As Republican front-runner Donald Trump has led the delegate chase, he has complained that the "corrupt and crooked" elections have been "rigged" against him. But he has repeatedly failed to prove his case.
Trump has received a plurality of delegates so far, but hasn't hit a majority, which is 1,237. It's that process of delegate selection that has fueled many of his complaints.
We have fact-checked three claims by Trump or his campaign manager Corey Lewandowski related to delegate selection or the primary voting system. Two claims were about Florida's March 15 primary, while the third pertains to the Colorado caucus and state convention. We rated all three statements False on the Truth-O-Meter.
Florida primary
Trump has hurled many accusations against the election in Florida — the home state of former Gov. Jeb Bush (who dropped out a couple weeks before the state's primary) and U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio. Trump beat Rubio in every Florida county except Rubio's home county of Miami-Dade, prompting Rubio to suspend his campaign.
Trump argued that Rubio and Bush orchestrated the state's primary procedures in an effort to prevent him from getting votes.
"You speak about what's unfair, so in Florida you had 99 delegates," he said in a speech. "And Jeb Bush had it set — Jeb Bush or Rubio, both of them. They had it set so that the winner takes everything, because they wanted to make sure that I didn't get anything."
Republican officials did hope a "winner-take-all" primary would benefit Bush or Rubio, but Trump gets some facts wrong. A key motivation behind setting the primary was to avoid the state getting penalized, as it had in previous years.
It wasn't Bush or Rubio who set rules for the primary. It was the Florida Legislature in March 2015, when it passed a bill setting the date and allowed the state GOP to decide whether to make the contest winner-take-all. Back then, Trump was a potential candidate, but he wasn't seen as a major threat to Rubio or Bush.