His top aides spent the week gingerly courting Republican insiders at a seaside resort in Florida, but Republican US presidential hopeful Donald Trump was busy railing against them.
Trump’s foot-stomping has served as a rallying cry to boost voter turnout and allowed him to continue to appeal to voters who feel disenfranchised. The “rigged” system is also a convenient scapegoat, taking the blame for any future potential losses and lost delegates, instead of an outmaneuvered campaign.
“The system is all rigged,” Trump told supporters at a rally on Friday at the Delaware State Fairgrounds ahead of the Republican primary. “That’s why we have to win big. That’s why on Tuesday, everyone has to go out and vote.”
Trump has won more states than his rivals, yet his team has been badly outplayed by Republican US presidential hopeful Senator Ted Cruz in the intricate game of ensuring that supportive delegates make it to the Republican convention in July in Cleveland.
Pennsylvania, one of five states voting on Tuesday, has an especially confusing delegate system. While the winner of its primary will emerge with 17 delegates, the vast majority of delegates — 54 — are unbound and can vote for whomever they choose.
The ballot is to feature 162 potential delegates, but it is to offer no information about whom they support. That means voters who have not consulted with the campaigns about their rosters would be voting blind.
Trump has yet to specifically target Pennsylvania’s process, but his argument would only grow stronger if he were to win the majority of votes in the state — opinion surveys show him with a significant lead — yet emerge with fewer delegates than Cruz.
Trump has been relentless in his criticism of the delegate system, slamming party “bosses” and calling out the Republican National Committee (RNC) and RNC chairman Reince Priebus.
On Friday, Trump compared himself to a prize fighter competing in a rival’s territory.
“The fighters have a great expression. When you have a champ that goes into a big territory, but it’s unfriendly; it’s home of the other fighter, but the good ones go: ‘No, no, I’m not worried,”’ he said. “‘Because if I knock him out, there’s nothing the judges can do.’ Right? What we have to do is knock them out with the volume of our votes.”
Speaking to reporters earlier this week, senior Trump aide Paul Manafort brushed off the idea that the candidate’s rhetoric was making it more difficult to build bridges with party leaders.
Nonetheless, frustration with Trump’s attacks on the RNC and the integrity of the nomination process were widespread in Florida, even as Trump’s team was trying to make amends.
In a private meeting on Thursday with party officials, Manafort tried to assure them that Trump was on their side and prepared to fundraise for the party.
On the Democratic side on Friday, Democratic US presidential hopeful Senator Bernie Sanders sent mixed signals on whether he will persist in his pointed critique of frontrunner Hillary Rodham Clinton’s record as some Democrats urge the party to coalesce around the former secretary of state.
Sanders largely gave her a pass, except by implication, as he denounced the thinking behind the Iraq war, which she supported, and warned of the risks of pushing regime change, as he addressed and took questions from a crowd of some 2,000 in a gym, with hundreds more in an overflow room.
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