24 February 2016

Trump, again

The BBC has an article (and its usual unbloggable video, though YouTube had it) about Trump's triumph in Nevada:

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump (video above) has easily won the state of Nevada, cementing his lead in the race for the party's nomination. The billionaire now has three caucus wins in a row, after victories in New Hampshire and South Carolina.
Senators Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz, who have been trading barbs this week, came second and third respectively.
Party officials said they were checking reports of double voting and insufficient ballots at one site. Some volunteers also wore clothing in support of Trump, but officials said this was not against the rules.
In his victory speech, Trump told a roaring crowd: "We're winning, winning, winning the country, and soon the country is going to start winning, winning, winning."
He also celebrated getting the support of the "poorly educated" and Latinos. Some half of Nevada's Republican voters of Latino origin backed Trump, according to entrance polls.
Zeke Miller and Philip Elliott have a Time article about it:
Donald J. Trump, the billionaire whose name floats on a hotel high above the Las Vegas Strip, claimed a third consecutive win on Tuesday, besting rivals Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio in Nevada’s little-attended caucuses. It was the latest reminder that the brash former reality-show star remained a player in the Republicans’ rough-and-tumble nominating fight.
As the polls closed, The Associated Press declared Trump the winner. Early election returns mirrored the scant public poling, and Trump seemed heading toward an easy victory. “Now, we’re winning, winning, winning. And soon, the country is going to be winning, winning, winning,” Trump said at the Treasure Island resort on the Strip, in the shadow of the Trump compound.
Sounding as though the nomination were already his and a win in November assured, Trump told his crowd in Las Vegas: “You’re going to be proud of your President and even prouder of your country.”
Rubio narrowly topped Cruz, winning second place. Further back, Ohio Governor John Kasich and retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson were afterthoughts.
The Nevada caucuses were marred with allegations of dodgy behavior as balloting happened. The state party, which runs the caucuses, defended itself, and said no allegations of wrongdoing or impropriety had been reported. Even so, it was obvious Cruz and Rubio would have plenty of reasons to cast doubt on Trump’s win.
Caucuses shut down at 9 pm local time (midnight on the East Coast). Hours before that, Twitter and other social-media platforms were screaming about fraud. After all, there were pictures on Twitter of ballot collectors dressed in Trump gear.
The caucuses were not a state-run affair, as primaries in other states are. Instead, they were being run by the state GOP, and its leaders were feeling the criticism that, in typical online fashion, seemed to gain steam with each retweet. “It’s not against the rules for volunteers to wear candidate gear,” the state party tweeted. “Volunteers went through extensive training and are doing a great job.” In another tweet, the party tried to downplay the controversies: “There have been no official reports of voting irregularities or violations.”
Nevadans decided they were fine being the third domino in a row to fall in favor for Trump. The caucuses came amid a winnowing of the GOP field down to five, although it really was just a three-man race in Nevada.
Advisers to Rubio and Cruz had expected Trump to prevail here, and were looking ahead to the next-to-vote states. Rubio watched the returns in Michigan, where he needs to make a stand against neighboring Ohio’s Governor Kasich. Cruz eyed Southern states that are part of the so-called SEC Primary.
Kasich looked at other states that go on 1 March, Vermont and Massachusetts.
Yet it was entirely plausible that Trump could run the table going forward. Voters have, time and time again, have cast ballots channeling their anger and frustration with Washington. No one better serves that dissatisfaction than Trump, who uses profanity and bluster to make those voters feels as though someone is listening. Even in his slogan, Make America Great Again, Trump urges Americans to acknowledge their disappointment in the present, and then their optimism for the future.
Cruz and Rubio, meanwhile, are locked in an increasingly testy fight behind Trump. The pair essentially tied in South Carolina, a contest that, at least for the moment, relegated Kasich and Carson to a second tier and forced Jeb Bush from the race altogether. Rubio edged out Cruz in South Carolina, although both campaigns expected the results in Nevada to be tight.
Campaigns were careful not to set expectations too high in the volatile state. “Our hope and expectation is to do well here,” Cruz told reporters Sunday in Pahrump, Nevada. Representative Jason Chaffetz, a Rubio ally, said his candidate needs only finish in the “top three” in what is essentially a three-man race to claim victory.
At stake are just thirty of the 2,472 delegates who will attend the 2016 Republican National Convention in Cleveland, Ohio, and they will be divided proportionally among the finishers. So far, only a hundred have been awarded in Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina, with Trump leading with 68.
Those early states helped winnow the field of contenders such as New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, Kentucky Senator Rand Paul, and former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee. Tuesday’s results were unlikely to trim the field any more. Kasich was largely sitting out the Nevada contest, focusing on larger contests set for the coming weeks, while Carson’s campaign has held only a handful of events between presidential debates.
The five remaining candidates were set to meet Thursday night in Houston, Texas for a debate ahead of the biggest day yet for Republicans: 1 March, when thirteen states were set to weigh in. The Super Tuesday contest was scheduled to award nearly six hundred delegates, the biggest chunk so far.
That’s why Rubio was set to watch the Nevada caucuses from Grand Rapids,
Michigan, which votes on 8 March. Kasich was set to be in Georgia. Cruz and Trump were scheduled to be in Nevada on caucus night, but the evening’s event was unlikely to upend a campaign that has already seen front runners fall, a billionaire appeal to struggling working-class voters, and former Iowa winners pack their bags and exit.
That’s why Trump holds the best hand here, and not just because his name is splashed across a golden tower on the famous Las Vegas Strip. Trump, better than most, understands that voters are looking for an outsider and a fighter, so it's good odds that Trump will add to his growing list of wins.
Rico says he can hardly wait for the pundits to weigh in on Trump's 'I love the poorly educated' comment...

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