Outsider campaigns seek inside track
Story highlights
- Cruz campaign has demonstrated better organization than Trump
- Sanders faces challenge with superdelegates
(CNN)Donald
Trump and Bernie Sanders are confronting the same paradox: the fate of
their insurgent campaigns built on scorn for the political establishment
rests on how well they play the inside game.
For
Trump, the challenge is shifting from a strategy of piling up state
primary wins to one that also takes into account states that award
delegates in a more intricate fashion. Trump's organizational weakness
in that type of contest was underscored Saturday when he was swept by
Ted Cruz in the Colorado Republican convention.
Sanders,
meanwhile, has to win not only more pledged delegates but also more
superdelegates -- party officials and other elites who can vote however
they choose -- if he wants to take the Democratic battle for the White
House to the convention floor.
Trump
is already making the case that the system is inherently unfair and is a
symptom of the insider politics practiced by distant elites that
disenfranchises grass-roots voters like those who have flocked to his
campaign.
"You see what's happening to me and Bernie Sanders," Trump said Sunday in Rochester, New York. "It's a corrupt deal going on."
The 2016 campaign's shift from a
simple hunt for primary wins is more than a sign that the electoral
calendar is running out and routes to the nomination for both parties
are beginning to narrow. It's proof that for all of its busted
conventional wisdom and broken political rules, the wild presidential
campaign is at a point where insurgent politics are no longer sufficient
to win.
"The nuts and bolts of
presidential politics is an archaic language and very few people
understand it. Outsiders need insiders to be successful," said
Republican political strategist Ford O'Connell. "If you want to crack
the Da Vinci code, you need insiders."
Trump is doing just that. Last week, he hired Paul Manafort, a master of insider politics, to run his convention strategy.
Still, Trump and Sanders start at a disadvantage in the inside game.
Cruz's organization
Cruz,
whose only real hope of heading the GOP ticket lies in a convention
fight, is rolling out a delegate hunting operation years in the
planning. Though he's built a political brand on being an outsider
himself, Cruz has demonstrated a savvy understanding of the hidden ways
of Washington and the mechanics of a presidential primary race.
The
Cruz campaign has recruited delegates in Arizona and sought delegates
won in Louisiana by Sen. Marco Rubio -- prompting a bewildered Trump,
who won the state, to threaten legal action. Cruz also secured all of
the final 13 delegates who were selected in Colorado this weekend.
The
strategy is designed to prepare the way for multiple rounds of
convention balloting when delegates awarded to Trump could be freed up
to migrate to another candidate. It prompted more sniping between the
campaigns on Sunday.
Manafort accused the Cruz campaign of "Gestapo tactics" and "not playing by the rules" in its efforts to wrangle delegates.
"He's threatening," Manafort said of Cruz on
NBC's "Meet the Press." "You go to these county conventions, and you
see the tactics, Gestapo tactics, the scorched-earth tactics."
Trump tweeted his frustration Sunday.
"I
win a state in votes and then get non-representative delegates because
they are offered all sorts of goodies by Cruz campaign. Bad system!"
He followed up with another tweet later in the day.
"How
is it possible that the people of the great State of Colorado never got
to vote in the Republican Primary?" he wrote. "Great anger - totally
unfair!"
Cruz campaign spokeswoman Catherine Frazier dismissed the complaints.
"More
sour grapes from Trump who continues to lash out in tantrums every time
he loses. We are winning because we've put in the hard work to build a
superior organization," she said in a statement.
Trump's
decision to hire Manafort, who helped quell the Ronald Reagan-inspired
delegate uprising against President Gerald Ford at the 1976 convention,
was a sign of evolution in his campaign.
"This
is an example of Donald Trump managing," Manafort said Friday on CNN's
"New Day." "Because the campaigns come in stages, he also understood
that there comes a time when winning isn't enough. But it's how you win
and how much you win. He recognized that this was the time."
New direction
It's unclear whether
the move will be enough to help Trump secure the 1,237 delegates he'll
need to win the nomination going into the GOP convention this summer.
But the new direction is being praised as a smart move, even by
Republicans strongly opposed to Trump.
