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jro660
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« Reply #25 on: August 22, 2016, 10:32:56 AM »

SUPER TUESDAY #1


The Lead Up

It would be extremely fair to say that Super Tuesday #1 is do-or-die for all three candidates. Ted Cruz needs to win and win big in southern states, which are a majority for this Super Tuesday. But he also must run strong in the other states too so as not to lose out on too many delegates. Condi Rice's goal is to win the New England and Midwestern states on Super Tuesday, and also try to peel off a southern state from Cruz. Insiders say that her best shot is Virginia, though her momentum in Georgia was growing after she received the endorsement of some conservative Evangelical leaders in the state. Rand Paul must win a state to have a rationale to stay in the race. His campaign was the only one to spend resources in Alaska, and he is making a strong play at Minnesota, Vermont, Massachusetts, and certain parts of Texas where his father was a member of Congress. A strong Paul showing outside of the South could hurt Rice among social moderates/liberals, while a strong showing in the South could hurt Cruz among anti-establishment voters.

The Rice-Cruz feud continued up until Super Tuesday primary day. Pundits and insiders received numerous reports that Rice was growing increasingly uncomfortable with the personal nature of the feud, but she was emboldened to "hit back" on Cruz for comparing her to Hillary Clinton. All three candidates debuted new ads leading up to Super Tuesday. Cruz's ads were especially powerful, featuring members of his church explaining how through prayer, compassion, and his Senate office, Cruz helped his constituents in times of need. The ad is called "For Us" and was being aired in all Super Tuesday states. Meanwhile, Rice launched two different ads ahead of Super Tuesday. "Change for Strength" featured military families explaining their support for Rice. This ad was launched in southern states and was aimed at reaching military families, a reliably conservative voting bloc in the South that Rice hoped to win over. Meanwhile, "Stronger Solutions" was launched in the Northeast and Midwest and focused on Rice's plan to combat heroine addiction and financial despair. Rand Paul echoed a different theme, with 15 second ads showing people smashing computers and other electronic machinery. The ads were simple: "Smash the Washington machine."

RESULTS

ALABAMA
Ted Cruz             51.6%
Condi Rice           35.1%
Rand Paul            14.3%

ALASKA
Rand Paul            46.2%
Ted Cruz                 28.4%
Condi Rice              25.4%

ARKANSAS
Ted Cruz               45.1%
Condi Rice              40.9%
Rand Paul               14.0%

GEORGIA
Ted Cruz                  44.1%
Condi Rice                 43.1%
Rand Paul                 12.8%

MASSACHUSETTS
Condi Rice            55.1%
Rand Paul                29.9%
Ted Cruz                  15.0%

MINNESOTA
Condi Rice           40.5%
Rand Paul               30.5%
Ted Cruz                 29.0%

OKLAHOMA
Ted Cruz               45.9%
Condi Rice               34.7%
Rand Paul                19.4%

TENNESSEE
Ted Cruz                 47.5%
Condi Rice                 39.9%
Rand Paul                 12.6%

TEXAS
Ted Cruz                  55.1%
Condi Rice                 30.4%
Rand Paul                   14.5%

VERMONT
Condi Rice                 51.3%
Rand Paul                    40.2%
Ted Cruz                       9.5%

VIRGINIA
Condi Rice                  42.9%
Ted Cruz                       40.4%
Rand Paul                     16.7%

DELEGATE COUNT
Ted Cruz            361
Condi Rice          258
Rand Paul           95

The Fallout: Cruz Wins, Condi Survives, Paul Hangs On

Super Tuesday #1 offered glimmers of hope and despair for all three Republican candidates. Let's break down the ups and downs for each candidate on Super Tuesday #1.

Ted Cruz (+): Cruz obviously won the most states and delegates on Super Tuesday #1. He boasts a 103 delegate lead over Condi Rice and that will certainly be a tough hurdle for him to overcome. He performed well in the South and in Minnesota, and he will continue to be able to lay claim that he is the frontrunner of the GOP presidential race.

Ted Cruz (-): Cruz won, but his victories in numerous southern states were not as large as he had hoped. Condi Rice was able to win a significant number of delegates in the proportional-delegate system. Making matters worse, these were supposed to be Cruz's best states. Going forward, toward a winner-take-all system, the terrain gets substantially tougher for Cruz. This might be his night, but the future doesn't hold a winning path for Cruz. Can he turn it around and make inroads with other groups?

Condo Rice (+)Sad Condi Rice was on Ted Cruz's tail for much for the night. She held him down to single-digit wins in various states. Her victory in Virginia and her close race in Georgia shows that she is starting to be able to compete in more conservative territory, especially with Rand Paul in the race. Going forward, her path looks even brighter, so long as she can keep the coalition together.

