Republican presidential hopeful Ted Cruz split victories in four
nominating contests with front-runner Donald Trump on Saturday,
bolstering Cruz's argument that he represents the party's best chance to
stop the brash New York billionaire.
The results were a repudiation of a Republican establishment that has
bristled at the prospect of either Cruz or Trump winning the party's
nomination and has largely lined up behind U.S. Senator Marco Rubio of
Florida, who was shut out in all four contests.
"I think it's time that he dropped out of the race," Trump said of Rubio
after the contests. "I want Ted one on one."
Cruz won Kansas and Maine on Saturday, while Trump won the bigger states
of Louisiana and Kentucky, holding onto his lead in the race for the
Republican nomination for the November 8 presidential election, even
though Cruz captured more delegates on Saturday.
The next big contest, and a crucial one, will be Tuesday's primary in
the industrial state of Michigan. Republicans in three other states,
Mississippi, Idaho and Hawaii, also will vote on Tuesday. Puerto Rico
Republicans will vote on Sunday.
In the Democratic race, front-runner Hillary Clinton won in Louisiana,
and her rival Bernie Sanders, a U.S. senator from Vermont, won in Kansas
and Nebraska, in results that did not substantially change Clinton's big
delegate lead.
Mainstream Republicans have blanched at Trump's calls to build a wall on
the border with Mexico, round up and deport 11 million undocumented
immigrants and temporarily bar all Muslims from entering the United
States.
But the party's establishment has not been much happier with Cruz, who
has alienated many party leaders in Washington.
"It looks like it will be the angry Trump voters against the purist
conservative Cruz voters," said Washington-based Republican strategist
Ron Bonjean. "The establishment is just being left out."
A spokesman for Rubio, who spent the past week launching harsh personal
attacks on Trump, said the senator would push on with an eye on the
March 15 contest in Florida.
"After we win the Florida primary, the map, the momentum and the money
is going to be on our side," spokesman Alex Conant said in a statement.
Cruz, a first-term U.S. senator from Texas who has promoted himself as
more of a true conservative than Trump, said the results showed he was
gaining momentum in the race to catch the real estate mogul.
Cruz, 45, has run as an outsider bent on shaking up the Republican
establishment in Washington. A favorite of evangelicals, he has called
for the United States to "carpet bomb" the Islamic State militant group
and has pledged to eliminate the tax-collecting Internal Revenue Service
and four cabinet agencies and to enact a balanced budget amendment.
"A HOWL FROM WASHINGTON"
"The scream you hear, the howl that comes from Washington, D.C., is
utter terror at what 'We the People' are doing together," Cruz told
supporters in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, after his early win in Kansas.
"What we're seeing is the public coming together, libertarians coming
together, men and women who love the Constitution coming together and
uniting and standing as one behind this campaign," Cruz said.
Trump, 69, has a substantial lead in the delegates needed to secure the
nomination at the Republican National Convention, but since winning
seven of the 11 contests on Super Tuesday he has come under withering
fire from a Republican establishment worried he will lead the party to
defeat in November's election. [nL2N16C08F]
But endorsements from establishment Republicans have failed to sway
voters. Rubio won the backing of Kansas Governor Sam Brownback but still
came in third there.
The four Republican contests on Saturday together accounted for just 155
delegates. Cruz won 64 delegates on Saturday, while Trump took 49.
The races on Saturday were open only to registered Republicans,
excluding the independent and disaffected Democratic voters who have
helped Trump's surge to the lead.
The anti-Trump forces have a short window to stop the caustic
businessman, who ahead of Saturday had accumulated 319 of the 1,237
delegates needed to win the nomination at July's Republican national
convention, outpacing Cruz, who had 226 delegates.
On March 15, the delegate-rich states of Florida, Illinois, Ohio,
Missouri and North Carolina will vote. Both Florida and Ohio use the
winner-take-all method to allocate Republican delegates, making the
stakes in those states particularly high. All of the Republican contests
on Saturday, and through March 14, award delegates proportionate to the
popular vote, although some states set minimum thresholds to qualify for
any delegates.
If Trump takes both Florida and Ohio he would be nearly impossible to
stop. There are a total of 358 delegates at stake in the five states
voting March 15, including 99 in Florida and 66 in Ohio.
On the Democratic side, Clinton has opened up a big delegate lead and
Sanders might have a tough time making up the difference. All states in
the Democratic race award their delegates proportionally, meaning
Clinton can keep piling up delegates even in states she loses.
The three states holding Democratic contests on Saturday had a total of
109 delegates at stake. The early estimates were that Clinton, who
appeared headed to a smashing nearly 50-point win in Louisiana, had won
at least 48 delegates on Tuesday and Sanders 37.
But Sanders made it clear he was not planning to end his White House
quest anytime soon.
"We have the momentum. We have a path toward victory. Our campaign is
just getting started," he said in a statement after his wins on
Saturday.
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-election-idUSKCN0W70EL