The final four Republican candidates are gathering in Detroit Thursday night for the Fox News debate, where Donald Trump will try to maintain his dominant position less than two weeks ahead of crucial races that could effectively seal his nomination.
Trump previously boycotted a debate held by Fox News in Iowa after feuding with the network over its use of host Megyn Kelly as moderator, who Trump has belittled with misogynist insults over several months. Kelly is set to return as moderator on Thursday, but so far Trump looks like he’ll attend anyway.
RELATED: Meet the Republicans speaking out against Trump
The debate comes ahead of a slate of races that include Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, and Maine on Saturday, Puerto Rico on Sunday, and debate site Michigan, Mississippi, Idaho, and Hawaii on Tuesday.
But those are mostly undercards before the definitive showdown on March 15, when Ohio and Florida host winner-take-all primaries. If Trump wins both states it will become extraordinarily difficult to prevent him from locking down the nomination.
With that in mind, here’s what to watch for on Thursday.
The anti-Trump offensive
Senators Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz devoted the entire last debate in Houston to savaging Donald Trump, and they threw out so many attacks over the night that it was hard just to keep track of them.
The front-runner mostly stood his ground, but the debate kicked off an anti-Trump offensive from his rivals that hasn’t let up since. Rubio and Cruz seized on his initial refusal to disavow support from the Ku Klux Klan and David Duke, have accused him of defrauding students at his defunct Trump University program, and believe he’s hiding potentially damaging information in his unreleased taxes, among many other things.
In addition, numerous Republican elites have joined the fray in the last few days, pledging never to vote for Trump under any circumstances in a general election. Mitt Romney, the party’s 2012 nominee, has also criticized Trump and delivered a scathing speech on Trump in Utah on Thursday.
It wasn’t clear from the Super Tuesday results, however, where Trump won seven of eleven states and the most delegates, that these attacks have done any significant damage. Thursday will give Rubio and Cruz another chance to hack away. They could get a boost from a BuzzFeed report that resurfaced a Trump University blog post in which the billionaire real estate magnate sang the virtues of outsourcing jobs, a practice he regularly decries on the campaign trail.
Rubio and Cruz’s uneasy truce
Why did it take until the last debate for candidates to start whacking Trump? For months, Rubio and Cruz, among others, were far more concerned with taking down each other in order to become the last one standing against the billionaire mogul.









