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Cruz, Kasich team up to stop Trump

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 Sunday.
ANNAPOLIS, MD - APRIL 19: Republican presidential candidate John Kasich holds a packed campaign town hall meeting in the ballroom at a Crowne Plaza hotel April 19, 2016 in Annapolis, MD. Voters are going to the polls in the New York primary election today where Kasich and his fellow candidate Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) are hoping to keep their rival for the nomination Donald Trump from winning all 95 of that state's delegates. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images/AFP

ANNAPOLIS, MD – APRIL 19: Republican presidential candidate John Kasich holds a packed campaign town hall meeting in the ballroom at a Crowne Plaza hotel April 19, 2016 in Annapolis, MD. Voters are going to the polls in the New York primary election today where Kasich and his fellow candidate Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) are hoping to keep their rival for the nomination Donald Trump from winning all 95 of that state’s delegates. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images/AFP

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 Sunday.

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

Five states vote Tuesday in the Republican race — Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island — and Trump leads in all of them.

Trump, a wealthy property developer and reality television star, has pushed quite close to amassing the number of delegates to the party convention in Cleveland in July that would ensure his status as the Republican standard-bearer.

But he is not there yet. And Cruz and Kasich know their only chance to stop him is a contested convention.

A candidate must secure 1,237 delegates to win the Republican nomination outright. Trump leads substantially in the delegate battle, with 846 delegates compared to 563 for Cruz and 147 for Kasich.

If Trump is to be denied, uncommitted delegates will have to go to Cruz.

“Having Donald Trump at the top of the ticket in November would be a sure disaster for Republicans. Not only would Trump get blown out by (Hillary) Clinton or (Bernie) Sanders, but having him as our nominee would set the party back a generation,” Cruz’s campaign manager Jeff Roe said in a statement.

“To ensure that we nominate a Republican who can unify the Republican Party and win in November, our campaign will 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.

“Our goal is to have an open convention in Cleveland, where we are confident a candidate capable of uniting the party and winning in November will emerge as the nominee,” it stressed.

– ‘Desperation! Trump says –
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 US senator from Texas.

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

Barely 36 hours before the 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.

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

Likening it to the “Wizard of Oz” children’s tale, Democratic National Committee chair Debbie Wasserman Shultz on Sunday mocked it as “basically Toto pulling the curtain on the wizard, and revealing that Donald Trump isn’t on the level, has never been on the level.”

“They basically have a faker running for president of the United States,” she told “Fox News Sunday.”

Manafort went on the same channel to try to quell the furor over his remarks, which leaked Thursday.

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.

– ‘Bribing’ delegates –
Trump’s incendiary campaign — he has called some Mexicans “rapists”, vowed to build a wall on the southern US border and wants to bar Muslims from entering the country — has infuriated the Republican establishment.

Trump said Cruz was busy focusing on the behind-the-scenes wooing of delegates in the event there is no outright winner heading in to the convention.

“They had boats and yachts waiting to take delegates around,” Trump said at a rowdy rally in Hagerstown, Maryland, speaking of the Republican National Committee’s spring meeting this past week with delegates gathered at a Florida resort.

“We want to put it (nomination) away,” Trump said. “I only care about the first ballot. We’re not going for the second and third and fourth and fifth.”

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

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