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The Federalist

The Wall Street Journal's Case For Kasich Makes No Sense

Most Republican voters dislike the frontrunner for their party鈥檚 nomination and he hasn鈥檛 won the majority of the vote in a single state, yet could be on path to victory because he has been running against a fractured GOP field. Now we are finally down to where that frontrunner has only one clear challenger, with the two of them having won 29 of the 31 states to date and having won 9 states apiece outside of the South.

Yet in Thursday鈥檚 lead editorial, the Wall Street Journal does its best to make the case for a three-person race rather than a two-person race. While trying to make the case for John Kasich, the Journal writes of challenger Ted Cruz and frontrunner Donald Trump,

Mr. Cruz鈥檚 problem is that it isn鈥檛 clear he can beat Mr. Trump one-on-one, especially in the Pacific coast and Northeast states still to be contested. The Texan鈥檚 victories have come in the South, the Plains states and low-turnout caucuses like Maine鈥檚. Mr. Cruz finished back in the pack in New England outside Maine, and the states coming up include Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Jersey, New York, Delaware and Maryland. Mr. Trump wins the nomination if he wins most of those states.

This is wrong on multiple counts. Cruz has won exactly no states in the South (only a New Yorker would say Texas or Oklahoma are part of the South). His lopsided victories in Idaho and Utah weren鈥檛 in Plains states (they are on the other side of the Rockies). If he finished 鈥渋n the back of the pack鈥� in New Hampshire鈥攄espite finishing third, ahead of Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio, and Chris Christie鈥攖hen so, presumably, did Kasich (who finished 20 points behind Trump and just 4 points ahead of Cruz).

Moreover, Trump cannot win the nomination on the basis of winning 鈥渕ost鈥� of the Northeastern states the Journal lists. In fact, if Trump were to add all of the delegates in those six states鈥擟onnecticut, Rhode Island, New Jersey, New York, Delaware, and Maryland鈥攖o his existing tally, he would still have only 986 delegates, or 79.7 percent of the 1,237 he needs for a majority.

Kasich Loses Big to Trump in His Supposedly Strong States

Indeed, of the 839 delegates to be awarded from states still to come, only 29 percent are from the six states the Journal lists. Whether Kasich would be a help or a hindrance in those Northeastern states, he would clearly be a hindrance in the states with the other 71 percent of delegates鈥攁nd that鈥檚 not a good tradeoff.

In truth, however, it is not even clear that Kasich would help in the Northeast. As noted, he lost to Trump by 20 points in New Hampshire. He lost to Trump by 31 points in Massachusetts. He lost to Cruz in the Maine caucuses. The only place he has posed any threat to Trump in the Northeast鈥攊ndeed, the only place where he has come close to winning outside of his home state of Ohio鈥攚as in Vermont, where he lost by 2 points.

But only about a third as many people voted in the tiny Vermont primary as in the Iowa or Utah caucuses. Outside of Vermont and Ohio, Kasich hasn鈥檛 come within ten points of the winner in any other state from coast to coast.

Michael Barone of Kasich鈥檚 prospects in one key Northeastern state: 鈥淗is boosters look to New York, which votes April 19. But its registered Republicans are less likely to be Ivy Leaguers liberal on cultural issues (they鈥檙e Democrats now) than Italian-American homeowners angry about high property taxes and corrupt local governments. Cruz might be competitive with Trump among such voters. Kasich would just split the vote and give Trump more delegates, as he did in Illinois.鈥�

One recent poll Kasich might be competitive in Pennsylvania, but more than likely his presence would just end up swinging that state to Trump as well. Kasich has already finished behind both Trump and Cruz in both Michigan and Illinois (losing in Illinois by 19 points to Trump and 11 points to Cruz), and Barone writes that, while 鈥渢he Philadelphia suburbs have lots of upscale voters, the only demographic among which Kasich has run well,鈥� the 鈥淧hilly suburbs cast only about one-fifth of Pennsylvania primary votes.鈥�

He adds, 鈥淚n Ohio, despite his local popularity, Kasich lost every county along the Pennsylvania and West Virginia borders. He鈥檚 likely to do worse against Trump in demographically and attitudinally similar western Pennsylvania, which casts as many votes as the Philly suburbs鈥�.鈥�

Kasich Swings States to Trump

Outside of the Northeast, the damage that Kasich would do is even more evident. His presence in the race has already pretty clearly swung North Carolina (a three-point Trump win in which Kasich got 13 percent of the vote) and Missouri (a 0.2-point Trump win in which Kasich got 10 percent of the vote) from the Cruz to the Trump column.

Likewise, recent Wisconsin polling Kasich is hurting Cruz there: 鈥淚n the GOP primary, Ohio Governor John Kasich finishes far behind Cruz (36%) and Trump (35%), with 19% of the vote. It appears that Kasich is pulling votes from Cruz as Kasich supporters find Cruz more favorable than Trump, 36% to 27%.鈥�

Most of the remaining states (and delegates) are west of Lake Michigan. In the 16 states west of Lake Michigan that have been contested so far, Cruz has beaten Trump in eight and has beaten Kasich by double-digits in all 16. (Indeed, Cruz has beaten Kasich by double-digits in nine of the other fifteen states as well.) Kasich鈥檚 continued presence in those states would merely help Trump.

In California, which is nearly twice as big as any other prize left on the board, the RealClearPolitics average of recent polling that Trump is on course to claim a clear plurality of the vote, and hence almost all of the state鈥檚 172 delegates, despite having the support of only about one-third of the voters. It would be tough, on the other hand, for Trump to get 50 percent of the vote there in a one-on-one race against Cruz, especially given that California is a closed primary, in which only Republicans can vote.

Barone writes of the Golden State, 鈥淲hat happens there if the anti-Trump vote is split can be seen by looking back to 2008, when California voted early. John McCain won statewide with 42 percent, with the more conservative Mitt Romney and Mike Huckabee getting 35 and 12 percent. But most California delegates are chosen winner-take-all by congressional district, and with split opposition McCain carried 48 of the 53 districts and thus won 155 of 170 delegates.鈥�

The Journal's final argument is that polls suggest Kasich would stand a better chance against Hillary Clinton than Cruz would. That is sort of like arguing that a team that didn鈥檛 make the playoffs would match up better with a team in the World Series than the team that鈥檚 already there. It may be true, but it鈥檚 irrelevant.

Kasich has lost all 30 states that don鈥檛 start and end in 鈥渙,鈥� and he鈥檚 not going to be the GOP nominee. After Republican voters have chosen an outsider candidate in all but two states, can the Journal really believe that an insider candidate who wins at the convention wouldn鈥檛 lose the support of a massive swath of the party, and hence lose the general election? (Besides, beat .)

The question is not whether Kasich could or couldn鈥檛 win in November. The question is whether his continued presence this spring would hand the Republican nomination to Trump. The evidence suggests that it would.