Condi Rice (-)Sad Despite some big wins on Super Tuesday #1, she is still 100+ delegates behind Cruz and needs to work on convincing the electorate that she is still a frontrunner in this race. She will be able to claim momentum, but will have to emulate some of Cruz's style to win in deep-red territory, something she has traditionally not been as comfortable with. If Rand Paul drops out in the near future, she may have an even harder time in a struggle mano-a-mano with Cruz.

Rand Paul (+)Sad He won Alaska and did well in Massachusetts and Vermont. His home state of Kentucky is next, and he has insisted will remain in the race.

Rand Paul (-)Sad Rumors have swirled that Sen. Mitch McConnell has urged Rand Paul to stay in the race to deprive Cruz of some wins in Kentucky and more libertarian-leaning caucus states. This hurts Paul's authenticity. Further, he has only won two states so far, and is probably going to have a harder time justifying staying in the race.

Notable Entrance/Exit Polling Data
*NOTE: this is aggregate data surveyed from across all the states that voted on Super Tuesday #1*
Who attacked most unfairly? Cruz 56%, Rice 37%, Paul 7%
Who is most qualified?   Rice 50%, Paul 25%, Cruz 25%
Who will bring change?  Cruz 39%, Rice 32%, Paul 29%
White evangelical:  Cruz 54%, Rice 36%, Paul 10%
NOT white evangelical: Rice 48%, Cruz 29%, Paul 23%

UP NEXT: Another debate, and Mini-Tuesday including Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, and Maine results.
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jro660
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« Reply #26 on: August 23, 2016, 11:18:06 AM »

MINI TUESDAY #1


The Lead Up

The March 5, 2016 Mini-Tuesday contest will prove as a pivotal moment for Rand Paul. If he fails to capture his home state of Kentucky, then he will likely drop out, and potentially open up a path for Cruz to capture the "anti-establishment" vote. Cruz's campaign has accused Paul and Rice, in the four days since Super Tuesday, of conspiring to deprive him of the delegates needed to win the nomination. For example, Rand Paul spent an unexpectedly heavy amount of resources in Louisiana despite polling a very distant third (low double digits) for weeks. He has focused much of his energy around college campuses in the state, making a play for voters who would be amenable to Cruz had Paul not been a viable candidate. Interestingly, in a  move that would support the Cruz conspiracy theory, Paul has pulled resources from Maine, a state in which he would appear to do well among younger and moderate voters. Meanwhile, Cruz is making an all out investment in all four states, including Kentucky. Rice on the other hand appears to be competing in all four states as well, but her campaign spokespeople have stated that all she needs to win is one state, probably Maine, to maintain her status as a favorite in this race. If she wins Maine, does well in Louisiana, her campaign will survive even if Cruz wins Louisiana, Kansas, and does well in Kentucky.

RESULTS

Kansas
Rand Paul       45.1%
Ted Cruz             31.2%
Condi Rice          23.7%

Kentucky
Rand Paul        52.0%
Condi Rice           24.2%
Ted Cruz              21.8%

Louisiana
Ted Cruz          43.0%
Condi Rice            41.4%
Rand Paul            15.6%

Maine
Condi Rice         50.1%
Rand Paul              26.5%
Ted Cruz               24.4%

DELEGATE COUNT
Ted Cruz            406
Condi Rice          313
Rand Paul           150

The Fallout: Rand Paul's big night



Rand Paul was clearly the big winner of the night. He handily won his home state of Kentucky and handily won Kansas as well. He remains a major thorn in Ted Cruz's side. National polling prior Mini Tuesday #1 suggests that in a three way race, support breaks down as follows: Rice 39%, Cruz 36%, Paul 16%, 9% undecided. In a Rice-Cruz race, Cruz leads Rice 48% to 42% with 10% undecided. In a Rice-Paul race, Rice leads Paul 45% to 33%. Meanwhile, Rice did very well on Mini Tuesday #1. She beat Cruz in delegates in Louisiana, as she won more unpledged delegates, and won Maine handily. Terrain looks continuously more difficult for Cruz. Rice has slashed his lead from 103 delegates to 93 delegates, a lead that can be erased by winning some of the more moderate winner-take-all states.

Aggregate Polling Post-Mini Tuesday #1

NATIONAL (GENERAL):
Rice 46% - Clinton 40%
Rice 44% - Sanders 42% 
Cruz 42% - Clinton 44%
Cruz 41% - Sanders 45%
Paul 41% - Clinton 41%
Paul 38% - Sanders 39%

NATIONAL (GOP):
Rice 40% - Cruz 33% - Paul 19% - undecided 8%
Rice 42% - Cruz 45% - undecided 13%
Rice 46% - Paul 37% - undecided 17%

PUERTO RICO:
Rice 56% - Cruz 15% - Paul 15% - undecided 14%


UP NEXT: Puerto Rico Primary, and Ted Cruz takes desperate measures to dispatch Rice. Will Rice return by unleashing the Donald?
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jro660
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« Reply #27 on: August 24, 2016, 02:57:25 PM »

PUERTO RICO PRIMARY


RESULTS
Condi Rice          64.3%
Ted Cruz                28.7%
Rand Paul               7.0%

DELEGATE COUNT
Ted Cruz            406
Condi Rice          336
Rand Paul           150

The Fallout



After a big win in Puerto Rice, Condi Rice has declared that her campaign has unstoppable momentum going forward, at a rally in Michigan. Just two days away from the next Mini-Tuesday, Condi Rice has invited tremendous controversy by indicting Gov. Rick Snyder for his handling of the Flint lead water crisis. In an interview with a local newspaper, she stated, "I agree with Secretary Clinton, Senator Paul, and countless others across the state and across our country who acknowledge this failure at all levels of government, including the governor's office."

