There’s no question that the main story coming out of the South Carolina primary is another big win for Donald Trump. His double-digit margin over his nearest competitors was very much along the lines of his impressive victory in New Hampshire and looked to have won him all of the state’s delegates. Trump proved that nothing he could say — whether it was repeating far-left talking points about George W. Bush, endorsing the ObamaCare personal mandate or opposing entitlement reform — could alienate his supporters.
Read More >>Depending on which campaign is talking, the Republican presidential race is either a three-person, two-person, or one-person affair.
In any event, Donald Trump, Ted Cruz, and Marco Rubio all claimed success in South Carolina and moved Sunday to take the fight to Nevada and other states that will help decide the matter.
Read More >>fter coursing through the first three intimate contests, the Republican presidential race is now accelerating to full throttle, becoming a truly national election that appears to favor celebrity front-runner Donald Trump against a bitterly divided field of opponents.
Read More >>With Jeb Bush’s departure from the presidential race on Saturday, a mighty fundraising army scattered. The question the troops face: pick another side or retreat?
Read More >>Ted Cruz has long insisted he is the only candidate capable of uniting the conservative base, but a disappointing third-place finish in South Carolina that saw evangelical Christians flock to Donald Trump is suddenly undercutting his status as the conservative chosen one.
Read More >>Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty announced his endorsement of Marco Rubio on Monday, hailing the Florida senator as the best candidate to unite the party.
“I think it comes down to this — he’s strong, he’s also informed, he’s conservative and he’s also electable and he can unite the party,” the 2012 Republican presidential candidate told CNN’s “New Day.”
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