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Cebu_4_2
11th April 2016, 06:05 AM
Video at link:

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2016/04/11/trump-slams-gop-nominating-process-as-top-aide-accuses-cruz-gestapo-tactics-to-win-delegates.html

Trump slams GOP nominating process as top aide accuses Cruz of 'gestapo tactics' to win delegates
Republican front-runner Donald Trump took a new round of shots at the GOP's nominating process Sunday, while his newly-hired convention manager Paul Manafort accused Trump's rival Ted Cruz of using "gestapo tactics" to earn delegate support at nominating conventions across the country.

Speaking to thousands packed in a frigid airport hangar in western New York, Trump argued anew that the person who wins the most votes in the primary process should automatically be the GOP nominee.

"What they're trying to do is subvert the movement with crooked shenanigans," Trump said. The real estate mogul compared himself to Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders, who is well behind Hillary Clinton in that party's delegate race despite a string of state wins.

"We should have won it a long time ago," Trump said. "But, you know, we keep losing where we're winning."

Trump was introduced at the rally by Buffalo real estate developer and 2010 New York gubernatorial candidate Carl Paladino, who said that talk of a brokered Republican convention "suggests that they can take that right away from the American people to choose their leader."

Manafort, a veteran GOP strategist who worked on White House campaigns for President Gerald Ford in 1976 and Kansas Sen. Bob Dole in 1996, told NBC's "Meet The Press" that the Cruz campaign was using a "scorched earth" approach in which "they don't care about the party. If they don't get what they want, they blow it up."
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Manafort added that the Trump campaign is filing protests because the Cruz campaign is "not playing by the rules.”

“You go to his county conventions and you see the gestapo tactics," he said.

Trump has a 743-to-545 delegate lead over the Texas senator, with the end of the primary/caucus season fast approaching. Over the weekend, Cruz completed his sweep of Colorado's 34 delegates by locking up the remaining 13 at the party's state convention in Colorado Springs. He already had collected 21 delegates and visited the state to try to pad his numbers there.

Cruz came out ahead in the Colorado contest, though, after dedicating resources to the convention process and putting in personal face time on the day of the final vote, something Trump did not do. The Trump campaign’s flyers in Colorado naming their preferred delegates were also riddled with errors. While Trump aides blamed the state party for giving them bad information, the party pushed back.

And on Twitter, the Colorado GOP retweeted a message, saying: “You may not like CO's caucus system, but it's representative, and claiming delegates were 'stolen' insults the Republicans who participated.”

Cruz spokeswoman Catherine Frazier also retweeted a message saying the rules “were publicly available for months to people who know how to read and understand words.”

Polls show Trump holding a sizable lead in the next big state contest, New York's April 19 primary, but Cruz is trying to chip away at Trump's home-state advantage in conservative pockets of the Empire State.

Ohio Gov. John Kasich is third with 143 delegates, behind Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, who ended his campaign March 15 with 171 committed delegates.

Manafort insisted Sunday that he’s still connected enough to wrangle delegates.

"You would be surprised who's been calling me over the last week and where they're from," he said. "Do I know the 25-, 30-year-old delegates? No. Do I know the people who push buttons in a lot of these states? Yes."

However, Manafort made clear the Trump campaign won’t use strong-arm tactics.

“That’s not my style,” he told NBC. “That’s not Donald Trump’s style. That’s Ted Cruz’s style.”

Manafort also dismissed the notion that the Trump campaign has missed opportunities to get delegates through insider tactics and boasted that Cruz has and will continue to lose that way.

He said the Trump campaign has gotten all of the committee spots in Alabama and that it “wiped [Cruz] out" in a similar effort in Michigan.

“You’re going to see Ted Cruz get skunked in Nevada,” Manafort added.

Manafort made clear the race to get 1,237 delegates will likely extend until early June, which includes California’s GOP primary, with 172 delegates, and the New Jersey primary with 51 at stake.

“I’m confident there are several ways to get to 1,237,” he said.

Trump would need to win nearly 60 percent of all the remaining delegates to clinch the nomination before this summer's convention in Cleveland. So far, he's winning about 45 percent.

Manafort insisted being hired by the Trump campaign was not a shakeup, particularly amid Cruz’s come-from-behind win last week in Wisconsin.

He argued the campaign season is entering its end stages and that Trump must move from the free-wheeling, free-media style that made the first-time candidate the GOP presidential front-runner.

“Donald Trump has recognized that,” Manafort said, while arguing Trump still runs the campaign.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Ares
11th April 2016, 06:16 AM
Trump doesn't have a leg to stand on unfortunately.

The Republican and Democratic parties are PRIVATE franchises and can work as they see fit. That doesn't mean we have to support them by voting for either one of their candidates.

midnight rambler
11th April 2016, 06:58 AM
RICO statutes would definitely be applicable.

EE_
11th April 2016, 07:44 AM
For decades Americans have preached democracy in the Muslim world. I hope the world is watching the election to see what a democracy is in Amerika.

EE_
11th April 2016, 08:02 AM
If he turns to be the nominee we will need to organize the biggest 'ANYONE BUT RYAN' campaign.