As a result, Ted Cruz, who was endorsed by Gov. Snyder in a surprise move, put out an ad featuring Hillary stating liberal positions on a variety of issues replaying Rice's statement "I agree with Senator Clinton." The ad was titled "Birds of a Feather" and was launched in Michigan and Mississippi.


Meanwhile, Condi Rice has dispatched endorsee Donald Trump, the bombastic New York businessman, to go on the attack against Cruz. "Look folks Ted Cruz doesn't get it," said Trump. "This guy doesn't have a clue. Michigan has hurt so badly, so badly, because of politicians like Cruz...and what does he want from all of you? To drink his Kool-Aid...he promises you all everything and he'll give you nothing. Trust me folks, I know business. I'm going to be honest with you, I don't want to be honest, but I have to. I'm the richest guy in the room right now I bet and I know about money and I know that Ted Cruz doesn't know a thing about it. Condi Rice is a treat. She's the smartest lady I know besides my wife Melania!"

Trump's speech was well-received. Despite Rice's hesitation to use Trump, she acknowledges that he is a strong surrogate in places like Michigan. Meanwhile, numerous Republicans in Michigan and some other states with large white-working class populations are asking Trump to move in and run for governor.

Aggregate Polling Morning of Mini-Tuesday #2:

NATIONAL (GENERAL):
Rice 47% - Clinton 42%
Rice 45% - Sanders 43% 
Cruz 41% - Clinton 46%
Cruz 41% - Sanders 47%
Paul 39% - Clinton 42%
Paul 36% - Sanders 40%

NATIONAL (GOP):
Rice 41% - Cruz 32% - Paul 18% - undecided 10%
Rice 44% - Cruz 44% - undecided 12%
Rice 48% - Paul 35% - undecided 17%

HAWAII:
Paul 34% - Rice 25% - Cruz 22% - undecided 19%

IDAHO:
Paul 40% - Cruz 22% - Rice 21% - undecided 17%

MICHIGAN:
Rice 42% - Cruz 37% - Paul 15% - undecided 6%

MISSISSIPPI:
Cruz 46% - Rice 34% - Paul 10% - undecided 10%

UP NEXT: MINI TUESDAY RESULTS!
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BuckeyeNut
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« Reply #28 on: August 24, 2016, 03:39:13 PM »

I'm surprised Paul didn't have a stronger showing in ME.
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jro660
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« Reply #29 on: August 24, 2016, 04:10:37 PM »

I'm surprised Paul didn't have a stronger showing in ME.

I'd be too, but, if you look at what I wrote in the previous post, he pulled resources from Maine to focus on other states, adding to Cruz's theory that Paul is being nudged by McConnell to help create an easier path for a Condi victory.
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jro660
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« Reply #30 on: August 25, 2016, 03:13:26 PM »

MINI TUESDAY #2


The Lead Up

Tonight is the night that Condi Rice needs to recapture frontrunner status from Ted Cruz, whose campaign has been in limbo since unloading bizarre attacks on Condi Rice's marital status and position on the Flint water crisis, among other issues. Cruz, who has become sermonic as of late in his speeches to Republican primary goers, said on the morning of Mini Tuesday #2 that nominating Condi Rice would "bring to life the Hillary Clinton politics of the Republican Party, and put to death the party of Ronald Reagan."

Interestingly, Rice spent her Mini Tuesday #2 morning visiting polling places in Michigan, Idaho, and Mississippi, and called in to various local morning T.V. news stations in Hawaii. GOP observers and insiders were beginning to remark that Rice's campaign had the markings of a serious, national campaign, whereas it was becoming increasingly evident that Cruz's agenda was to win by tarnishing Rice.

Rand Paul spent the last several days campaigning in Idaho and Hawaii.

Meanwhile at 5:53pm EST, WikiLeaks' team released emails stolen from the Condi Rice campaign, suggesting collusion between Rice and Paul. This is not the first time Condi has endured an email scandal.

