Calling the Colorado Republican Party's decision not to hold a primary popular vote a scandal, talk-radio host Michael Savage declared Sen. Ted Cruz should disavow the move and call for a vote.

"What just happened in Colorado should, frankly, disqualify Cruz, who claims to be a constitutional conservative," Savage told his listeners Monday.

Savage is a strong supporter of GOP front-runner Donald Trump, who has been a regular guest on "The Savage Nation."

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Savage said Trump has been "pushed aside by the 'Republicrat and Demican' party, which I have told you about since 1994."

"I told you we don't have a democracy. It's how I rose to fame in the radio business. … I position, as I have been all my life, as a total cynic," he said.

"This is a corrupt, rotten system. It's a one-party system. It's demagoguery. There is no two-party system. They are the ones who selected Obama. They are the ones who are selecting Hillary. Make no mistake about it."

Savage said the "rigged Republican, back-room deal" was "not befitting a free republic" and "something you would expect of Uruguay in the 1940s."

"How can Mr. Cruz support a rigged election in Colorado and still claim to be a conservative?"

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Meanwhile, another top radio talker, Rush Limbaugh, told his audience Monday that Cruz is not cheating, but he's simply winning at his strategy.

"He's demonstrating he knows how to work himself within this insider labyrinth. He knows how to navigate it. He knows how to work it. He knows how to turn it to his advantage," Limbaugh explained. "You have to look at this and say, 'OK, what does this tell us about Cruz, if he should become president?' No matter how enamored you are – and a lot of people are – no matter how enamored you are of the notion of a total outsider with no links to the establishment, no links to insider politics, nothing whatsoever, you're fascinated by that happening, somebody coming in and just totally wrecking the castle, finding out that you can't do that without getting inside the castle first. 'Cause people inside the castle are not gonna let you crumble the walls."

He continued: "You know, being an outsider, it has benefits, but it has drawbacks, too, and knowing the rules inside out and outworking the competition is not cheating. If you happen to be more knowledgeable of how things work and are able to work it to your advantage, that's just hard work. That isn't cheating. I think the entire lesson, if you look at the Obama campaign and the Cruz campaign, organization matters, from the grassroots on up."

Limbaugh, however, warned listeners that the knives of the Republican establishment could still be out for Cruz: "My humble belief is that if and after the powers that be dispatch Trump, they will then next seek to dispatch Cruz. Over there Paul Ryan's running a campaign for something, and everybody's marveling at it. He was just in Israel talking to Bibi Netanyahu. And there are people whispering Kasich, Kasich, Kasich. So this is by no means settled."

As WND reported, Trump erupted on "Fox & Friends" Monday morning after a weekend that saw Cruz sweep all of Colorado's 34 delegates without a popular vote.

"I've gotten millions ... of more votes than Cruz, and I've gotten hundreds of delegates more, and we keep fighting, fighting, fighting, and then you have a Colorado where they just get all of these delegates, and it's not [even] a system," Trump said. "There was no voting. I didn’t go out there to make a speech or anything. There's no voting."

His comments came after Cruz won the remaining 13 delegates at the weekend's convention, bringing his total for the state to 34, an outcome he claimed was unfair and just shy of illegal.

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"They offer them trips – they offer them all sorts of things, and you're allowed to do that," Trump said, of the method by which some woo delegates. "I mean, you’re allowed to offer trips, and you can buy all these votes. What kind of a system is this? Now, I'm an outsider, and I came into the system and I’m winning the votes by millions of votes. But the system is rigged. It's crooked."

Watch video of Trump's appearance on "Fox and Friends" here:

The televised remarks followed a weekend of tweets expressing similarly critical views.

"How is it possible that the people of the great State of Colorado never got to vote in the Republican Primary? Great anger – totally unfair!" wrote Trump in one Twitter post.

He followed it up with a second tweet: "The people of Colorado had their vote taken away from them by the phony politicians. Biggest story in politics. This will not be allowed!"

It was last August when officials with the Republican Party in Colorado decided they would not let voters take part in the early nomination process.

The Denver Post reported Aug. 25: "The GOP executive committee has voted to cancel the traditional presidential preference poll after the national party changed its rules to require a state's delegates to support the candidate that wins the caucus vote."

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