Here's why Donald Trump keeps talking about suing Ted Cruz
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Is Donald Trump really going to sue Ted Cruz? He鈥檚 been threatening such a drastic step for days, and he talked about it again during a Tuesday morning appearance on ABC鈥檚 鈥.鈥
鈥淚鈥檓 thinking about it very seriously,鈥 The Donald told ABC鈥檚 George Stephanopoulos. 鈥淚鈥檝e never dealt with anybody who lies like him.鈥
Mr. Trump charged that during the Iowa caucuses Senator Cruz's campaign passed along false rumors that Ben Carson had dropped out of the race. He also said that Cruz workers have sent out mailers which claim (falsely) that the recipient is in danger of a 鈥渧oter violation.鈥
鈥淚 think he鈥檚 a very unstable person,鈥 Trump said of Cruz.
Look, it鈥檚 certainly possible Trump would resort to the legal system to address these perceived offenses on the part of a rival. He has sued many people and organizations in his long business career. He sued his ex-wife Ivana in 1992 for talking about their relationship too much, among other things.
It鈥檚 the very filing of suits, and not their legal outcome, that may motivate some of this Trumpian litigiousness. They are a means of registering his opinion and forcing the other side to respond.
鈥淗e sues, most of all, to make headlines and to reinforce the notion that he is powerful,鈥 wrote in an overview of his lawsuits last July.
But in this case the threats alone may be the thing. Trump likely has some particular political goals in mind that he might achieve by just talking about lawsuits.
One is to keep his closest opponent off balance. Cruz is running second to Trump in South Carolina, according to polls. South Carolina holds its GOP primary this Saturday. And the Cruz campaign is playing it tough in the Palmetto State, putting up ads that brand Trump a fake Republican who takes the houses of the elderly by eminent domain and might appoint liberals to the Supreme Court, to boot.
According to Cruz, Trump is just using heated rhetoric to try and distract voters and the media from the substance of his actions.
鈥淵ou cannot simply scream 鈥榣iar鈥 when someone points out your actual positions,鈥 .
Trump鈥檚 secondary goal may be to keep the Republican establishment as a whole off balance. He鈥檚 laying groundwork for complaining the Republican National Committee is not playing fair with him, as they promised, and thus he鈥檚 no longer bound by his pledge to refrain from a third party presidential bid.
鈥淭he RNC better get its act together because you know, I signed a pledge, but the pledge isn鈥檛 being honored by them,鈥 Trump said Monday during a South Carolina campaign rally.
Trump鈥檚 talked a lot about that pledge, and the RNC鈥檚 alleged perfidy, in recent days. He鈥檚 complained that the audience in the most recent GOP debate was purposely stacked against him, for instance.
His goal in this may not be paving the way for an actual bolt from the party so much as establishing a narrative about why he lost 鈥 if he loses, which is far from a sure thing. That鈥檚 what some right-leaning pundits suspect, in any case.
鈥淭rump鈥檚 image depends on him being seen as the consummate winner; if he loses to Cruz, he鈥檒l need to explain how that possibly could have happened. The only tolerable excuse is that he was cheated,鈥 .
This might also set the stage for a Trump refusal to endorse any non-Trump GOP nominee 鈥 something that could be almost as damaging to Republican hopes as a third party bid by The Donald.