RESULTS

Hawaii
Condi Rice              39.5%
Rand Paul                35.9%
Ted Cruz                  24.6%

Idaho
Rand Paul                40.2%
Condi Rice                  33.4%
Ted Cruz                    26.4%

Michigan
Condi Rice                 47.2%
Ted Cruz                      39.6%
Rand Paul                    13.2%

Mississippi
Ted Cruz                     50.3%
Condi Rice                    39.9%
Rand Paul                      9.8%

Delegates
Ted Cruz            452
Condi Rice          409
Rand Paul           181

The Fallout



At a rally in Florida, Condi Rice declared the "direction of the race had changed," and that the party was beginning to coalesce around her candidacy. Uneasy, she lobbed criticism of Hillary Clinton, President Obama, and her main opponent, Ted Cruz. "Like President Obama and Secretary Clinton," said Rice, "Senator Cruz thinks that divisiveness and name-calling is the path to win America's heart. Well, friends, we're living proof that that notion is false. American hearts and minds are won over not in Washington but across this great country and on the battlefields abroad."



Meanwhile, at a rally in Missouri, Ted Cruz held up print-outs of the e-mails that were allegedly made between campaign staff of Condi Rice and Rand Paul. In short, the emails from Rice staff offer advice to Paul strategists as to where to go ofter "potent change vote" and where to avoid "more centrist, densely populated vote." Just before Cruz spoke, Rice campaign staff has said that "junior campaign staff inappropriately offered casual advice to friends in a rival campaign. While this is often commonplace in campaigns to discuss voter trends among strategic rivals, we have terminated our affiliation with the campaign staff." But Cruz did not accept this response. At the rally, he declared that the GOP primary had been rigged and that Condi Rice should "drop out for the good of the party, the good of the country, and quite frankly, the good of her humanity and conscience." Fascinatingly, businessman Donald Trump aired a video response to Cruz on Fox News from a hotel in Houston, Texas. Rumors are now swirling that Trump may look to purchase property in Texas and challenge Cruz in 2018.

Aggregate Polling of March 15 Super Tuesday #2 +DC

NATIONAL (GENERAL):
Rice 47% - Clinton 43%
Rice 40% - Sanders 44%
Cruz 39% - Clinton 45%
Cruz 36% - Sanders 42%
Paul 39% - Clinton 44%
Paul 36% - Sanders 40%

NATIONAL (GOP):
Rice 42% - Cruz 35% - Paul 13% - undecided 10%

WASHINGTON, D.C.:
Rice 71% - Paul 14% - Cruz 7% - undecided 8%

FLORIDA:
Rice 43% - Cruz 39% - Paul 10% - undecided 8%

ILLINOIS:
Rice 45% - Cruz 37% - Paul 11% - undecided 7%

MISSOURI:
Cruz 41% - Rice 36% - Paul 14% - undecided 9%

NORTH CAROLINA:
Cruz 46% - Rice 41% - Paul 7% - undecided 6%

OHIO:
Rice 45% - Cruz 39% - Paul 10% - undecided 6%

NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS
*Rice favored; GOP leadership has endorsed Rice*

NEXT UP: SUPER TUESDAY #2 plus some breaking news on the campaign trail.
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jro660
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« Reply #31 on: August 26, 2016, 02:45:32 PM »

BTW--if anyone has a cool idea to throw a "wrench" into this primary election (or general or presidency) please message me privately, would love to consider some ideas, thanks!
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tmthforu94
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« Reply #32 on: August 26, 2016, 04:16:54 PM »

Really enjoying this, Progressive! Smiley
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President Punxsutawney Phil
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« Reply #33 on: August 26, 2016, 04:24:48 PM »

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jro660
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« Reply #34 on: August 26, 2016, 09:31:38 PM »

CONDI ABORTION BOMBSHELL: RICE EXPOSED FOR HAVING TWO ABORTIONS AFTER SEX BINGE TRYING TO PROVE INTEREST IN MEN



"I can't be silent any longer. Look I've got a lot of respect for Condi but the leader of the free world needs to be exposed and...well, look I was her college roommate. We knew things about each other that no one til [sic] this day probably knows. But I've prayed on this over and over and over again. And, well, like I said, I can't be silent any longer. Condi would try to prove us all that she liked boys when we know she didn't. She knows she didn't. So she'd go home with some guy and she'd kick him out early morning. But then she went to the clinic. Twice. It was bad news. I'm sorry Condi, but, the world needs to know..."

STAY TUNED

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jro660
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« Reply #35 on: August 28, 2016, 11:06:35 AM »

SUPER TUESDAY PART 2: MARCH 15, 2016


The Lead Up

The Condi Rice abortion/lesbian bombshell was believed to be orchestrated by aides close to Ted Cruz to who contacted a former roommate of Condi Rice. Glenn Beck, the controversial conservative commentator who is endorsing Ted Cruz, pushed the story on his radio show, and, as a result, conservative online news outlets began covering the story including The Drudge Report, Breitbart, The Blaze and others. Mainstream news outlets reported the story as well, though the day after the story broke, Fox News confirmed that the woman making the claims against Rice was actually not a former roommate, but someone whom she shared a hallway with during one semester her first year in college. And instead of knowing for sure that Condi Rice was getting abortion-care, she knew that Rice went to "some sort of health clinic at least twice" after inviting men over to her room. As for the lesbian accusations, this former hall-mate's knowledge was based on the fact that "everybody knew" that Rice was not attracted to men.

