The recount in Missouri is finally finished, it gave Trump 12 more delegates. That leaves the count at Trump 755, Cruz 545, Rubio 171, Kasich 143.
Also can someone explain wtf is going on with Colorado's Republican convention? I'm hearing a lot of noise about that but I'm having trouble finding what actually happened past all the people who're pissed off about whatever it was.
I can't find too much, either, beyond that Cruz picked up all 34 delegates there and Trump folk are crying foul. Colorado's delegates are chosen on a caucus system has some very confusing rules that were never really changed, in spite of a bit of a push last year to shift to a statewide primary system like most states. You have to preregister 29 days in advance to vote, and I suspect a lot of people didn't bother. You have to be affiliated with the party whose candidate you're supporting for at least 2 months, and given some of the chaos that came out on the Democrat side in places like New York, I suspect there were a lot of "Republicans" who discovered to their unpleasant surprise that they were formally registered independent or Democrat (since with a secret ballot, your registered party affiliation is not at all tied to who you've actually voted for in past elections, and since it almost never come up otherwise, it can easily be out of date, leaving aside the possibility of bureaucratic SNAFUs or actual foul play). Finally, you don't actually vote directly for who you want the delegates to support; each congressional district has a "mini-convention" of sorts to choose a delegate who, as far as I can tell, votes their stated preference.
NOTANEDIT:
Ah, I just found
this. It appears that above and beyond the points I make above, the Republicans changed the rules this year to completely cancel the caucus votes and all preference polls in the state in order to bypass a rule at the national party level that requires them to abide by the result of any such vote and allocate their delegates accordingly. The state convention then awarded 13 delegates and 7 congressional assemblies the remaining 21, all of which are likely dominated by party insiders, and thus naturally giving Cruz 34 delegates. Technically not illegal (the primaries are not a part of the national election system, but rather a function of the individual parties - they could choose their presidential candidate by pulling ping pong balls out of a fishbowl, for all any hypothetical Electoral Commission could cares), but highly questionable given the preponderance of the Democratic and Republican parties and the contentious nature of this particular primary season. Worse, it doesn't even pretend to be subtle. The Drudge Report article referenced in that (
here) has more information on the normal process.