West Chester, PA – The three-man race for the Republican nomination is now two-on-one as Senator Ted Cruz and Ohio Governor John Kasich team up to take on Donald Trump. According to the front-runner, that suits him just fine.
“How pathetic is it when they use collusion?” Trump asked a fired-up crowd at West Chester University. “How weak does this make them look? I said to my people this is great, it will make them look weak and pathetic — which they are — as politicians.”
Trump has spent weeks warning supporters of a plot from within the GOP to exploit delegate rules in order to oust him at a “rigged” convention despite his wide delegate lead. In that context, the news that Kasich and Cruz would strategically cede states to each other – Indiana’s to Cruz, New Mexico and Oregon to Kasich – fit his message perfectly.
“When you have millions of votes more it’s supposed to be yours,” Trump said. “It’s a rigged system, it’s a crooked system. It’s as crooked almost as Hillary Clinton.”
Trump lashed out at “Lyin’ Ted Cruz” and “stubborn” Kasich, who he nicknamed “1-in-42” in reference to his lone victory in the Ohio primary and mocked for eating pancakes during a recent interview. Trump called out Kasich for refusing to tell supporters to back Cruz in Indiana, despite his campaign’s withdrawal from the state’s May 3 primary, arguing that it showed their deal was poorly arranged. The billionaire insisted their plan would backfire, having a “huge reverse effect” that would benefit his run.
RELATED: Donald Trump foodshames John Kasich
Critics counter that Trump’s talk of a plot to oust him is a thin cover to whine about longstanding rules that his often-disorganized campaign failed to plan around. The nominee has always had to win an outright majority of delegates on the first ballot or face an open convention, the process for selecting those delegates has been in place for months, and it’s on Trump to follow it. Pennsylvania, where Trump has complained about a complicated process where voters pick unbound delegates by Congressional district, is a perfect example.
Trump told supporters on Monday that he wasn’t preparing for a floor fight “because we want to win the right way: on the first ballot.” He warned that the party would face certain doom in the general election if it bypassed him since his voters would “revolt” and refuse to support the nominee.
Depending on where you stand within the party, the Cruz/Kasich deal looks very different as well. For the activists in the #NeverTrump bandwagon, it’s an extraordinary alliance between establishment and conservative forces that shows the party is finally joining hands to confront an apocalyptic threat.
“They probably should have talked amongst candidates sooner,” Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, who dropped out in September while calling for a united front against Trump, told TMJ4 on Monday.
RELATED: Donald Trump’s gift to the rich
For Trump supporters, it smacks of a conspiracy to overturn the candidate with by far the most popular support. To them, the fact that Kasich and Cruz are miles apart politically doesn’t show the party is united, it shows that the candidates were always more concerned with amassing power than whatever principles they invoked to bash Trump.
“It’s ridiculous,” Edgar Green, a Trump supporter who drove in from Maryland for his West Chester rally. “They should have realized a long time ago that Trump is what the people want. “
“The people in power are so afraid of Donald, they’re trying to manipulate people to get what they want,” Marge Green, a 51-year old nurse from nearby Media, Pennsylvania said as she waited in line.
Sean Steinmetz, a sophomore at West Chester University, said he was leaning against Trump in the primary but even he disliked the plan to carve up the race state-by-state.
“Who you want to vote for should be who you vote for,” Steinmetz said.