In a move that Cruz thought would mobilize evangelical support, he was confronted with both mainstream and fringe-right conservatives not just chastising him but calling on him to drop out of the race. Shockingly, former president George W. Bush and his wife, Laura Bush, issued a video statement in support of his former advisor, Condi Rice, ahead of the Super Tuesday primaries, and called on Cruz to drop out of the race. Moreover, former Texas Gov. Rick Perry called on Cruz to resign his senate seat "for the good of the people of Texas, the good of his family, and the good of his conscience." Still, Cruz was emboldened by some evangelical leaders especially in Florida, Missouri, and North Carolina, three states Cruz hoped to win to revive his campaign. He received the endorsement of Pam Bondi, Florida's Attorney General, known for her conservative views on social issues.

For her own part, Condi Rice largely ignored the attacks on her personal life. Close aides and confidants to Rice conceded to national press that Rice was "startled" and "saddened" by the negative tenor of the Republican Primary. She confided in them that she feared her reputation and her family's reputation would be tarnished by conservative leaders hellbent on her political downfall. Still, emboldened by her momentum in the race as of late, she deployed some of her stronger surrogates to the March 15 Super Tuesday states. Rice admittedly had an uncomfortable relationship with many of these surrogates. She did not particularly feel that Donald Trump, Mike Huckabee, or Joni Ernst, examples of some of her more frequent surrogates, matched her style, but she was grateful for their constant willingness to help her against conservative onslaught of attacks, and felt that they had earned their right to stump however they pleased, so long as it was appropriate, on the campaign trail.

On the campaign trail for Rand Paul was a few libertarian-esque elected officials in Missouri and Ohio. Paul's campaign admitted that unless he broke double digits in all states on March 15, he would drop out of the race. Condi Rice deployed Donald Trump to Ohio for five events in three days. The crowds there loved him. Rice invited Gov. Kasich to many of her events in Ohio, Missouri, and Illinois, stoking speculation that she felt very comfortable with his delivery for her. Florida Gov. Rick Scott and Sen. Marco Rubio were big hits for Rice in Florida. Ted Cruz stumped with Jerry Falwell, Jr., Steve King, and other conservative leaders in the Super Tuesday States.

RESULTS

Washington, D.C.
Condi Rice        74.0%
Rand Paul           16.1%
Ted Cruz              9.9%

Florida
Condi Rice         48.7%
Ted Cruz              42.4%
Rand Paul              8.9%

Illinois
Condi Rice          49.4%
Ted Cruz                39.6%
Rand Paul             11.0%

Missouri
Ted Cruz            45.6%
Condi Rice             42.0%
Rand Paul              12.4%

North Carolina
Ted Cruz             45.6% *Cruz won by 56 votes total/called days later*
Condi Rice             45.6%
Rand Paul               8.8%

Ohio
Condi Rice            48.0%
Ted Cruz                 41.9%
Rand Paul               10.1%

Northern Mariana Islands
Condi Rice 85%

Delegate Count
Condi Rice          702
Ted Cruz            533
Rand Paul           193

The Fallout

The small potatoes of the night was that Rand Paul dropped out after not meeting his self-determined goal of hitting double digits in all states. While he did not endorse Rice, he warned that Cruz was a "danger of greatest proportions," and should be stopped "at all costs."


The big winner of the night was Condi Rice, who delivered a nominee-like speech to an audience in Florida, where she campaigned vigorously all day. Rice declared that the nominating process had entered its final stages and that the party was rallying around her candidacy. At the end of her speech she called out Cruz by name, something she had been reluctant to do: "As a child my parents taught me to stand up for myself. As secretary of state, I stood up for America and for American values. And now as a presidential candidate, and, if by the glory of God, president, I refuse to sit down when I need to stand up for what is right. Tonight, the Republican Party has chosen a path of prosperity and a road forward of patriotic optimism. As this campaign enters its final stages, I can't express enough gratitude for saying once and for all that Sen. Cruz's baseless, pathetic attacks, are not worthy of the presidency."

Cruz meanwhile held onto his win in Missouri and minor win in North Carolina as a sign that voters wanted him to stay in the race. But with Condi Rice posting a 169 delegate lead, the Cruz machine was beginning to unravel.

