Trump accuses Cruz of ‘fraud’, wants Iowa rematch
Presidential candidate Donald Trump has called for a new election in Iowa, accusing the Republican victor, Ted Cruz, of fraud.
He criticised Cruz for putting out a statement saying that a fellow candidate, retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, was quitting the race, and accused Cruz of lying to thousands of voters about Trump’s policies. Marco Rubio. The poll found that nationally, Trump’s support has fallen to 25 percent, while Cruz and Rubio are tied with 21 percent each.
A University of Massachusetts Lowell tracking poll, conducted daily, had Rubio jumping into New Hampshire’s No. 2 spot in Thursday’s release.
As the candidates barrel toward New Hampshire, which on Tuesday will hold the election’s first primary, early signs have shown Rubio to be climbing there after his Iowa performance.
Clinton asked New Hampshire voters to use their hearts and their heads when they vote Tuesday.
“For a guy known for making bombastic, off-the-wall speeches, Donald Trump’s Iowa speech was something genuinely new: a conventional concession speech”, Timothy B. Lee wrote on Vox.
“The Donald” has let loose at his rival Ted Cruz, who emerged victorious, this afternoon.
Cruz spokesman Rick Tyler told CNN on Wednesday that Cruz apologized personally to Carson for the mistake. And unlike Iowa, which morphed into a three-man race between Trump, Cruz and Sen.
Whether the results of the Iowa Caucuses give him a fresh start.
Democratic presidential candidates are fighting over who’s the true liberal candidate, as Republican candidates bicker over tactics used by the Cruz camp in Iowa. He quoted a Bible verse where Jesus taught that there are some people “who aren’t what they seem to be, who say one thing and do another”. Ohio Gov. John Kasich, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie all hope New Hampshire will breathe life into their flagging campaigns. Marco Rubio with 23.1 percent. I mean, do people come out? Two-thirds of likely Republican primary voters describe his second-place finish in Iowa as more of a “temporary setback” than a sign of serious trouble for his campaign.