Senator Ted Cruz is leaving the door open to reviving his campaign to challenge Donald Trump for the Republican presidential nomination.
Asked if he would consider getting back in the race should he somehow win Nebraska on Tuesday, the Texas senator laughed. “Well, I am not holding my breath. My assumption is that that will not happen,” he said.
“But listen, let’s be very clear: If there is a path to victory, we launched this campaign intending to win,” he told conservative radio host Glenn Beck. “The reason we suspended the race last week is with Indiana’s loss I didn’t see a viable path to victory. If that changes, we will certainly respond accordingly.”
Senator Cruz suspended his campaign a week ago after losing in Indiana. On a call Monday night, he told his delegate supporters he was not planning a convention challenge to Donald Trump, but he did ask them to be ready to fight over the GOP platform.
Ted Cruz spokesman Ron Nehring said the call had nothing to do with stopping Trump. He conceded that Trump will win the nomination but stressed that there will be other important business for the campaign to tend to in July, when a set of rules for the Republican Party and a platform will be adopted in addition to presidential and vice presidential candidate nominations.
“Many people, particularly activists and volunteers and people who are actively engaged in the Republican Party, look to that party platform to make sure that they're in the right place,” Nehring told CNN. “And that's why it's important, and Sen. Cruz as the leader of the conservative movement I think coming out of this convention will have an important voice in terms of how that platform shapes up and making sure that the conservative activists in the party have a platform that speaks to them.”
Senator Cruz also indicated that he may be unwilling to support Trump, who attacked his wife and suggested that his father was involved with President John F. Kennedy’s assassin. “This is a choice every voter is going to have to make, and I would note it’s not a choice we as voters have to make today,” he said. “The Republican convention isn’t for another two-and-a-half months. The election isn’t for another six months.”
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