Rome News-Tribune

Ted Cruz drops out of race

After Indiana’s primary, Trump virtually clinches the GOP presidenti­al nomination. On the Democrat side, Sanders beats Clinton.

- By Julie Pace and Scott Bauer Associated Press

INDIANAPOL­IS — In a stunning triumph for a political outsider, Donald Trump all but clinched the Republican presidenti­al nomination Tuesday with a resounding victory in Indiana that knocked rival Ted Cruz out of the race and cleared Trump’s path to a likely November faceoff with Democratic frontrunne­r Hillary Clinton.

Trump still needs about 200 delegates to formally secure the nomination, but Cruz’s decision to end his campaign removed his last major obstacle.

“Ted Cruz — I don’t know if he likes me or he doesn’t like me — but he is one hell of a competitor,” Trump said of his last fierce competitor whom he had dubbed “lyin’ Ted.” Trump, in a victory speech that was much lower-key than usual, promised victory in November, vowing anew to put “America first.”

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders eked out a victory over Clinton in Indiana, but the outcome will not slow the former secretary of state’s march to the Democratic nomination. Heading into Tuesday’s voting, Clinton had 92 percent of the delegates she needs.

“I know that the Clinton campaign thinks this campaign is over. They’re wrong,” Sanders said defiantly in an interview Tuesday night. But Clinton already has turned her attention to the general election.

She and Trump now plunge into a six- month battle for the presidency, with the future of America’s immigratio­n laws, health care system and military posture around the world at stake. While Clinton heads into the general election with significan­t advantages with minority voters and women, Democrats have vowed to not underestim­ate Trump as his Republican rivals did for too long.

For months, Republican leaders considered him a fringe candidate and banked on voters shifting toward more traditiona­l contenders once the primary contests began. But Trump proved to be surprising­ly durable, tapping into Republican­s’ deep anger with party leaders and outlasting more than a dozen experience­d political rivals.

Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus declared the race over, saying on Twitter that Trump would be the party’s presumptiv­e nominee.

“We all need to unite and focus on defeating @ Hillary Clinton,” he wrote.

Indeed, Trump’s first challenge will be uniting a Republican Party that has been roiled by his candidacy. While some GOP leaders have warmed to the real estate mogul, others have promised to never vote for him and see him as a threat to their party’s very existence.

Even before the Indiana results were finalized, some conservati­ve leaders were planning a Wednesday meeting to assess the viability of launching a third party candidacy to compete with him in the fall.

One outside group trying to stop Trump suggested it would shift its attention to helping Republican­s in other races. Rory Cooper, a senior adviser to the Never Trump super PAC, said the group will help protect “Republican incumbents and

down-ballot candidates, by distinguis­hing their values and principles from that of Trump, and protecting them from a wave election.”

Indiana was viewed as the last gasp for Cruz, the fiery Texas conservati­ve. He campaigned aggressive­ly in the state, securing the support of Indiana’s governor and announcing

businesswo­man Carly Fiorina as his running mate, but lost momentum in the closing days.

Cruz had clung to the hope that he could keep Trump from reaching the 1,237 delegates needed for the nomination and push the race to a rare contested convention.

“I’ve said I would continue on as long as there was a viable path to victory; tonight I’m sorry to say it appears that path has been foreclosed,” Cruz told a somber crowd in Indianapol­is.

Ohio Gov. John Kasich is now the only other Republican left in the race. But Kasich has won just one primary — his home state — and trails Trump by nearly 900 delegates.

Kasich pledged to stay in the race, with his campaign manager saying the governor would continue to “offer the voters a clear choice for our country.”

Only about half of Indiana’s Republican primary voters said they were excited or optimistic about any of their remaining candidates becoming president, according to exit polls. Still, most said they probably would support whoever won for the GOP.

Clinton, too, needs to win over Sanders’ enthusiast­ic supporters. The Vermont senator has cultivated a deeply loyal following in particular among young people, a group Democrats count on in the general election.

Though Sanders claimed momentum, he has conceded his strategy hinges on persuading superdeleg­ates to back him over the former secretary of state.

 ?? Darron Cummings / The Associated Press ?? Republican Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, shown Tuesday in Indianapol­is beside his wife, Heidi Cruz, has dropped out of the race for the GOP nomination for president.
Darron Cummings / The Associated Press Republican Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, shown Tuesday in Indianapol­is beside his wife, Heidi Cruz, has dropped out of the race for the GOP nomination for president.
 ??  ??
 ?? Charlie Riedel / The Associated Press ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and his wife, Jane O’Meara Sanders, wave after a campaign rally Tuesday in Louisville, Ky. Sanders won the Indiana primary and 42 delegates, to Hillary Clinton’s 36 delegates.
Charlie Riedel / The Associated Press Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and his wife, Jane O’Meara Sanders, wave after a campaign rally Tuesday in Louisville, Ky. Sanders won the Indiana primary and 42 delegates, to Hillary Clinton’s 36 delegates.
 ?? Mary Altaffer / The Associated Press ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump speaks Tuesday in New York after winning the Indiana primary.
Mary Altaffer / The Associated Press Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump speaks Tuesday in New York after winning the Indiana primary.
 ??  ?? Hillary Clinton
Hillary Clinton
 ??  ?? John Kasich
John Kasich

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