HERSHEY, Pa. — Ted Cruz declared definitively on Wednesday that the fight for the Republican presidential nomination is “definitely headed to Cleveland,” where, he said, “the people are going to prevail.”
“Nobody’s getting 1237 [delegates] – Donald knows that. We’re headed to a contested convention,” Cruz told NBC News while shaking hands after his rally here in a state with 71 delegates up for grabs in next Tuesday’s primary.
“The reason why he has so many of his media surrogates repeating the mantra that the race has got to be over now is because he knows he cannot earn a majority of the delegates in Cleveland,” Cruz continued, calling Trump “a fringe and marginal candidate.”
Cruz exited New York’s primary without winning a single delegate, nearly mathematically vanishing his ability to win the nomination before the convention – a standard he often used last month to indirectly suggest John Kasich and, then, Marco Rubio should leave the race.
Donald Trump tweeted on Wednesday morning: “Ted Cruz is mathematically out of winning the race. Now all he can do is be a spoiler, never a nice thing to do.”
Ted Cruz is mathematically out of winning the race. Now all he can do is be a spoiler, never a nice thing to do. I will beat Hillary!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) April 20, 2016
But Trump – in order for him to win outright and avoid heading to a contested convention — would still have to win 57 percent of the remaining delegates.
The Cruz campaign is now turning its attention to Pennsylvania, where 54 unbound delegates are in play next Tuesday.
A top Cruz campaign aide, while acknowledging the narrative is unfavorable to Cruz in the northeast, said it’s “highly likely” Cruz will pull at least 30 delegates out of Pennsylvania.
“Donald and the media want to convince everyone that Pennsylvania is a suburb of Manhattan,” said Cruz, adding: “That’s their telling — Manhattan has spoken and Pennsylvania will quietly file into obedience.”
The crowd defiantly jeered before Cruz finished his thought: “You know what, I’ve got a lot more faith in the people of Pennsylvania.”
While addressing the crowd, Cruz reframed the race and the role of Pennsylvania’s delegates, exclaiming he’ll “take ’em” next week.
A campaign aide told NBC News it does not anticipate beating Trump in the popular vote in the state, meaning Cruz would lose out on its 17 at-large delegates, which go to the victor. Polls currently show Cruz losing by around 20 percentage points.