UP NEXT: Arizona and Utah. Cruz has a Mormon problem. Polling and more news coming soon.
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jro660
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« Reply #36 on: August 31, 2016, 08:01:43 PM »

THE BOOK OF 'MOURNIN' FOR CRUZ? PERHAPS NOT


The Lead Up

After Rice's strong showing in Super Tuesday II Primary states, the focus re-centered on the March 22, 2016 contests: The Arizona Primary and the Utah Caucuses. More specifically, the contests were largely focused on the Mormon vote. Polls throughout the race showed an uneasiness with Rice but a distrust of Cruz. Mitt Romney and John Huntsman, Republican Mormon leaders, threw their weight behind Rice, but Cruz was organizing a strong grassroots efforts among religious leaders in both Utah and Arizona. Further, in Arizona, Cruz was coalescing support from anti-immigration advocates.



At a forum in Arizona on immigration, Cruz endorsed the idea of building a border wall between the United States and Mexico. Gaining momentum among movement conservatives, Cruz debuted a new hashtag and slogan campaign "#BigTheWall, Cruz for all!" Was this enough to stop Rice's momentum? Polls showed almost 33% of Utah Republicans were still undecided. Further, the day after the Super Tuesday II primaries, Rice had a 46% to 37% lead in Arizona. The night before the Arizona race, Rice lead 48% to 45%.

RESULTS

Arizona
Condi Rice            49.6%
Ted Cruz                 48.4%

Utah
Ted Cruz                 49.9%
Condi Rice                48.9%

Delegate Count
Condi Rice          779
Ted Cruz            554

The Fallout

Despite pulling off an upset win in the Utah Caucuses, Cruz remains significantly behind Rice after her squeaker win in Arizona. The terrain only gets more tricky for Cruz with a few exceptions: primaries in states like Indiana and Nebraska can provide wins for Cruz. With 1,237 delegates required to win the Republican nomination, and 811 delegates remaining, both candidates can claim a legitimate chance at winning the nomination, though, Cruz's is undoubtedly more narrow. Cruz has said that he is staying in the race until the convention to ensure conservatives a chance at victory "as shoes continue to drop about Rice's character and convictions."

NEXT UP: Wisconsin Primary
LATEST POLLS: (Wisconsin GOP) Rice 46% - Cruz 41% (National GOP) Rice 48% - Cruz 41% (National General) Rice 47% - Clinton 42%, Rice 43% - Sanders 43%, Cruz 39% - Clinton 45%, Cruz 40%, Sanders 49%
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« Reply #37 on: September 01, 2016, 10:54:14 PM »

Interesting - I think Cruz won Utah in 2016 largely because he wasn't Trump. In a close race like this, I have to wonder how he would answer the "Are Mormons Christians?" question that would inevitably come up. Personally, I don't think his answer would be satisfactory to Mormons, though he is known to be a bit of a panderer!
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jro660
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« Reply #38 on: September 02, 2016, 08:30:06 AM »

Interesting - I think Cruz won Utah in 2016 largely because he wasn't Trump. In a close race like this, I have to wonder how he would answer the "Are Mormons Christians?" question that would inevitably come up. Personally, I don't think his answer would be satisfactory to Mormons, though he is known to be a bit of a panderer!

I think you bring up to really good points: 1) Mormons in Utah did not "like" Cruz, but he was better than Trump; 2) Mormons and Evangelicals have often not been mutually fond of one another.

I think my last post tries to address this to some degree. In this TL, primarily, suspicions around Rice's private life, and a strong effort by the Cruz campaign to show Mormons that Rice would not appoint SCOTUS nominees, etc., who comported with their world view, led to a souring of Rice's image among mormons. Still, Rice pulled it off with institutional support from the Romney machine and I suppose to a lesser extent, moderate-Huntsman-style voters. To the second point, I think Cruz (just like IRL in 2016) tried to show himself to be a transactional politician to these voters. "Vote for me, and you'll get X."

Nonetheless, similarly to Hillary's status among voters this year, Condi is experiencing turbulence with personal favorability, likability, and the "trust factor." Stay tuned for Wisconsin, it's going to be a bumpy road to the nomination, and a convention like you've never seen. Stay tuned!
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jro660
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« Reply #39 on: September 02, 2016, 06:22:18 PM »
« Edited: September 02, 2016, 06:32:52 PM by Progressive »

WISCONSIN PRIMARY: APRIL 5, 2016


RESULTS
Ted Cruz                52.3%
Condi Rice               47.7%

In an event that sent political shockwaves through the country tonight, Ted Cruz managed to out-badger Condi Rice in the Badger State. After continued leaks about the RNC's involvement in advancing Condi Rice's political interests, and encouraging Rand Paul to stay in the race, Ted Cruz capitalized on Republican voters' trust issues with Condi Rice. Additionally, Cruz's Wisconsin win underscores his strong ground game in states with a strong conservative base, especially in single-state primary nights where he is able to fight 1-on-1 against Rice. The next primary contest is New York, where Republican voters dole out 95 delegates. Rice is expected to win big in New York. Cruz has conceded that he will probably not win the state, but he will play to win certain Congressional districts (allotting several delegates) in rural Upstate and in Orthodox Jewish/Hasidic communities in and around New York City. Cruz criticized Rice for campaigning around New York with Donald Trump, mocking their "shared New York, limousine liberal values." While Rice remains substantially ahead in the delegate count, Cruz continues to keep a viable but certainly steep path open to winning the nomination outright.

