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CNN projects Donald Trump wins Indiana, on cusp of GOP nomination
CNN | - |
(CNN)
Donald Trump surged to a decisive victory in the Indiana Republican
primary Tuesday, CNN projects, while Ted Cruz's last-ditch efforts to
win the state faltered, leaving Trump on the cusp of the nomination.
CNN projects Donald Trump wins Indiana, on cusp of GOP nomination
Story highlights
- Indiana victory could put Trump within 200 delegates of the magic number he needs to clinch the nomination
- Cruz needed come-from-behind win to keep path to nomination alive
- Clinton seeks to stretch delegate lead over Sanders
(CNN)Donald
Trump surged to a decisive victory in the Indiana Republican primary
Tuesday, CNN projects, while Ted Cruz's last-ditch efforts to win the
state faltered, leaving Trump on the cusp of the nomination.
Though
the real-estate mogul won't secure the 1,237 delegates he needs to
formally claim the nomination until June, his Indiana triumph makes it
almost impossible to stop him.
Following
his decisive wins in New York and other East Coast states, the Indiana
victory could put Trump within 200 delegates of the magic number he
needs to clinch the nomination.
Cruz
now faces the agonizing choice of whether to remain in the race, with
his attempt to force the party into a contested convention in tatters,
or to bow out and cede the party nomination to his political nemesis.
The
Texas senator tried everything to pull off a last ditch win in Indiana,
including the unusual move of selecting Carly Fiorina as his running
mate even though he wasn't the nominee. He also forged a pact with John
Kasich that would allow him to focus on Indiana while the Ohio governor
would devote his time to later states.
But none of the moves seemed to work.
With
17% of the vote in at 7:20 p.m. ET, Trump was in the lead with 53.7% of
the vote while Cruz was at 35.1%. Kasich was at 8.6%.
Trump's
candidacy has galvanized the GOP, bringing in voters -- especially in
regions like the Rust Belt -- that might not otherwise be attracted to
the party's message. In the process, he's toppled a GOP field that, at
the start, included many well-respected governors and senators.
GOP
elites now face the long-feared reality of Trump as an outsider nominee
who will lead them into the fall campaign after splitting the party,
overturning establishment and conservative power bases and alienating
key general election voters with incendiary rhetoric.
The
anti-Trump movement said it would fight on as Trump was still short of
the delegates needed to secure the nomination. Katie Packer, the chair
of Our Principles PAC, said there is still time for Trump to "continue
to disqualify himself in the eyes of voters."
"We
continue to give voice to the belief of so many Republicans that Trump
is not a conservative, does not represent the values of the Republican
Party, cannot beat Hillary Clinton, and is simply unfit to be President
of the United States," she said in a statement.
For his part, Kasich insisted he would remain in the race.
"Tonight's
results are not going to alter Gov. Kasich's campaign plans," said John
Weaver, Kasich's chief strategist. "Our strategy has been and continues
to be one that involves winning the nomination at an open convention."
Sanders v. Clinton
Meanwhile,
Bernie Sanders hopes to upset national front-runner Hillary Clinton in
Indiana. But even if he ends up on top, he is unlikely to cut deeply
into her large delegate lead that has her on track for the nomination.
Trump's dramatic victory caps a day of extraordinary developments in the Republican race.
Cruz,
facing the prospect of an Indiana defeat, snapped after weeks of
personal attacks from Trump that included fresh insinuations that his
father was associated with Lee Harvey Oswald.
"I'm going to tell you what I really think of Donald Trump," he told reporters at a morning news conference.
Cruz blasted Trump as a
"pathological liar," "utterly amoral," "a narcissist at a level I don't
think this country's ever seen" and "a serial philanderer."
He unleashed his full arsenal of insults in his attack on Trump.
"He
is proud of being a serial philanderer ... he describes his own battles
with venereal diseases as his own personal Vietnam," Cruz said, citing a
decades-old Trump appearance on "The Howard Stern Show."
