DONALD TRUMP FORCES TED CRUZ TO REWRITE HIS PLAYBOOK.
WHITEFIELD, N.H. — Ted Cruz
did not have to say a cross word about Scott Walker. Rick Perry and
Bobby Jindal faded on their own. And when Ben Carson briefly rocketed to
the top of the Iowa polls, Mr. Cruz and his team stayed cool, confident
that the neurosurgeon’s support would wither.
But after months of assiduously following his playbook, with expected rivals for evangelical and Tea Party support exiting the race or languishing in the polls, Mr. Cruz is being forced to confront the election season’s great mystery:
How do you solve a problem like Donald Trump?
For
days, Mr. Cruz — convinced, at last, that Mr. Trump will not tire from
throwing punches — has been testing several strategies in succession.
True to form, when dealing with Mr. Trump, the path has been
complicated.
During a long bus tour of Iowa, Mr. Cruz noted that he lacked a plane
with his name on it — a barely veiled effort to cast Mr. Trump as
anathema to the “Iowa way” of retail campaigning. But then the state’s
six-term Republican governor, Terry Branstad — who preaches to
presidential candidates the importance of visiting all of Iowa’s 99
counties — urged Mr. Cruz’s defeat.
Mr.
Cruz has described Mr. Trump as “someone who’s a dealmaker, who will
capitulate” to the Washington establishment. On Wednesday in Hollis,
N.H., he said insiders were “abandoning Marco Rubio” to support Mr.
Trump because he, unlike Mr. Cruz, would not interfere with their “gravy
train.” But the establishment label has shown few immediate signs of
sticking to a rival better known for business threats, lawsuits and a
go-it-alone style than for seeking consensus.
Most
pointedly, Mr. Cruz has detailed Mr. Trump’s long history of liberal
positions and contributions to Democratic boogeymen, from the Clintons
to Mayor Rahm Emanuel of Chicago. But this line of attack and Mr. Cruz’s
broader case that conservatives are coalescing around him were
undercut, at least briefly, by Sarah Palin’s endorsement of Mr. Trump on Tuesday.
“Even today, the G.O.P.
machine, they’re attacking their own front-runner,” Mrs. Palin, the
running mate of John McCain in 2008, said alongside Mr. Trump on
Wednesday in Tulsa, Okla., adding: “Not every conservative has had the
guts to talk about the real issues.”
It
would be difficult to suggest that a figure so ridiculed by the
political class as Mrs. Palin is part of the “Washington cartel” that
Mr. Cruz inveighs against. And he has not tried.
This
was not the campaign Mr. Cruz expected. Since his 2012 run for the
Senate in Texas and through his fights in Washington, Mr. Cruz has
portrayed himself as an uncompromising conservative and his opponents as
enablers of a corrupt establishment.
But
that neat, white hat/black hat construct has been scrambled by the rise
of Mr. Trump, a candidate willing to go even further outside the
traditional bounds of political conduct.
Notably,
Mr. Cruz’s aides do not appear so unnerved by Mr. Trump that they feel
compelled to run commercials attacking him, even in Iowa, where Mr.
Trump has pulled even with Mr. Cruz in the polls. Senior aides to Mr.
Cruz said Wednesday that they had no immediate plans to go after Mr.
Trump on television.
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