INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana — In a result that once seemed unthinkable to many Republicans, Donald Trump became the likely GOP nominee on Tuesday as top rival Sen. Ted Cruz withdrew from the race.
“We are going to win again and we are going to win again bigly,” a confident Trump declared from Trump Tower in New York on Tuesday night.
Trump cut a violent swath through a 17-person GOP field while spreading outrageous fringe conspiracy theories about Muslims, Mexicans, and African-Americans, threatening violence against protesters, and leveling misogynist attacks against his female critics. He will now represent the party of Abraham Lincoln in the general election despite little connection to any leg of the party’s traditional trio of social conservatives, fiscal conservatives, and national security conservatives. Implausibly, he will now lead all three groups against Hillary Clinton.
Trump won by discovering a primal desire among GOP voters for a swaggering populist who would buck orthodoxy on trade, protect entitlements, build a border wall, deport all undocumented immigrants, and implement an “America First” foreign policy that demanded allies pay for U.S. protection or go it alone. Millions of supporters, distrustful of their party’s leaders, rallied behind him as a unique figure whose personal fortune enabled him to spurn donors and say what he wanted with impunity.
He was as ruthless in attacking his Republican opponents as anyone else. With a nod toward party unity, however, he surreally pivoted Tuesday from attacking Cruz, who he had nicknamed “Lyin’ Ted,” to calling him a “tough, smart guy” and “one hell of a competitor” with an “amazing future.”
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Trump graciously acknowledged Cruz’s “whole beautiful family,” which presumably included the wife whose looks he had mocked on Twitter and the father who he had insinuated just hours earlier was involved in the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
Trump’s speech came shortly after Cruz, halfway across the state, told dejected supporters that he was ending his campaign.
“From the beginning, I’ve said that I would continue on as long as there was a viable path to victory,” Cruz said. “Tonight, I’m sorry to say, it appears that path has been foreclosed.”
Cruz made no mention of the opponent who he had told Americans that same morning was “utterly amoral,” a “pathological liar,” a “bully” and a “narcissist” after Trump’s attack on his father. Instead, Cruz offered a flowery tribute to Ronald Reagan and conservatism that sounded like a stump speech for a future campaign.
In meekly ceding the race to Trump on Tuesday, Cruz joined a growing group of rivals who had denounced the front-runner’s candidacy in apocalyptic terms, only to soften their opposition as the general election neared. Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal called Trump “an unserious, unstable, narcissistic egomaniac” last September. He said on Tuesday he would back Trump. Former Texas Gov. Rick Perry called him a “cancer on conservatism” in a speech last July. He said this week he planned to support him as well.
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Cruz’s supporters weren’t all so ready to forget, however. Some chanted “Never Trump!” as images of the near-presumptive nominee flashed on the screen. An exit poll showed 43 percent of Republican voters on Tuesday were “concerned” or “scared” about a Trump presidency rather than “excited” or “optimistic.”
“We have lost our country,” a female Cruz volunteer, crying with rage, said after he finished his speech. “We’re a country of fools who believe liars and entertainers.”
“The Republican party has transmogrified into something it was never supposed to be,” 60-year-old Cruz supporter William Gebby said.
Gebby had already made up his mind on what to do in the general election if Trump secured the nomination: not vote. Several others in the room said they were grappling with what to do come November.
The national party, however, was moving on. Republican National Committee chairman Reince Priebus declared Trump the “presumptive nominee” on Tuesday, ignoring Ohio Gov. John Kasich’s continued presence, and urged voters to unite against Hillary Clinton.
.@realDonaldTrump will be presumptive @GOP nominee, we all need to unite and focus on defeating @HillaryClinton #NeverClinton