"This
man is a pathological liar, he doesn't know the difference between
truth and lies ... in a pattern that is straight out of a psychology
textbook, he accuses everyone of lying," Cruz said as Indiana voters
headed to cast their ballots. "Whatever lie he's telling, at that minute
he believes it ... the man is utterly immoral," Cruz said.
Trump hit back in a statement blasting Cruz as a "desperate candidate trying to save his failing campaign."
"It
is no surprise he has resorted to his usual tactics of over-the-top
rhetoric that nobody believes," Trump said. "Over the last week, I have
watched Lyin' Ted become more and more unhinged as he is unable to react
under the pressure and stress of losing, in all cases by landslides,
the last six primary elections --- in fact, coming in last place in all
but one of them.
Trump added:
"Today's ridiculous outburst only proves what I have been saying for a
long time, that Ted Cruz does not have the temperament to be President
of the United States."
Increasingly personal battle
The
volley reflected the increasingly personal battle between Cruz and
Trump in the final days of the Indiana contest. Earlier Tuesday, Trump
had criticized Rafael Cruz, the senator's father, calling him
"disgraceful" after he urged evangelical voters in Indiana to reject his
son's rival.
Trump also referenced
a report from the tabloid National Enquirer -- without naming the
publication -- which alleged that it had identified Rafael Cruz in a
photo with Lee Harvey Oswald months prior to the JFK assassination. CNN
has not independently confirmed that report -- and there is no evidence
that it is true.
"And (Ted Cruz's)
father, you know, was with Lee Harvey Oswald prior to Oswald's, you
know, being shot. I mean the whole thing is ridiculous," Trump said in
an interview on "Fox and Friends." "I mean what was he doing with Lee
Harvey Oswald, shortly before the death? Before the shooting? It's
horrible."
Trump went into Tuesday
leading the GOP field with 1,002 delegates and needing to win just 47%
of the 502 remaining delegates on offer. Cruz has 572 delegates and
Kasich has 156. Neither man can now reach 1,237 delegates.
Indiana
is not a classic winner-take-all contest on the Republican side. To win
all 57 Republican delegates, a candidate must win the statewide popular
vote and the popular vote in all nine of the state's congressional
districts.
Delegate count
A
win for Clinton on Tuesday in Indiana, with 83 pledged Democrats on
offer, would further complicate Sanders' rationale for pushing on to the
end of the campaign in June and possibly on to the Democratic National
Convention in Philadelphia in July. A Sanders victory, however, would
provide a morale boost to his struggling campaign but do little to dim
Clinton's prospects of becoming the Democratic nominee.
Going
into the Indiana primary, Clinton has 2,179 of the 2,383 delegates
needed to win the nomination, including superdelegates -- senior party
officials and lawmakers who can vote however they choose at the
convention. She only needs to win 20% of the remaining delegates at
stake to formally capture the nomination.
Sanders
has 1,400 delegates so far, including superdelegates, and he needs to
capture 97% of the remaining delegates to overhaul Clinton. There are
1,016 delegates remaining to be contested in the campaign. Clinton leads
Sanders in the pledged delegate count by 1,666 to 1,359 and by 513
superdelegates to Sanders' 41.
The
painful state of the race for Sanders means that his only hope of
winning the nomination would be to persuade Democratic superdelegates at
the convention to abandon the former secretary of state -- an unlikely
scenario considering that group is largely made up of party insiders
long aligned with Clinton.
That is
one reason why the Clinton campaign has begun stressing that it is time
to unite the party and concentrate on the race against Republicans in
the fall.
But the Vermont Senator
used his public performances in Indiana to highlight what he says are
stark differences on trade. He also rebuked her over her vote in 2002 to
authorize the Iraq war, and demanded a $15 minimum wage.
"Let
Indiana be the 18th state to join the political revolution!" Sanders
said at a rally in Fort Wayne, Indiana, on Monday, as he battled to
close a four-point deficit to Clinton revealed in the NBC/Wall Street
Journal/Marist poll.
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