"Ted Cruz is mathematically out of winning the race," Trump tweeted on Wednesday.
Republican
presidential candidates are making an intense push to curry favor with
party leaders whose support could prove crucial as the nomination fight
enters a critical phase.
Front-runner Donald Trump sent envoys and Ted Cruz and John Kasich
appeared at a Republican National Committee meeting on Wednesday at an
oceanside resort in Florida where elected party leaders from across the
country are holding three days of talks focused mostly on their upcoming
presidential convention in Cleveland.
All three
contenders are making the case to the RNC members, some of whom are
delegates to the Republican National Convention that will choose the
nominee, that they have the best chance to emerge as the victor and win
the Nov. 8 election.
The meeting comes after
Trump, 69, regained the momentum in the Republican race after his
crushing defeat of Kasich and Cruz in Tuesday's New York primary. The
victory boosted Trump's delegate tally to 845, while Cruz has 559 and
Kasich 147, according to the Associated Press.
Republican delegate totals include unbound delegates who are free to support the candidate of their choice.
To
become the nominee, a candidate needs 1,237 delegates. Cruz, 45, a U.S.
senator from Texas, and Kasich, 63, the Ohio governor, are trying to
prevent Trump from winning the nomination outright so they can force a
contested convention.
"Ted Cruz is mathematically out of winning the race," Trump tweeted on Wednesday.
But Cruz told a news conference: "What is clear today is that we are headed toward a contested convention."
"Nobody is able to reach 1,237. I'm not going to reach 1,237, and Donald Trump is not going to reach 1,237," said Cruz, who added he had the ability to unite the Republican Party after a bitter nomination battle.
Kasich said opinion polls showed he was the only Republican candidate who could defeat Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton.
"My message to the delegates is that I can win," Kasich told reporters on Wednesday night "It's reflected in every poll."
Tensions
between Kasich and Cruz erupted at the meeting, as Cruz complained
Kasich's insistence on remaining in the race despite having won only
Ohio's Republican primary meant he was trying to be a spoiler and end up
as Trump's vice president.
"He's saying if I can't mathematically win the nomination I should get out," Kasich shot back. "He can't mathematically win. What's good for the goose is good for the gander."
TRUMP OUTREACH
Trump's
representatives are doing outreach with RNC members who have bristled
at Trump's repeated attacks on popular Chairman Reince Priebus and his
complaints that the system of awarding delegate in some states is
corrupt.
Rick Wiley, his national political
director, was wooing delegations from the five states - Pennsylvania,
Maryland, Delaware, Connecticut and Rhode Island - that will hold
nominating contests next Tuesday.
The RNC's rules
committee is to meet on Thursday but is not expected to make any
recommendations on rules changes governing the July 18-21 convention.
Some
anti-Trump forces, alarmed by the New York billionaire's comments on
immigration, Muslims and trade, would like to change the rules in a way
to make it easier for Cruz, Kasich or an establishment candidate to
defeat Trump for the nomination.
But Priebus has
said any decisions should be left up to the rules committee that
actually governs the convention. Members of that committee have not even
been selected yet and they will meet the week before the convention.
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