Politics

Trump Cruz Using Nazi Tactics Win Delegates

Ruth Kamau  ·  February 19, 2016

Washington, DC – Back in February 2016, the Republican presidential primaries turned ugly as rivals Donald Trump and Ted Cruz traded barbs over how they were playing the delegate game. Reports surfaced that Trump’s campaign accused Cruz of sneaky maneuvers to lock up delegates, with some critics drawing extreme comparisons to historical strong-arm tactics. It was a wild moment in an already chaotic race, leaving voters scratching their heads at the lengths candidates would go.

The fuss started when Trump’s team claimed Cruz was manipulating party rules in states like Colorado and Louisiana to steal delegates outright. People on Trump’s side pointed to what they called “machine politics,” evoking images of old-school bossism that felt uncomfortably close to tactics from darker chapters in history. Cruz, for his part, fired back, insisting his strategies were just smart politics in a cutthroat contest. Neither side minced words, and the rhetoric got heated fast, with media outlets picking apart every move as the primaries barreled toward Super Tuesday.

As the accusations piled up, it wasn’t just about delegates; it felt like a broader fight over the soul of the GOP. Trump’s bombastic style clashed with Cruz’s more calculated approach, and this dustup highlighted how desperate things had become. I remember thinking at the time that comparing modern politics to Nazi methods was a step too far, but in the frenzy of campaign season, hyperbole ruled the day.

In the end, the drama didn’t derail either candidate much. Trump kept surging ahead, while Cruz held his ground in the delegate hunt. But the episode served as a reminder of how high the stakes were that year, with every vote and rule twist potentially tipping the balance in a race that would reshape American politics. It was messy, sure, but that’s how these stories often play out on the campaign trail.