Painstaking organization and in-person campaigning paid off again for Senator Ted Cruz on Saturday as he nailed down all 14 delegates up for grabs at the Republican Party convention in Wyoming. The result leaves businessman Donald Trump facing yet another loss in a string of defeats in Western states.
Saturday’s sweep for Cruz follows his victory last month in Wyoming’s county conventions, when he scored nine of 12 available delegates.
Trump and Senator Marco Rubio each won one delegate last month in those conventions while one remained undecided.
Trump still leads the overall delegate race. The Associated Press delegate count: Trump, 744; Cruz, 559; and Kasich, 144. Needed to win: 1,237.
Cruz was the only candidate to address the convention in Casper on Saturday, promising to end what he called US President Barack Obama’s “war on coal” if he is elected. Wyoming is the nation’s leading coal-producing state.
Trump largely bypassed the state.
In a telephone interview on Saturday on Fox and Friends, he said: “I don’t want to waste millions of dollars going out to Wyoming many months before to wine and dine and to essentially pay off these people, because a lot of it’s a payoff, you understand that?”
Trump’s defeat in Wyoming follows his shutout earlier this month in Colorado, where he failed to pick up a single delegate of the 34 in play. He has urged his supporters to protest the results to state officials in that state.
Campaigning in New York on Saturday, Trump said: “I guess I’m complaining ‘cause it’s not fair to the people.”
In Wyoming and Colorado, “the people never got a chance to vote,” he said.
Cruz, in an interview after his speech in Casper, said Trump’s decision not to campaign in Wyoming is telling.
“The reason he decided not to show up is he recognized he couldn’t win, he couldn’t earn the support of conservatives in Wyoming,” the Texas senator said.
Cruz has benefited from a deep, grassroots campaign effort in Wyoming, where the state GOP machine has detailed rules for the delegate selection process. Ed Buchanan, a former Wyoming House speaker, has served as chairman of the Cruz campaign.
“It’s just great to have the support of the Wyoming voters,” Buchanan said after the delegate selection was announced. “They share Ted Cruz’s conservation principles, and that’s why we’re successful today.”
Clara Powers of Wheatland spoke for Trump on Saturday. She told the crowd she has three grandchildren.
“I do not want any of them working with next-generation science,” Powers said. “I do not want my grandchildren to believe in evolution. I do not want my grandchildren thinking that global warming is more important than our national security.”
On the issue of coal, Wyoming has seen hundreds of coal industry layoffs in recent months as several of the nation’s largest coal companies have filed for federal bankruptcy protections.
Calling America, “the Saudi Arabia of coal,” Cruz promised in his speech to roll back federal regulations he says hamper coal production. The Obama administration recently imposed a moratorium on new coal leases.
Wyoming and other states, meanwhile, have mounted legal challenges in recent years to US Environmental Protection Agency regulations tightening emission limits on coal-fired power plants.
“[Democratic presidential hopeful] Hillary [Rodham] Clinton promises that if she’s elected, she’s going to finish the task and bankrupt anyone associated with coal,” Cruz said. “I give you my word right now, we are going to lift the federal regulators back, we are going to end the war on coal.”
Cruz told the AP that he’s “not remotely” concerned that rolling back federal restrictions on coal could contribute to an increase in global warming.
“The war on coal is driven by an ideological extremism on the part of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton and today’s modern Democratic Party,” he said.
On other issues, Cruz drew applause for promising to protect gun rights and turn federal lands in the West to the states.
Cruz told the crowd he was “pretty sure, here in Wyoming, y’all define gun control the same way we do in Texas — and that is hitting what you’re aiming at.”
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