"Paul
Manafort is a seasoned professional and he is a smart guy," Stuart
Stevens, senior strategist for Mitt Romney's 2012 GOP campaign, told CNN
on Friday. "This is make or break for Donald Trump. He has to get to
1,237. I think if he doesn't go to Cleveland with 1,237, it's doubtful
that he will be able to come out of there as the nominee of the party."
Part
of Manafort's job will be to forge links with local state party chiefs
and officials influential in populating delegate slates, and to ensure
that Trump is not outmaneuvered in the rules committee that will set out
the parameters of the convention.
"The
challenge that the Trump campaign faces right now is that Ted Cruz has
spent two years working every single one of those members, every single
state party chair," said Republican strategist Doug Heye. "The Trump
campaign is just getting to know those people."
Trump's
campaign confronts a challenge beyond Cruz's camp and the more
long-shot possibility of facing down a convention coup from Ohio Gov.
John Kasich, who is positioning himself as an alternative should both
his Republican rivals fail to corral a majority of delegates in a split
party.
Republican establishment
insiders, who in some cases failed to thwart Trump on rival campaigns,
are still trying to stop him, some with super PAC efforts targeting the
billionaire with millions of dollars in advertising.
These
efforts are also now increasingly turning to influence delegate slates,
said Tim Miller, a former senior Jeb Bush aide now working for the
anti-Trump Our Principles PAC.
"There
is a role we can play, whether it is directly speaking or directly
messaging to delegates or potential delegates in these states," Miller
said.
Sanders' liability
While
the Republican primary campaign has claimed much of the media coverage
so far this year, an insurgent versus establishment dynamic is playing
out in the Democratic primary race.
Sanders,
the self described democratic socialist, has always been a political
free spirit, caucusing with Democrats in the Senate as an independent
but inhabiting ground to left of the mainstream party.
That
leaves him with few insider credentials with the party establishment,
which could become a liability as he tries to lure superdelegates.
His outsider campaign has posed a much stronger than expected challenge to one of the most powerful names in American politics.
But
he faces an uphill climb to the nomination -- he would need to win 77%
of the remaining delegates at stake to win the nomination.
Clinton
is much further along than Trump and Sanders in the process of locking
up delegate support — especially among Democratic superdelegates — many
of whom have decades of stored up loyalty and connections with her
family.
Clinton lost in 2008 to
Barack Obama's outsider campaign that toppled her insider machine. Her
2016 campaign team has learned from its mistakes, paying far more
attention to delegate calculations and individual state electoral math
than she did earlier.
This has
meant that even when she has lost to Sanders, she has minimized the
deficit in delegates — as happened in Wisconsin last week when she lost
by 13 points but only collected 10 fewer delegates than her rival.
Sanders beat Clinton by more than 10 points in the Wyoming Democratic
caucuses on Saturday but they both walked away with seven delegates.
"The
Clinton campaign infrastructure that is in place has done a phenomenal
job of securing pledged superdelegates very early on in the process,"
said Tharon Johnson, a senior Democrat from Georgia, who was southern
regional director for Obama's 2012 re-election campaign. "They have a
very full, comprehensive, ground organization in states that matter the
most to close out the nomination."
Clinton
currently enjoys a lead of 1,304 to 1,075 pledged delegates over
Sanders. And she has also secured the endorsements of 486 super
delegates compared to 38 who have declared for the Vermont Senator,
according to CNN estimates.
The
Clinton campaign maintains that there is no realistic route for Sanders
to win the nomination. To do so, he would have to claim almost every
remaining nominating contest into June by large margins, in a way that
would ensure that neither he nor Clinton would approach the 2,383
delegates needed to win the nomination.
Then,
Sanders would have to pull off an intricate inside game to persuade
hundreds of superdelegates to desert Clinton and support him as the
party's standard bearer.
That's a
tall order for Sanders even if he and his allies insist the senator is
best positioned to be a Republican in the November general election.
"This
is what superdelegates have to grapple with, they want to win," Sanders
campaign manager Jeff Weaver said on CNN last week. "We are going to an
open convention. Everybody is talking about a Republican open
convention (but) the Democrats are going to an open convention."
No comments:
Post a Comment