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This Article is From Apr 16, 2016

Donald Trump Prepared To Cede Wyoming Delegate Contest

Donald Trump Prepared To Cede Wyoming Delegate Contest
Donald Trump's campaign made a conscious decision not to commit resources to Wyoming. (AFP file photo)
Cheyenne: Donald Trump's presidential campaign has all but thrown in the towel in Wyoming ahead of Saturday's Republican convention.

The billionaire businessman's campaign made a conscious decision not to commit resources to Wyoming, according to Alan Cobb, a senior Trump adviser.

Trump picked only up a single delegate in last month's Wyoming county conventions while rival Ted Cruz scored nine. There are 14 more delegates at stake at this weekend's state convention.

In a telephone interview with The Associated Press from the convention site in Casper, Cobb said Friday that he expects Cruz to sweep what remains of the 29 delegates up for grabs in the Wyoming convention.

"This process is favorable toward party-insider folks," Cobb said. "When you don't have a vote of the people, it just favors (Cruz)."

While Cruz' campaign has been working for months lining up support among Wyoming's Republican insiders, Trump's campaign has limited mobilization in the state, and the candidate has not spent any time campaigning there. Cruz is scheduled to attend Saturday's convention.

The state party's arcane system of allocating delegates through county meetings followed by the state convention doesn't favor the disorganized.

If Cruz performs as expected, Wyoming's result could mirror that of Colorado, where Cruz swept all 34 delegates earlier this month. Trump encouraged supporters to demonstrate against the Colorado party's presidential nominating process on Friday at the state capitol in Denver.

"The very insider, narrow pathways like Wyoming, they just don't work very well for us," Cobb said. "Campaigns make strategic choices on where to go and where to invest, and just given your process here, it just doesn't lend itself to our kind of campaign and candidate."

Sarah Palin had been scheduled to speak for Trump in Casper on Saturday but the 2008 Republican vice presidential nominee canceled her appearance on Thursday. Cobb said he may wind up giving Trump's address.

Even so, Cobb said he still sees Trump on track to win the 1,237 delegates required to secure the Republican nomination on the first ballot at the national convention this summer. "We've got the Northeast states," he said. "I think we'll do well in California, Oregon, Washington."

By contrast, the Cruz campaign in Wyoming has been well organized for months. Ed Buchanan, a former Wyoming House speaker, is state campaign chairman.
"Of course, we've been working at this since last fall, and really attempted to identify folks at the precinct level, and the caucus level and then at the county conventions, and that's why we had some success on March 12," Buchanan said Friday. "And so we've just continued that effort."

Buchanan said he sees Cruz as a natural fit for voters in Wyoming, a state where registered Republicans outnumber Democrats by roughly 140,000 to 41,000. Buchanan said people support Cruz because of his conservative values and the fact he's a fellow westerner.

Ogden Driskill, a Republican state senator from Devils Tower, was chosen as the party's only uncommitted delegate in the March 12 county conventions. He's trying to organize a slate of uncommitted delegates at the party convention with the hope the candidates would pay more attention to the state's concerns if they had to work to woo delegates ahead of the national convention. He said he expects Wyoming delegates ultimately to support Cruz.

On the Democratic side, Bernie Sanders met briefly with Pope Francis Saturday morning at the papal residence at the Vatican, saying it was a "real honor" to call on "one of the extraordinary figures" in the world.

The brief encounter came a day after Sanders addressed a Vatican conference dealing with his lifelong passions of economic and social justice.

The chancellor for the pontifical academy sponsoring the conference, Bishop Marcelo Sanchez Sorondo, said he invited Sanders because he was the only US presidential candidate who showed deep interest in the teachings of Francis.

The trip gave Sanders a moment on the world stage, putting him alongside priests, bishops, academics and two South American presidents at the Vatican conference.

Sanders has been at a disadvantage during his campaign against Clinton, President Barack Obama's former secretary of state, on issues of foreign policy. But Sanders was peppered with questions from academics and ecclesiastics during Friday's conference in a manner that might have been afforded a head of state.

The Vermont senator made the trip to Rome hours after Thursday night's Brooklyn debate with front-runner Hillary Clinton and said the opportunity to address the Vatican conference was too meaningful to pass up. The roughly 24-hour visit precedes the crucial New York primary on Tuesday.

Before returning to the United States and resuming his campaigning in New York, Sanders said he had the chance to tell the pope that "I was incredibly appreciative of the incredible role that he is playing in this planet in discussing issues about the need for an economy based on morality, not greed."

Clinton attended a campaign fundraiser on Friday night in San Francisco hosted by George and Amal Clooney at the home of a venture capitalist, as dozens of Sanders supporters protested nearby. The Clooneys were also opening their Los Angeles home Saturday night for a dinner with Clinton that starts at $33,400 per person.

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