Trump is Republican bet; Sanders still alive

Donald Trump

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a primary night news conference, Tuesday, May 3, 2016, in New York. AP

WASHINGTON—Donald Trump seized the mantle of Republican standard-bearer for the 2016 presidential election late Tuesday, sending his only serious challenger, Ted Cruz, crashing out of the White House race.

After charging to victory in Indiana, the unorthodox, antiestablishment candidate embraced the role of de facto nominee and trained his sights on the Democrat most likely to face him in the battle for the White House.

“We’re going after Hillary Clinton,” the billionaire real estate mogul told jubilant supporters gathered at Trump Tower in New York to celebrate the victory. “We’re going to win in November, and we’re going to win big.”

Clinton suffered a shock upset in Indiana as her Democratic rival Bernie Sanders mounted a come-from-behind victory, denying the former US secretary of state a feather in her cap as she seeks to claim her party’s nomination.

Tuesday’s contest in the midwestern state was the final firewall thrown up by Republican heavyweights to keep their brash, name-calling antagonist from locking in the party’s nomination.

But as the race was called overwhelmingly in Trump’s favor, Cruz conceded to supporters in Indianapolis that he no longer had a viable path forward.

Denouement

“We left it all on the field in Indiana,” Cruz said as he announced he was suspending his campaign. “We gave it everything we’ve got, but the voters chose another path.”

It was a stunning denouement for the archconservative Texas senator who had insisted he would press on to the final day of the Republican race.

His departure leaves the low-polling Ohio Gov. John Kasich as Trump’s only other challenger for the nomination—making it a virtual certainty that Trump will go head to head in a general election matchup with Clinton.

The top echelon of the Republican establishment said as much minutes after Cruz capitulated, with Republican Party chief Reince Priebus declaring Trump the “presumptive” nominee.

“Donald Trump will be presumptive GOP nominee, we all need to unite and focus on defeating Hillary Clinton,” Priebus said, in an extraordinary embrace of a candidate the party establishment had fought tooth and nail to stop.

Shot in the arm

Sanders, the self-declared democratic socialist, beat Clinton 52.5 percent to 47.5 percent, providing a shot in the arm to his campaign and further justification for staying in a race that team Clinton and many pundits have said is all but finished.

“The Clinton campaign thinks this campaign is over. They’re wrong,” Sanders said in a statement.

“We are in this campaign to win and we’re going to fight until the last vote is cast,” he added.

“There is nothing I would like more than to take on and defeat Donald Trump, someone who must never become president of this country.”

Though Sanders claimed momentum, he has conceded his strategy hinges on persuading superdelegates to back him over Clinton. Superdelegates are Democratic Party insiders who can support the candidate of their choice, regardless of how their states vote. And they favor Clinton by a nearly 18-1 margin.

With Sanders’ narrow victory on Tuesday, he picked up at least 43 of Indiana’s 83 delegates. Clinton now has 2,202 delegates to Sanders’ 1,400. That includes pledged delegates from primaries and caucuses, as well as superdelegates.

Trump now has at least 1,047 delegates. Cruz exits the race with 565, while Kasich has 152.

Focused on November    

Cruz had been hoping to use the midwestern state to block Trump from gaining the 1,237 delegates needed to secure the nomination ahead of the Republican convention in Cleveland in July.

But the bombastic tycoon—who has thus far defied all political logic to lead the Republican race—swept Cruz aside.

Trump thumped Cruz by about 53.3 percent to 36.6, with Kasich an Indiana footnote at 7.6 percent.

With 1,047 delegates to his name, Trump was already in a favorable position to reach the magic number needed to avoid a contested party convention. With Cruz out of the race, crossing the threshold is a foregone conclusion for Trump.

Even before the Indiana results, Trump and Clinton had pivoted toward one another.

“I’m really focused on moving into the general election,” Clinton said confidently on Tuesday in West Virginia.

“That’s where we have to be because we are going to have a tough campaign against a candidate who’ll literally say or do anything,” she said of Trump. “We’re going to take him on at every turn.”

Too divisive

Ignoring Clinton’s surprise loss in Indiana, her campaign chair John Podesta said Trump’s propensity to “bully and divide Americans” could backfire with an electorate looking for economic opportunities and to be kept safe.

“Throughout this campaign, Donald Trump has demonstrated that he’s too divisive and lacks the temperament to lead our nation and the free world,” Podesta said in a statement. “With so much at stake, Donald Trump is simply too big of a risk.”

Cruz’s exit comes after the primary battle took a nasty turn on Tuesday when Trump cited a tabloid report linking Cruz’s father, Rafael Cruz, to John F. Kennedy assassin Lee Harvey Oswald.

Pathological liar

Trump raised the recent National Enquirer story in his interview with Fox News, prompting an irate Cruz to brand him a “pathological liar.”

“The man is utterly amoral,” Cruz said, adding that “we are staring at the abyss” if Trump wins the White House.

The Enquirer, which has published previous stories deeply critical of Cruz, said an Aug. 16, 1963, photograph of Oswald in New Orleans handing out leaflets in support of Fidel Castro shows a young Rafael Cruz nearby.

Oswald was killed Nov. 24, 1963, two days after Kennedy’s assassination.

Rafael Cruz was once a supporter of rebel leader Castro, but he admits in his biography “A Time for Action” that he was unaware that Castro was a communist, according to the Miami Herald.

The paper said there was no corroborating evidence that Cruz, who is now fervently anticommunist, was affiliated with Oswald, and that the Cruz campaign said the candidate’s father is not in the photograph. Reports from AFP and AP/TVJ

 

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