Interesting national polling data after Wisconsin actually shows the national Republican primary race tightening, with Rice hitting 50% of the vote, but Cruz earning 45% of Republicans. Further, there is a clear enthusiasm gap. 72% of Cruz voters report being enthusiastic or excited about supporting Cruz, while Rice voters are only 54% enthusiastic or excited about supporting their candidate. Perhaps this accounts for stronger than expected results for Cruz in states with palpable conservative bases.

DELEGATE COUNT
Condi Rice          787
Ted Cruz            588

POLLING
New York (GOP): Rice 61%, Cruz 24%
Connecticut (GOP): Rice 55%, Cruz 21%
Delaware (GOP): Rice 46%, Cruz 38%
Maryland (GOP): Rice 50%, Cruz 33%
Pennsylvania (GOP): Rice 47%, Cruz 42%
Rhode Island (GOP): Rice 62%, Cruz 19%


GOP CONTESTS SO FAR
RED = RICE
BLUE = CRUZ
GREEN = PAUL
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Kingpoleon
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« Reply #40 on: September 02, 2016, 09:58:42 PM »

#CrookedCruz
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jro660
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« Reply #41 on: September 03, 2016, 08:10:40 AM »
« Edited: September 03, 2016, 08:15:38 AM by Progressive »

NEW YORK PRIMARY: APRIL 19, 2016


RESULTS
Condi Rice             69.4%
Ted Cruz                 30.2%

The Fallout

It seems that the Rice empire has struck back in the Empire State after a humiliating, but close, defeat in Wisconsin on April 5. Rice clobbered Cruz across the state, though, it appears, that Cruz may have won the 7th Congressional district, a district with nearly 33,000 Yiddish speakers, many of whom are social conservative members of various Hasidic sects. Therefore, Cruz will in fact net some delegates from the New York primary.

With momentum from a big win in the Big Apple, Rice's team is hoping to sew up the nomination next week, April 26, with Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island Republicans (and Democrats) voting. Rice and Cruz are both spending big on Pennsylvania, but it may all be for naught. The vast majority of Pennsylvania's delegates are allocated via Congressional district, and, Cruz may win Central Pennsylvania districts handily. Nonetheless, a clean sweep on April 26 will certainly boost Rice's efforts.

A brief note on the Democratic nominating contest: At this point in the race, with such a large win in New York, it appears that Hillary Clinton has foreclosed any serious paths forward for Bernie Sanders, and the GOP candidates have pivoted their Democratic attacks against Clinton.

A brief note on the Republican delegate count: There are just 674 delegates remaining. If Cruz were to win all 674 remaining delegates, he would receive 1,268 delegates, just 31 delegates more than needed to clinch the nomination outright. Thus, while Cruz is not mathematically eliminated, Rice's latest string of wins have seriously wounded Cruz's chances of having a serious opportunity to clinch the nomination. As a result of the mathematic unlikelihood, Cruz is going to take extreme steps to injure Rice's standing as a likely nominee.

NEXT UP: April 26, 2016 primary contests! Stay tuned!

DELEGATES
Condi Rice          876
Ted Cruz            594
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jro660
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« Reply #42 on: September 04, 2016, 09:48:35 AM »

NORTHEAST TUESDAY: APRIL 26, 2016


With Condi Rice amassing a huge delegate lead over rival Ted Cruz, the Republican Party is bracing for the next phase of its campaign: finally having a presumptive nominee. Continued e-mail leaks have dogged the frontrunners for both parties (Condi Rice + Hillary Clinton), though Hillary Clinton's email troubles appear substantially worse, and have even prompted investigations. Nonetheless, both Rice and Clinton have a trust deficit among general election voters. Ted Cruz has tried to exploit this in Pennsylvania, the only state he has a serious chance of winning on April 26, 2016. Cruz's campaign blew nearly $1 million on negative ads in Pennsylvania. Rice, for her part, has refused to make any press appearances or hold debates since her big win in New York. She appears to be hoping to run out the clock on Cruz. She needs a blowout on Northeast Tuesday. The contests after this include Indiana, West Virginia, and Nebraska, states in which Cruz is the likely winner. He has led polls in these states for months, and Rice is expecting a loss in those states even with a big win tonight. Let's check out the results:

RESULTS

Connecticut
Condi Rice                  70.4%
Ted Cruz                      29.0%

Delaware
Condi Rice                 56.2%
Ted Cruz                       42.9%

Maryland
Condi Rice                   59.2%
Ted Cruz                      39.5%

Pennsylvania
Condi Rice                   55.4%
Ted Cruz                        44.1%

Rhode Island
Condi Rice                    71.4%
Ted Cruz                         27.3%

DELEGATE COUNT
Condi Rice    941
Ted Cruz      606


RED = RICE
BLUE = CRUZ
PAUL = GREEN
YET TO VOTE = GRAY

Stay tuned for the fallout...Cruz takes the campaign to a new level....
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NHI
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« Reply #43 on: September 04, 2016, 12:35:17 PM »

one of the best timelines I've read in a while.
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jro660
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« Reply #44 on: September 04, 2016, 02:13:44 PM »

one of the best timelines I've read in a while.

