FARGO, North Dakota – The shadowy war for Republican delegates will step into the spotlight this weekend in North Dakota, where the state’s lack of a presidential caucus or primary – and a quirky rule that allows its delegates to vote as they please in July’s national convention, unbound to any candidate – lays bare the three remaining GOP contenders’ fight to run up the numbers.
While it is still possible for front-runner Donald Trump to win the necessary 1,237 delegates outright and avoid a contested convention — a last-ditch method for choosing the nominee, which allows a couple thousand delegates to vote over and over, round by round, until someone secures majority support — the hunt for unbound delegates has taken on a new sense of urgency as party insiders — and the campaigns of Trump’s remaining rivals, Ted Cruz and John Kasich — view a contested convention as the only way to wrest the nomination from Trump.
That’s why North Dakota’s 28 unbound delegates might just make a difference. The three GOP presidential campaigns have scrambled to mobilize at the state Republican convention here this weekend, screening and making overtures to local activists who may be chosen as delegates. In a sign of how important the convention has become, the state GOP went from struggling to find a keynote speaker to juggling three: Sen. Ted Cruz will speak Saturday night, followed on Sunday by Dr. Ben Carson speaking for Donald Trump and former New Hampshire Sen. Gordon Humphrey on behalf of Gov. John Kasich.
“I really didn’t think we’d play this big a role,” the state party’s Executive Director Roz Leighton told MSNBC. “All of a sudden, we have all these people who want to talk.”
Republican leaders in the state say Cruz has the strongest grassroots presence here: The Texas senator had already begun reaching out to likely delegates ahead of the state convention, and his preacher father, Rafael Cruz, has been campaigning across the state this week.
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Not to be outdone, Trump is sending Carson, a former rival turned hugely popular surrogate. Barry Bennett, a former Carson adviser turned Trump strategist told MSNBC the Trump campaign is particularly keen on keeping down Cruz’s delegate haul.
“It’s more do or die for [Cruz],” Bennett said of North Dakota’s delegates. “We probably have 10 or 15 priorities. It is one of them.”








