Monday’s Talking Points – March 21, 2016

Good Monday morning from Salt Lake City. Today is the 81st day of the year. There are 285 days left in 2016

Obama visits Cuba. Presidential candidates campaign in Utah. Sanders raises more money than Clinton in February.

The clock:

Ten talking points for Monday:

  1. President Barack Obama makes a historic visit to Cuba [CNN, Reuters].
  2. Republican Donald Trump says party rules requiring a candidate to win a majority of delegates to capture the party nomination outright are “unfair,” claiming he should be given the nomination if he has the most delegates [New York Times].
  3. Bernie Sanders raised a lot more money than Hillary Clinton in February [Politico].
  4. Presidential candidates were crawling all over Utah this past weekend:
    • Democrat Bernie Sanders spoke to an estimated crowd of 14,000 on Friday afternoon [Tribune, Deseret News]. Sanders will hold another rally, and talk about foreign policy in Salt Lake City on Monday [Tribune].
    • Republican Donald Trump spoke at a smaller rally in Salt Lake City on Friday, where he took a shot at Mitt Romney’s Mormon faith [Tribune, Deseret News].
    •  Republican John Kasich tells crowds he’s the only candidate who can beat Hillary Clinton in November [Tribune, Deseret News].
    • Republican Ted Cruz told supporters in Utah he would consider nominating Sen. Mike Lee for the Supreme Court [Tribune, Deseret News].
  5. Donald Trump could get shut out of the delegate count in Utah according to a new survey showing Cruz with a big lead among Utah caucus-goers [Utah PolicyTribune]. 
  6. Another study shows Donald Trump might lose to either Sanders or Hillary Clinton in Utah if he’s the nominee [Deseret News].
  7. Trump supporters and protesters clash outside of his rally on Friday night [Deseret News, Tribune].
  8. Presidential campaigns are spending big in Utah, dropping more than $1.5 million on advertising [Tribune].
  9. 16 legislative candidates are running unopposed in November [Tribune].
  10. Utah’s unemployment rate doesn’t change, holding at 3.4% [Deseret News].

On this day in history:

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