Three weeks removed from his Iowa victory and now heading into the March 1 Super Tuesday contests, Sen. Ted Cruz is facing an existential crisis that could do fatal damage to his candidacy.
Sen. Marco Rubio’s campaign is often mocked for its roundabout path to the nomination, which doesn’t put much emphasis on winning any particular state. Cruz is in the opposite position: He has a very specific path that runs through a specific set of states and most of them are coming up in less than a week’s time.
The Cruz plan is a Southern strategy powered by evangelical voters. The trial run for his approach wasn’t in the South, though, but in Iowa, where he consolidated support from social conservative leaders and built a grassroots operation that turned out religious right voters to caucus. The plan from there, as explicitly articulated by Cruz’s campaign, was to win states with similarly evangelical-heavy Republican electorates — especially March 1 states like Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Cruz’s native Texas.
RELATED: Five takeaways from the Nevada GOP caucus
“We’ve proven that we can turn out evangelicals in Iowa, and we’re going to take that model and that organization and replicate it through the states,” Cruz’s then-spokesman Rick Tyler told reporters shortly after Iowa.
But first they had to pass another test: South Carolina. The voters who showed up for the GOP race were exactly who Cruz wanted: 67% were white evangelicals according to exit polls, even higher than Iowa’s 64%. The problem was that Trump won a plurality of white evangelicals: 34 percent over Cruz’s 26 percent and Rubio’s 21 percent. That left Cruz a weak third place overall, just behind Rubio, with zero delegates to show for his effort. The trend continued in Nevada on Tuesday, where Trump won 40 percent of white evangelical voters to Cruz’s 27 percent and Rubio’s 23 percent.
Cruz has also taken some heat in recent days thanks to a combined attack from Trump and Rubio over campaign ethics. Earlier this week, the senator fired Tyler, the campaign spokesman quoted earlier, after he tweeted a video falsely claiming Rubio disparaged the Bible.
Now Cruz’s entire theory of the election is thrown into question and there’s almost no time to retool before it reaches its most critical phase. Upcoming primaries like Alabama (75 percent white evangelical in 2012), Georgia (64 percent), and Oklahoma (72 percent) are made for Cruz, but Trump has momentum with the exact voters Cruz needs to win and Rubio is proving a persistent threat as well.
The Cruz campaign is well aware of the stakes and have not tamped down Super Tuesday expectations.
“We’ve been built for this day the entire time,” Cruz campaign manager Jeff Roe told reporters on Sunday.
He described Cruz’s appeal as “somebody that can beat Trump that’s built to last.”
RELATED: Cruz: I won’t gamble daughters’ futures with Trump








