The Oklahoman

Cruz is surging by design

- George Will

A California woman has turned her home into a sanctuary for 1,000 cats. She’s applied for both taxand man-exempt status.”

CONAN O’BRIEN

“CONAN”

HOUSTON — People here at Ted Cruz’s campaign headquarte­rs are meticulous­ly preparing to win a contested convention, if there is one. Because Donald Trump is a low-energy fellow, Cruz will be positioned to trounce him in Cleveland, where Trump’s slide toward earned oblivion would accelerate during a second ballot.

Wisconsin has propelled Trump toward joining those he most despises: “losers.” Wisconsin’s populist tradition is persistent and indiscrimi­nate enough to encompass Robert La Follette and Joseph McCarthy. And evangelica­l Christians are less important in Wisconsin than in contiguous Iowa. Neverthele­ss, temperate Wisconsin rejected Trump, partly for the reason that one of his weakest performanc­es so far was in the reddest state, Utah, where conservati­ve Mormons flinched from his luridness. His act has become stale.

If, as seemed probable a month ago, Trump had won Wisconsin, he would have been well-positioned to win a first-ballot convention victory. Now he is up against things to which he is averse: facts. For months Cruz’s national operation has been courting all convention delegates, including Trump’s. Cruz aims to make a third ballot decisive, or unnecessar­y.

On the eve of Wisconsin’s primary, the analytics people here knew how many undecided voters were choosing between Cruz and Trump (32,000) and how many between Cruz and John Kasich (72,000), and where they lived. Walls here are covered with notes outlining every step of each state’s multistage delegate selection process. Cruz’s campaign is nurturing relationsh­ips with delegates now committed to Trump and others. In Louisiana’s primary, 58.6 percent of voters favored someone other than Trump; Cruz’s campaign knows which issues are important to which Trump delegates, and Cruz people with similar values are talking to them.

Trump, whose scant regard for (other people’s) property rights is writ large in his adoration of eminent domain abuses, mutters darkly about people “stealing” delegates that are his property. But most are only contingent­ly his, until one or more ballots are completed.

Usually, more than 40 percent of delegates to Republican convention­s are seasoned activists who have attended prior convention­s. A large majority of all delegates are officehold­ers and state party officials. They tend to favor presidenti­al aspirants who have been Republican­s for longer than since last Friday.

Trump is a world-class complainer but a bush league preparer. A nomination contest poses policy and process tests, and he is flunking both.

Regarding policy, he is flummoxed by predictabl­e abortion questions because he has been anti-abortion for only 15 minutes, and because he has lived almost seven decades without giving a scintilla of thought to any serious policy question. Regarding process, Trump has surfed a wave of free media to the mistaken conclusion that winning a nomination involves no more forethough­t than he gives to policy. He knows nothing about the art of the political deal.

The nomination process, says Jeff Roe, Cruz’s campaign manager, “is a multilevel Rubik’s Cube. Trump thought it was a golf ball — you just had to whack it.” Roe says the Cruz campaign’s engagement with the granular details of delegate maintenanc­e is producing a situation where “the guy who is trying to hijack the party runs into a guy with a machine gun.”

Trump last won something on March 22, in Arizona. Trump, says Roe, is now “bound by his brand rather than propelled by his brand.” If Trump comes to Cleveland, say, 38 delegates short of 1,237, he will lose. Cruz probably will be proportion­ally closer to Trump than Lincoln (102 delegates) was to William Seward (173.5), who was 60 delegates short of victory on the first of three ballots at the 1860 convention.

Cruz’s detractors say he has been lucky in this campaign’s unpredicta­ble political caroms that thinned the competitio­n. But as Branch Rickey said: “Luck is the residue of design.”

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