Corrupt Colorado Republicans Responsible For Stealing CO Election Are Cruz Delegates

Corrupt Colorado Republicans Responsible for Stealing CO Election Are Cruz Delegates

Corrupt Colorado Republicans Responsible for Stealing CO Election Are Cruz Delegates

The very same corrupt Colorado Republicans who were responsible for stealing the CO primary election and delegates from Trump are in fact Cruz delegates and supporters.

It was never a mystery as to why the corrupt GOP assholes started playing their dirty tricks in Colorado and all over America. They knew that Donald Trump would have won the Colorado primary and would have received all of the CO delegates, so they scrapped the CO primary elections to stop Trump from winning the delegates, and the GOP nomination for president.

This is why I am no longer a Republican, and will never again vote for a Republican establishment candidate. Instead, I will be voting for the people I know have conservative beliefs in-line with my own, and will work everyday to shine light on the corrupt Republican Party, as well as the criminal organization known as the Democrat party.

Social media posts, along with Cruz’s campaign website, reveal that Sen. Ted Cruz supporters in the Colorado Republican Party were responsible for crushing an effort to give Colorado the ability to vote in a state primary.

In May of 2015, four Colorado Senate Republicans killed an initiative “to create a presidential primary in 2016,” reported the Denver Post. “Under the bill, Colorado would have held a presidential primary in March that ran parallel with the state’s complicated caucus system… when it came before the Senate Appropriations Committee, four Republicans voted to kill the bill with three Democrats supporting it.”

The four Republicans who voted against the initiative were Sen. Kevin Grantham, Sen. Kent Lambert, Sen. Laura Woods, and Sen. Jerry Sonnenberg.

On Cruz’s campaign website, Sens. Woods, Grantham, and Lambert are all listed as Cruz supporters and as declared members of Cruz’s “Colorado Leadership team.”

“I am honored to have the support of so many courageous conservatives in Colorado,” Cruz said about his so-called leadership team in early April. “With our incredible team we are in a very strong position for this weekend’s assemblies in Colorado.”

Sen. Grantham is even an official Cruz delegate and Sen. Lambert is an alternate Cruz delegate.

At the time, the editors of the Denver Post seemed perplexed by Grantham’s decision not to support the primary election initiative. In a May 2015 editorial titled, “Colorado GOP flubs chance for 2016 presidential primary,” the editors write: “What? Grantham was a sponsor of the bill. If he thought the bill made enough sense to put his name on it, why wouldn’t he think it should be passed out of committee?”

The editors go on to suggest that Party leaders may have had “other agendas that remain undisclosed” for rejecting a primary election of the people. The editors write: an “opportunity to move Colorado out of its antiquated presidential caucuses has been lost through miscommunication, timidity or, perhaps, because of other agendas that remain undisclosed.” They continue, “The caucuses guarantee lackluster voter participation and the disproportionate influence of activists on both ends of the political spectrum who are not representative of the parties’ mainstream. Some romanticize the caucus system as the purest form of grass-roots democracy, but that’s only accurate if your idea of democracy involves excruciatingly low turnout — by design.”

Following Cruz’s “voterless victory,” the state senators who had killed the primary election initiative seemed effusive.

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