't even Trumps subject, he simply was handed it because others, Cruz included, couldn't get any traction with it.
Economic development, and American jobs are his 'one note' subjects. When he gets there, he is going to get some real traction.
Then he will no longer be in the teens of support, he's going to take off and within a month or two he is going to be getting to the twenties and thirties.
Cruz is smart to hitch his star to Trump.
And America is lucky that Cruz is doing what he is doing. Everyone will benefit, Trump, Cruz, America.
Patrick Howley, an editor The American Spectator
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