EVANSVILLE, Indiana — Donald Trump continued his pivot toward the general election on Thursday with a low-key but energetic Indiana rally where he made his case against Hillary Clinton.
“I will be so much better to women than Hillary Clinton is — for healthcare issues, on the protection of our country,” he told a crowd of more than 2,500 seated in an auditorium here.
He also set the stakes of the Indiana primary, saying he refused to take any time off from the campaign trail because of how important the primary is.
“If we win in Indiana, it’s over,” he said.
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Trump in particular told the audience that he could expand the map in a general election fight against her, saying she can’t win New York because the Clintons “abandoned Arkansas for New York” and thus aren’t “real New Yorkers.” He also insisted Clinton “doesn’t do great in Arkansas,” despite the fact she and her husband started their political careers there.
It’s a somewhat unconvincing argument, as Clinton did in fact win the Arkansas Democratic primary, and Arkansas is unlikely to be in-play in a general election. But it’s a hint at where Trump’s focus lies following a night of resounding primary wins across the Northeast on Tuesday that put him considerably closer to the nomination — and created a major setback for opponents hoping to force him to a contested convention.
Indiana remains their best possible opportunity to knock Trump off-course from the 1,237 delegates he needs to win the nomination outright, and Sen. Ted Cruz and Ohio Gov. John Kasich have spent the past week hoping to do just that.
Cruz attempted to reset the narrative around his multiple last-place finishes Tuesday night by announcing former challenger Carly Fiorina as his running-mate on Wednesday. But Trump dismissed their pairing, saying it’s “not gonna help,” and that Fiorina had “one good debate—on the children’s stage.”









