The most important primary of the presidential nominating contest just might be the very last one. On June 7, California could determine whether Donald Trump is able to amass enough delegates to clinch the nomination and avoid a chaotic open convention in Cleveland.
Now three veteran California Republican operatives are launching an effort to keep Trump from winning a mass of delegates in California, localizing the stop-Trump effort, by focusing on the fight, district-by-district.
Rob Stutzman, a campaign veteran, is leading the effort with two of his colleagues, Richard Temple and Ray McNally, and their goal is lofty.
“I think it’s possible Trump gets shut out in California,” Stutzman told NBC News.
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Sen. Ted Cruz, Trump’s main challenger, is looking ahead to the state. He’ll make two campaign stops there Monday.
Stutzman said that California’s system makes it more possible to defeat Trump by focusing very specific, targeted messages to Republicans in each district. Only 13 of California’s delegates are awarded to the winner of the state, the rest are doled out based on the winner of each Congressional district.
His focus on delegate allocation falls in line with the new focus of national stop-Trump movements, which have transitioned from focusing on state-wide wins to delegate-wins.
Trump has failed to master the complicated minutia of delegate allocation, proving to be a major weakness of his candidacy. To correct and play catch-up, he has hired new staff and begun focusing on the process.
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The key in California, however, is that Cruz and Gov. John Kasich, the two other candidates remaining, don’t split the vote, handing Trump a victory.









