Donald Trump shrugged off continuous attacks from his rivals, damaging stories in the press, and regular confusion over his own policy platform to end the week where he began: the front-runner for the Republican nomination.
At the same time, Sen. Marco Rubio, the candidate many in the establishment pegged as their champion, appears to be on life support. His rapid decline leaves Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, a hardline conservative loathed by many party insiders, as the GOP’S last best alternative to Trump.
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Trump easily won Michigan and Mississippi, the two biggest delegate prizes of the night. In doing so he once again dashed rivals’ hopes that their frantic efforts to drag down his campaign might finally be yielding fruit. Cruz won in Idaho while Hawaii, the last state to come in, was still voting as of midnight. ET.
“I don’t think I’ve ever had so many horrible things said about me,” Trump stated in a press conference on Tuesday night.
The two races were a heat check ahead of crucial winner-take-all races in Ohio and Florida. The results suggest that Trump is well positioned to compete in both states. If they go his way, his rivals will have few paths to defeating him short of a long shot effort to narrowly deny him a delegate majority and then somehow oust him in a contested convention in July.
Making Trump’s path to Florida easier: The ongoing collapse of Rubio, who suffered through a brutal night on Tuesday ahead of his home state primary.
In Michigan, a state Rubio’s campaign would likely have considered prime territory just weeks ago, he failed to crack double digits. The results were even worse in Mississippi, where he finished in fourth with just 5 percent with 92 percent of precincts reporting.
It was a major shift from Super Tuesday just one week earlier, when Rubio closely battled Senator Ted Cruz for second place in similar southern states. This time Rubio finished well behind third-place Ohio Gov. John Kasich, who has shown little appeal in the region.
Rubio’s implosion could not come at a worse time, both for his own campaign and for the broader anti-Trump effort led by former Republican nominee Mitt Romney.
Romney, who recorded robo-calls for Rubio and Kasich in Michigan, urged Republicans in a speech last week to vote for the senator in Florida and Kasich in Ohio in order to deny Trump a delegate majority. Now Rubio looks like a zombie candidate as the race turns to his own state, where many voters have already cast early ballots.
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