Wow thank you. I'm really enjoying writing this.
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GoTfan
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« Reply #45 on: September 04, 2016, 04:43:05 PM »

Very interesting. Condi's candidacy pretty much nullifies Hillary's claim to "first female nominee from a major party". Perhaps it can even be turned into a win for her, considering the massive shift to the right the Republican Party has undergone.

I'm also curious to see her VP pick. She may have to pick someone from the right to shore up the conservative vote.
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Kingpoleon
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« Reply #46 on: September 04, 2016, 06:28:20 PM »

I think I know Condoleeza's top two picks. POTENTIAL SPOILER: John Kasich and Donald Trump
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LLR
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« Reply #47 on: September 04, 2016, 08:10:19 PM »

Rice/Rubio would be good, but too minority-heavy for the people IceSpear hates

Rice/Kasich is too centrist

Rice/Ernst might work

Rice/Portman seems like a winner, though.
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jro660
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« Reply #48 on: September 04, 2016, 08:45:12 PM »

Very interesting. Condi's candidacy pretty much nullifies Hillary's claim to "first female nominee from a major party". Perhaps it can even be turned into a win for her, considering the massive shift to the right the Republican Party has undergone.

I'm also curious to see her VP pick. She may have to pick someone from the right to shore up the conservative vote.

Yes, in many ways Condi's candidacy neutralizes many of Hillary's more favorable attributes this year.

I will probably finish up the primaries by the end of Labor Day Weekend. After the primaries are concluded, I will be making a separate, detailed Veepstakes primer for both Condi and Hillary (to a lesser extent).

Kingpoleon, and LongLiveRock, thanks for input. Curious to see who you think will be the VP choice. I have pretty much decided already who the veep will be, and I'm curious to see based on the details of this timeline, who you'd think it was going towards. PM me. Thanks! New post soon.
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jro660
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« Reply #49 on: September 04, 2016, 09:28:31 PM »

'HOOSIER' CANDIDATE? TED CRUZ!
INDIANA PRIMARY: MAY 3, 2016


RESULTS
Ted Cruz           53.3%
Condi Rice          46.7%

In a profound disappointment to the Rice camp, Ted Cruz won the Indiana Primary by 6.6 points, giving Cruz fuel to declare himself the conservative candidate in the race. In a fiery, passionate speech from Indianapolis, Cruz eviscerated Rice. Here is a particularly jarring clip of the speech:

"My friends, Indiana showed the world tonight that the Republican Party is a party of conservative principles. You all went out tonight to declare that we won't let Hillary Clinton counterpart in big, bloated bureaucracy take over our party. The political class died a little bit tonight and this is a death we can all be proud of. Now, now, friends, we are far from being ready to declare victory. For we have won but one battle in this war against cheap, tepid conservatism. Condi Rice would have you believe that our party stands for abortion on demand and reckless international involvement.Condi Rice would have you believe that American people should put an almighty government above an almighty God. Condi Rice would have you believe that she and Hillary Clinton are above the law. You see folks for people like Condi Rice, this race is not about inspiring you or working for you. For Condi Rice and Hillary Clinton, this race is about securing power. Tomorrow we move forward toward victory. Tomorrow we rise up in a revolution against a rigged Republican system that wants to exploit your values. Tomorrow we rise up against a candidate who reminds me more of a Barack Obama than any of you out here in beautiful Indiana. But for now, tonight, we celebrate. I'm proud to say we have an open bar, and one main dish, fried rice."

DELEGATE COUNT:
Condi Rice          876
Ted Cruz            651


At an emergency meeting at Rice campaign headquarters, Condi demanded a meeting with top campaign aides. "Guys, we're going to get creamed again next week Nebraska and West Virginia. What the hell happened tonight? Polls tightened. We had Pence, Daniels, we had everybody. Our field game was strong. We had Kasich come in we had Portman, we had our Michigan field team. What is happening? Why can't we seal this deal?" Top aides sheepishly offered suggestions to Rice. Jessica Proud, a New York political veteran hired by rice to work on urband/suburban areas suggested that Rice bring out larger-than-life surrogates again like Donald Trump and Rudy Giuliani.

POLLING:
Nebraska: Cruz 49%, Rice 39%, undecided 12%
West Virginia: Cruz 52%, Rice 25%, undecided 23%
National (GOP): Rice 51%, Cruz 41%, undecided 8%
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