Share from the web
here. To get FOX News First in your inbox every day sign upÂ
here.
FOX News First: March 30
By Chris StirewaltBuzz Cut: ·      Â
GOP accelerates race to splitsville ·      Â
Power Play: Can Cruz and Kasich deconflict their campaigns? ·      Â
Hillary out with first ad dumping on Trump ·      Â
Second judge allows further digging into emails ·      Â
Ah, the glamor of showbiz Â
GOP ACCELERATES RACE TO SPLITSVILLE Itâs not surprising by now that the mutual-support pact among current and former Republican presidential nominees
has broken down. After all, if you have to come up with a pledge to begin with, youâve got a problem.
But itâs worth remembering how they got here.
When this all began, the concern among Republicans was that
Donald Trump would make good on his threat to mount a third-party run and play general-election spoiler after he was inevitably defeated in the primaries.
Ha!
Now, with Trump teetering on the threshold of inevitably himself, many of his once, current and would-be future rivals have pulled back from their previously throaty pledges to support the eventual nominee.
The last two anti-Trumps standing, Sen.
Ted Cruz and Gov.
John Kasich, decisively dodged the question at a CNN town hall on Tuesday night. Kasich used conditional terms, pinning his reticence on Trumpâs conduct and candidacy, saying he wouldnât support someone who was âreally hurting the country, and diving the country.â Cruz reverted to his prior objections to supporting a candidate who had attacked his wife,
Heidi, but ultimately waved off the question by promising to defeat Trump.
Trump, however, was not equivocal, saying he would not honor the pledge he signed with considerable fanfare back in September because he has âbeen treated very unfairly" by the Republican Party. Trump was presumably alluding to rules that might still deny him the nomination even if he has the most delegates heading into the partyâs convention.
As was observed at the time Trump and others signed the pledge, it was not a contract enforceable by any court, but rather an agreement between gentlemen and one lady that they would unite when the primary was over. So itâs not like the RNC can sue Trump if he bolts the party post-convention.
In that sense, Trumpâs breach and the threatened breaches of his rivals means nothing. The Republicans were already hopelessly divided and embittered before Tuesday night, rent by a struggle over Trumpâs fitness as a nominee and president.
But make no mistake: This is a considerable escalation and there will be consequences of Trumpâs departure from the pact.
Trumpâs tacit threat of working to ensure Republican defeat if he is denied the partyâs nomination is now explicit. That will further embolden
those who say they would rather lose in the fall than support Trump.
Weâve heard suggestions in every election cycle that if the party doesnât listen to the anguished cries of the supporters of trailing candidates that âthe baseâ will stay home in the fall. But weâve never heard it from the frontrunner and certainly moving into the realm of overt threats is something weâve not seen in the modern era.
It is nearly an admission of inevitable defeat that both sides in the dispute vow to send the party to defeat against presumptive Democratic nominee
Hillary Clinton if their demands are not met. There are certainly enough voters in both camps to make good on their promises.
And if eventual defeat is becoming a foregone conclusion, then the frame of the race has changed massively. Hardliners on both sides of the Trump divide will feel even more liberated to press their cases.
With his revocation, Trump has dropped more napalm on the already incinerated GOP.
With no conclusive end in sight for the Republican nominating process before June at the soonest and each week finding a lower circle of Hell in which the race can reside, it seems increasingly likely that the party will be in full rupture even before what promises to be a heinous convention.
Trump goes after reporter who brought assault charges against his campaign manager - The Hill: âDonald Trump on Tuesday argued that his campaign manager acted appropriately by getting physically involved when a reporter approached him earlier this month. âShe shouldnât have been touching me,â he said during a CNN town hall in Milwaukee, discussing former Breitbart journalist
Michelle Fields. âShe had a pen in her hand,â Trump told moderator Anderson Cooper. âIt could have been a knife. It might have been dangerous.â Trump said he would not punish
Corey Lewandowski because his top aide did nothing wrong during the encounter on March 12 in Jupiter, Fla. âI would have loved to have fired him, but I stick up for people when they are unjustly accused,â he said of his campaign manager.â
Wait. Never mind - Pressed by a town hall questioner on what he saw as the three most important functions of the federal government, Donald Trump listed national security, education and health care, later including housing as another key role. When it was pointed out that the latter items were widely rejected as federal functions by conservatives, Trump backtracked.
Cruz says politicians shouldnât âwear their faith on their sleeveâ - CBS News: âEarly in his presidential campaign, Ted Cruz ran on a strategy of winning the support of evangelical conservatives, but the GOP candidate on Tuesday said he doesn't want people to vote for him because of his faithâ¦Cruz said in a Milwaukee, Wisconsin town hall televised by CNN⦠âIâm a Christian, Iâm not going to hide that... but I also think those in politics have an obligation not to wear their faith on their sleeve.ââ
Power Play: Can Cruz and Kasich deconflict their campaigns? - Early signs show there may be an alliance forming between John Kasich and Ted Cruz to stop Donald Trump from obtaining the nomination outright, but at a sacrifice to both. Chris Stirewalt explains the possible scenarios from this alliance in just 60 seconds.
WATCH HERE.
