Ted Cruz sees path to White House running through the South

LITTLE ROCK, Arkansas (AP) — Ted Cruz sees his way to the White House, and it runs between the hedges, through waters patrolled by the “Volunteer Navy” and a spot on the Mississippi River nicknamed Death Valley.

Confused? Not if you’re one of the voters the Texas senator is counting on to carry him to the Republican presidential nomination.

They’ll know that’s all part of college football lore in the Southeastern Conference, whose make-up roughly matches the states that will hold primaries next March — right after the kickoff contests in the four early voting states.

“The role of Arkansas and the other states throughout the SEC is to make sure the next Republican nominee for president is a real and genuine conservative,” Cruz told backers this week in Little Rock.

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Cruz assures his supporters he is “all in” on the early states, which include South Carolina — an SEC state that’s accustomed to its prominent role in picking the president. But the “SEC primary” is a new phenomenon, with Alabama, Tennessee, Arkansas and others moving up their contests to join Georgia for a Southern-tinged Super Tuesday on March 1.

Louisiana and Mississippi host primaries the following week.

The tight turnaround, Cruz said in an interview this week, will make it impossible for second-tier candidates to focus exclusively on Iowa or New Hampshire with hopes that an “unexpected victory” can translate into national momentum.

“There’s so little time … to raise money, no time to build infrastructure … no time to energize the grassroots,” he said. “That’s why our strategy is very deliberately playing the long game.”

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The Southern stretch is unlikely to put any candidate over the top, since the Republican Party requires that delegates selected in contests held before March 15 be split proportionally among leading vote-getters. Only afterward can a state party opt to award all of its delegates to the top vote-getter.

Cruz certainly has competition. Mike Huckabee and Rick Santorum won Southern primaries in their previous White House bids, and retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson and businessman Donald Trump boast notable followings. And Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal is from Baton Rouge — the home of Louisiana State.

But Cruz and his aides argue the early March primaries will cull the field ahead of the winner-take-all states, and a strong performance there could pit Cruz as conservative standard-bearer against one or two establishment favorites — defined by the Cruz camp as Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio and Scott Walker.

And so Cruz spent his week following the first GOP debate making that pitch at more than a dozen stops on a multi-state bus tour through the South, where he quoted scripture, asked supporters to pray for him and delighted big crowds with his usual broadsides against President Barack Obama, Democratic 2016 favorite Hillary Rodham Clinton and the federal government in general.

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“There’s no doubt it’s a total package,” said Arkansas state Rep. Bob Ballinger, a Cruz supporter. “He’s also a fiscal conservative. He also just understands the people and is willing to vote and work for the people, which is what excites me about him.”

Cruz started his tour in South Carolina and concluded Thursday in Oklahoma, talking college football and tailoring his rallies to local culture: “Sweet Tea with Sen. Cruz” in Memphis and a “Boots and BBQ” lunch in Oklahoma City.

“He’s down-the-line everything we stand for, and he’s passionate about it,” said 84-year-old Mary Lou McCoy of Jacksonville, Arkansas. Her husband, 87-year-old Lowell McCoy, stood by in a T-shirt that read: “liberalism: moochers electing leeches to steal from producers.”

The first-term senator, who built his national profile as a tea party favorite in his 2012 election and subsequent role in partially shuttering the federal government the following year, fills his rallies with humorous takedowns of Obama and Clinton and even GOP leaders.

He takes aim at 2012 Republican nominee Mitt Romney, who publicly chided Cruz for hammering Obama as a “state-sponsor of radical Islamic terrorism” because of the administration’s nuclear deal with Iran.

“If we nominate Democrat-lite, we will lose again,” Cruz said, a line that drew approval from voters at every stop.

Associated Press writer Andrew DeMillo contributed to this report.