Don't look now, but Donald Trump has made moves in the past week that are, wait for it, actually quite smart.
Consider:
• Trump announced the hiring of Rick Wiley, who managed Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker's presidential campaign, as his national political director. Wiley joins the likes of other longtime GOP operatives, including Paul Manafort, Don McGahn, Ed Brookover and Rick Reed, in Trump's inner circle - evidence that Trump rightly assessed that his loyal core of staffers wasn't equipped to handle the battle for delegates between now and July 18, when the Republican National Convention is to begin.
• Trump has leaned hard into the idea that the whole process is "rigged" against him, pointing to what happened in Colorado two weekends ago - where he was out-organised and lost all 34 of the state's delegates to Senator Ted Cruz of Texas - as evidence that party leaders are trying to silence him.
This is a terrific message for Trump and may be the second act he needs to push himself over the delegate threshold by June 7, when California votes. He always runs best as the aggrieved outsider, the guy whom the establishment is trying to control but who keeps slipping out of its grasp. He has struggled of late because he became the very clear front-runner and didn't really have anything or anyone to run against. Now that he can rail against the system, he is right back in his messaging wheelhouse.