Marco Rubio’s presidential campaign has presented the youthful Florida senator as the future of the Republican Party.
On Tuesday, that image — along with Rubio’s political career — is at stake.
Read More >>Home, it is said, is where, when you have to go there, they have to take you in.
Tuesday gives three candidates a chance to test that axiom.
Read More >>This could be it, folks. The Republican presidential primary may be settled — or at least a lot clearer — on Tuesday. Republicans will vote in six contests. Donald Trump is looking to stay on track to win a majority of states, if not delegates. Marco Rubio and John Kasich could be making their last stands. And Ted Cruz is hoping he’s in a two-man race with Trump come Wednesday.
Read More >>Several large states vote tomorrow including two states, Florida and Ohio, that are home to two of the four remaining Republican candidates for president. Both are winner-take-all on the GOP side, raising the stakes significantly from past contests where delegates were divvied up between competing candidates in most cases.
While businessman Donald Trump leads Sen. Marco Rubio in Rubio’s home state of Florida according to recent polling, the race in Ohio is neck-and-neck between Trump and Gov. John Kasich, as CBS ... Read More >>
Ted Cruz won a comfortable majority of the vote in Wyoming Republicans’ county conventions Saturday, banking 9 new delegates in the process.
At conventions held in counties throughout the state, delegates promising to vote for Cruz received 66 percent of the vote statewide. Marco Rubio came in second with 20 percent of the vote.
Read More >>Florida Sen. Marco Rubio has won the Washington D.C., Republican convention with 37 percent of the vote, delivering a small but much needed infusion of delegates to his campaign.
Ohio Gov. John Kasich finished a close second with 36 percent. Donald Trump came in third place with 14 percent and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz had 12 percent.
Read More >>Tuesday might be the most decisive day of the 2016 GOP campaign. Depending on the results, one or more of the remaining candidates might be forced to drop out. And Donald Trump might be unstoppable.
If Trump rolls to victories in Florida and Ohio — the first states on the calendar this year that award every single delegate to the statewide winner — his lead becomes all but insurmountable. Without home-state wins, Marco Rubio and John Kasich would have little cause to continue.
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