[
GOP delegate count: Trump 736; Cruz 463; Kasich 143 (1,237 needed to win)]
WITH YOUR SECOND CUP OF COFFEE⦠The cover art of The Beatlesâ â
Sgt. Pepperâs Lonely Hearts Club Bandâ is iconic to say the least â and perhaps nearly as influential as the bandâs eight album itself. It was on this day in 1967 that prior to a late-night recording session for the album, the four members of the group gathered in a London studio in their psychedelic martial marching band outfits for the photo shoot that would result in the cover. The group stood before 61 images and mannequins of famous figures, ranging from comedian
W.C. Fields to Satanist
Alistair Crowley, providing decades of great fodder for obsessive fansâ conspiracy theories. The Beatles Bible
tells the story of the famous shoot: âThe soon-to-be-famous collage, designed by
Peter Blake and his wife
Jann Haworth, had been assembled in the studio during the preceding eight daysâ¦
Jesus and
Hitler were among
John Lennonâs choices, but they were left off the final list.â
Got aÂ
TIPÂ from theÂ
RIGHTÂ or theÂ
LEFT? EmailÂ
FoxNewsFirst@FOXNEWS.COMPOLL CHECK
Real Clear Politics Averages
National GOP nomination: Trump 42.3 percent; Cruz 31.7 percent; Kasich 19.2 percent
National Dem nomination: Clinton 51.3 percent; Sanders 42.3 percent
General Election:Â Clinton vs. Trump: Clinton +11.2 points
Generic Congressional Vote: Democrats +1
HILLARY OUT WITH FIRST AD DUMPING ON TRUMP Making good on a promise to knock
Donald Trump early on in the campaign cycle, Democratic frontrunner
Hillary Clinton is out with an
ad in New York today that frames her candidacy as the best way to defeat Trump.
Though the spot is aimed at Democratic voters in the Empire Stateâs April 19 primary, thereâs no reference to her intramural rival and native New Yorker Sen.
Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. Instead it juxtaposes images of happy, diverse New Yorkers with images from Trumpâs campaign, including a slo-mo video of a protester being sucker punched at a rally for the Republican frontrunner. The spot also features a peek at a sign from what appears to be a Trump construction project reading: âTrump: coming 2016.â
âSo when some say we can solve Americaâs problems by building walls, banning people based on their religion, and turning against each other⦠Well, this is New York â¦And we know better,â Clinton narrates.
The ad comes off the heels of a Clinton PAC spokesman saying that the group plans to start
hitting Trump early after seeing the failed strategies of his Republican competitors this cycle.
Second judge allows further digging into emails - Fox News: âA second federal judge has ruled that a conservative group should be allowed to dig deeper in its quest for emails sent by former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, in a decision Tuesday that could allow the group to seek more documents and depositions from current and former State Department officials. U.S. District Court Judge
Royce C. Lamberthâs order grants limited discovery to Judicial Watch, which sued in 2014 in order to gain access to records relating to the drafting of the talking points given to then-Ambassador
Susan Rice in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2012 attacks on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi.â
[Liberal WaPo columnist
Ruth Marcus explains how Hillary Clinton beating the rap on mishandling state secrets could leave a bad taste in votersâ mouths.]
Bernie on home turf in Madison - Politico: âWhen Bernie Sanders takes the stage at a town hall in Madison on Wednesday, itâll seem like a homecoming of sorts. Outside of his home state of Vermont, there are few places more familiar with Sanders â or more enamored of him â than Wisconsinâs state capital. For years, heâs been a regular headliner at the big annual Wisconsin progressive festival known as Fighting Bob Fest, where he's typically met with raucous applause. In July, 10,000 screaming fans packed Madisonâs Veterans Memorial Coliseum to greet his appearance as a presidential candidate -- a moment the Sanders campaign views as a turning point in his bid for the Democratic nomination, a sign of his transformation into a serious contender.â
Makes late pitch to woo superdeleagtes - Fox News: Bernie Sandersâ campaign, buoyed by recent victories, is mounting a late-stage bid to court so-called superdelegates and wrangle just enough of the influential party insiders to close the gap with Hillary Clinton heading into the Democratsâ presidential convention. Like essentially every other Sanders strategy at this point, itâs an uphill and longshot play.
[
Dem delegate count: Clinton 1712; Sanders 1004 (2,383 needed to win)]
THE GLAMOR OF SHOWBIZKEYC: âThis town in Faribault County [Minnesota] is often the butt of many jokes. But they may soon have some national recognitionâ¦When you grow up in Kiester, youâve probably been cracking backside jokes since you were bornâ¦So when Preparation H, a medicine for hemorrhoids, floated the idea for filming a commercial here, the townspeople reacted with the same sense of humor theyâve kept for generationsâ¦Preparation H approached the City Council to see if they could film a commercial there. The city said yes, but the project is on hold as Preparation H hasnât confirmed the details yet. Passer says, âIâm fine with it. It puts us on the mapââ¦[E]ven though this ad may bring them notoriety, the people of Kiester say they are proud of their small townâ¦Kiester was named for a judge from Blue Earth,
Jacob Kiester.â
Chris Stirewalt is digital politics editor for Fox News. Want FOX News First in your inbox every day? Sign upÂ
here. Â
Manage Subscriptions | Unsubscribe | Privacy Policy ©2016 Fox News Network, LLC. All Rights Reserved. |