MIAMI — It’s Judgment Day for the Republican Party.
On Tuesday, voters are hitting the polls in five states and one territory in contests that could determine whether Donald Trump is on track to win the nomination outright, or whether the GOP faces a bitter convention fight in Cleveland this July.
The vote takes place amid escalating left-wing protests against Trump and escalating rhetoric from the candidate who rivals complain is inciting his backers to violence. Trump cancelled a rally on Friday in Chicago as clashes erupted between protesters and supporters in and outside his event, raising concerns of mounting chaos as the convention and general election near.
The two biggest prizes are winner-take-all states Ohio and Florida, which combine for 165 delegates. Candidates also have a chance to gain ground in North Carolina (72 delegates), Illinois (69 delegates), and Missouri (52 delegates), especially if they earn decisive margins.
A candidate needs 1,237 delegates to clinch the nomination. Trump currently has 460, ahead of Senator Ted Cruz’s 369, Senator Marco Rubio’s 163, and Ohio Governor John Kasich’s 63. By the time the votes are counted Tuesday night, almost 60 percent of GOP delegates will have been awarded and Trump has a good chance of avoiding a contested convention with victories in Ohio and Florida.
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Of the two major contests, Florida looks the most favorable to Trump. An NBC News/Wall Street Journal showed him nearly doubling the numbers of his closest competitor, with 43 percent support to just 22 percent for Rubio, who has held elected office in the state almost continuously since 2000.
Nearly every poll going back months shows similar deficits for Rubio. If he wins, it will be an upset for the ages. If he loses, it will be difficult to continue his campaign, which has crashed and burned in recent state contests as Cruz, who campaigned in Florida last week, absorbs his support.
Trump campaigned in Tampa on Monday with Sarah Palin and the state’s attorney general Pam Bondi, who endorsed him onstage. Referring to recent protests, Palin decried that “petty, punk-ass little thuggery stuff.” Trump urged voters to rally behind him in Ohio and Florida, as it would give him a chance to put the race away early and “focus on Hillary” instead of his GOP rivals.
Rubio has taken a more reflective tone in recent appearances as he warns that Trump is sowing “anarchy” and “chaos” that could do generational damage to the party and to the country.
“I don’t think there’s anyone in the history of American politics that compares to the vulgarity of a Donald Trump candidacy,” Rubio told the press in Melbourne, FL on Monday.
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