Paul Ryan is not a unifier: Don’t let the speaker’s new “ads” fool you into thinking he’s actually a moderate

With Ted Cruz and Donald Trump savaging each other, Paul Ryan is trying to come off as the "reasonable" Republican
SIMON MALOY
MONDAY, APR 11, 2016 05:58 AM EDT

Paul Ryan is not a unifier: Don't let the speaker's new "ads" fool you into thinking he's actually a moderate

Paul Ryan is one devious character. We’re in the middle of a Republican presidential primary and the Speaker’s office is busily putting together slickly produced campaign ad-like videos of Paul Ryan speaking in hopeful, forward-looking prose about the greatness of American democracy. And the fact that he’s doing this at a point where it looks like the primary is barreling toward a convention fight between two broadly dislike candidates has naturally led everyone to speculate whether Ryan is laying the groundwork for capturing the 2016 nomination himself.

I don’t think Ryan wants the nomination, at least not this year. The ads are provocative, sure, but his office has been cranking them out for months. Here’s one from last December, released when everyone in the Republican establishment happily assumed that Marco Rubio would be the nominee. And Ryan has to understand how huge a risk he’d be taking to swoop in at the last second and steal the nomination from two candidates who will have spent over a year campaigning and winning votes. He’d face persistent credibility questions, he’d have a Trump-led insurrection to deal with and quite possibly a Cruz-led revolt as well, and if he lost in November his political career would be over.

I think he’s doing something very different. Ryan is taking advantage of this fraught situation in the presidential race, with his party choosing between a toxic performance artist and an unlikable ideologue, to position himself as a voice of reasoned moderation. And he’s deliberately pitching this message to an audience that is ready and eager to swallow it, digest it and treat it as plain and obvious truth: Beltway pundits.

Here’s Ryan’s latest video/ad/whatever thing, the title of which is “Politics These Days,” which could stand in as a headline for pretty much every Ron Fournier column of the last decade: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ECxH4uIswiA

Division is bad, Ryan says, but unity is good! Success is good too, he adds. And disagreement is fine so long as it’s about ideas (ideas are also good).

That’s his message. It’s pabulum from start to finish, gussied up with some quick-cut edits and a softly inspirational piano score. And this drivel doesn’t resemble in any way the agenda Ryan or his party have pursued over the past eight years. But that’s not the context you’re supposed to judge this video against. Ryan wants pundits and reporters who are watching Donald Trump and Ted Cruz savage one another to look at him and think “oh, well, he’s the reasonable one – he likes unity! He said so in the video! He’s Paul Ryan, the wonky unifier who loves ideas.” As I’ve written previously, I think Ryan is looking ahead to a Republican Party that has been left hobbled by Trumpism and is positioning himself as the person who will step in to assume leadership. But under no circumstances should Paul Ryan be allowed to position himself as a “unifier.”

Paul Ryan, for all his talk of unity and inspiration, is an extremely conservative politician whose agenda involves wreaking massive amounts of havoc on the social safety net in order to finance wildly regressive tax cuts that shunt money to the top of the economic ladder. As late as last year, the Speaker who decries the politics of division was dismissing proposals to roll back tax breaks for the wealthy as “envy economics.”

Ryan has been pushing the same dogmatic policy proposals for years – the only thing that changes is the way he tries to sell them. In 2014 he tried rebranding his intensely plutocratic vision of America as “the American idea” and tried to borrow some legitimacy from the Founding Fathers. He tried recasting himself as a poverty warrior, rechristening the block-granting of social programs as “opportunity grants” and proposing to cure economic hardship through signed contracts that carry “sanctions” for failure to stop being poor. The series of videos he’s releasing now are part of another rebranding, this one for the social media age – the Ryan agenda now goes by the hashtag #ConfidentAmerica.

The guy is as much of an ideologue as Ted Cruz, but he’s savvy enough to know how to sell his extreme brand of conservatism in such a way that pundits and the press will view him as something other than a hardline right-winger. And right now he has the perfect foils in Cruz in Trump, who make it easy for a guy like Paul Ryan to come off as measured and reasonable.
http://www.salon.com/2016/04/11/paul_ryan_is_not_a_unifier_dont_let_the_speakers_n ew_ads_fool_you_into_thinking_hes_actually_a_moder ate/

EE_
11th April 2016, 08:57 AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DjcnM3Z5tP4

Cebu_4_2
11th April 2016, 10:24 AM
He even recently shaved off his beard, wonder how much he is getting paid?

http://static2.politico.com/dims4/default/273ab82/2147483647/resize/1160x%3E/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fstatic.politico.com%2Fb8%2F1d%2F 49ba6d4445a5a190717f236d0a10%2F151210-paul-ryan-1160-gty.jpg

EE_
11th April 2016, 10:28 AM
He even recently shaved off his beard, wonder how much he is getting paid?

http://static2.politico.com/dims4/default/273ab82/2147483647/resize/1160x%3E/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fstatic.politico.com%2Fb8%2F1d%2F 49ba6d4445a5a190717f236d0a10%2F151210-paul-ryan-1160-gty.jpg


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b6f44HxdF_o


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=haExF5TyBXI