USA TODAY US Edition

WISCONSIN BLUNTS FRONT-RUNNERS

Trump, Clinton look to New York for comebacks

- Susan Page

The Wisconsin primary Tuesday was an unwelcome speed bump for Republican front-runner Donald Trump and Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton, raising questions about their presidenti­al campaigns at the moment each was hoping to project an aura of inevitabil­ity.

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz thumped Trump, with Ohio Gov. John Kasich a distant third. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders defeated Clinton by a lopsided margin.

For Trump, a series of furors over everything from controvers­ial policy pronouncem­ents to his campaign manager’s arrest for manhandlin­g a reporter seemed to be taking a toll: GOP voters were much more likely to say Trump, not his rivals, had run the most unfair campaign, and they gave Cruz a better shot at defeat- ing Clinton. Almost half wanted someone with experience in politics as the nominee, a percentage nearly as high as it’s been in any state this year — and a group that has been largely resistant to Trump’s appeal.

Four in 10 Republican­s were “scared” of what Trump would do as president.

For Clinton, Democrats seemed to be having a debate between their hearts and their heads. By double digits, Demo- cratic voters were more likely to say Sanders was inspiring hope for the future, but they also were more inclined to think Clinton had realistic proposals. They were much more likely to say Sanders was honest and trustworth­y, but they thought Clinton had a better chance of defeating Trump in November.

That said, Trump and Clinton see a safety net ahead: New York. Cruz and Sanders hope victories in Wisconsin will boost their prospects in the Empire State, which holds the next primary on April 19. But Trump and Clinton insist the state where he was born and she now lives will provide a decisive boost and steadying victory heading into the primary campaign’s final stretch.

Wisconsin will make the path home bumpier.

“If we wake up the American people .... there is nothing that we

cannot accomplish,” Sanders told a cheering rally in Laramie, Wyoming, which holds Democratic caucuses Saturday.

Even so, it will take more than a victory in Wisconsin for him to shake the advantage Clinton has built among delegates.

“I think we will come out of Wisconsin without him being able to dent that lead in any kind of material way,” Clinton strategist Joel Benenson told USA TODAY. Before Wisconsin’s delegates were allocated, the AP calculated Clinton had 1,243 pledged delegates to Sanders’ 980. When unpledged “superdeleg­ates” were included, her lead stretched to 1,712 delegates — 2,383 are needed for nomination — to 1,011 for Sanders.

But Clinton’s loss in the Badger State underscore­d the challenges she still faces in delivering an inspiratio­nal message in general and in appealing to younger voters in particular. Sanders has now won six of the past seven Democratic contests.

For Trump, the consequenc­es of the Wisconsin loss could be more serious. Neither Cruz nor Ohio Gov. John Kasich are in a position to command the 1,237 delegates needed to clinch the nomination, but they are trying to deny Trump that majority. Going into the Wisconsin primary, Trump had 737 delegates; Cruz trailed at 481 and Kasich at 143.

Keeping Trump below the 1,237 needed for nomination could lead to the first contested convention in four decades. .

“Tonight, Wisconsin has lit a candle guiding the way forward,” Cruz told a victory rally in Mil- waukee, predicting the victory would enable him to amass a majority of delegates leading up to the convention or during it. He vowed, “Let me just say, Hillary, get ready. Here we come.”

The exit polls illustrate­d some of the perils ahead, though, including the prospect of a civil war in the GOP.

If no candidate arrives in Cleveland with a majority, more than half of Republican primary voters said the nomination should go to the candidate with the most votes; just over four in 10 said the convention delegates should decide. Not surprising­ly, Trump supporters felt particular­ly strongly about the idea; more than eight in 10 said the leading candidate should get the nod. But nearly six in 10 Cruz and Kasich voters endorsed the idea of letting the delegates decide.

Perhaps most troubling for Republican strategist­s: The divides in the GOP don’t end when the nomination is settled. In Wisconsin, just 61% of GOP primary voters said they would vote for Trump in a contest against Clinton. Only a bit more, 65%, would vote for Cruz in a Cruz vs. Clinton race. The rest would consider voting for a third party, stay home or even vote for the Democrat.

Republican­s now are braced for the party’s longest primary battle in a generation.

This isn’t the way it usually works. The GOP instinct to coalesce behind the presumptiv­e nominee is so strong that in three of the past five contested primaries, the final rivals conceded even before their opponents had clinched the nomination. This was the week that Rick Santorum withdrew in 2012, clearing the way for Mitt Romney even though the former Massachuse­tts governor wouldn’t have a delegate majority in hand until late May.

The last time the Republican nomination was still in doubt at this point was in 1980. But this year the race is guaranteed to run through the final primaries in California and elsewhere on June 9 — and perhaps even to the convention itself.

Perhaps most troubling for Republican strategist­s: The divides in the GOP don’t end when the nomination is settled.

 ?? SCOTT OLSON, GETTY IMAGES ?? Sen. Ted Cruz gets a hug from Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker during a celebratio­n in Milwaukee after polls closed Tuesday.
SCOTT OLSON, GETTY IMAGES Sen. Ted Cruz gets a hug from Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker during a celebratio­n in Milwaukee after polls closed Tuesday.
 ?? BRENNAN LINSLEY, AP ?? Sen. Bernie Sanders and his wife, Jane, wave to supporters at a campaign rally in Laramie, Wyo., on Tuesday.
BRENNAN LINSLEY, AP Sen. Bernie Sanders and his wife, Jane, wave to supporters at a campaign rally in Laramie, Wyo., on Tuesday.
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