The Republican presidential field has winnowed
down to just two candidates following Donald Trump's latest win in
Indiana on 3 May. Trump took home a decisive win in the Hoosier State
and was even declared the "presumptive" GOP candidate after rival Ted
Cruz announced he was suspending his campaign.
Trump's victory
The GOP frontrunner was declared the winner of
the Indiana primary promptly at 7pm EDT/12am BST as the remaining
polling stations closed. In pre-primary polls, Donald Trump led among
his Republican rivals by as much as 15 points.
With 93.3% reporting, the real estate
mogul maintained a 16.7 point lead against Ted Cruz, 53.3% to 36.6%.
Outlier candidate and Ohio Governor John Kasich lagged far behind with
just 7.5%.
Trump's latest win helped push him past the
1,000 delegate threshold and placed him on the verge of the necessary
delegates needed to officially clinch the nomination. Prior to the
primary, he led with 996 delegates, followed by Cruz with 565 and Kasich
with 153. After winning the Hoosier State,
Trump nabbed at least 51 of the 57 delegates available, pushing him right in front with 1,047 delegates. The billionaire former reality TV star is expected to also take home the remaining six delegates. Republican candidates need 1,237 delegates to secure the party's nomination.
Cruz out but Kasich remains
The most surprising twist of the night arrived
when Texas Senator Ted Cruz announced he was dropping his bid for the
presidency. Cruz was the sole remaining GOP candidate who had the
closest chance of thwarting Trump, but a string of losses in the last
week essentially destroyed his chances. The senator made a last ditched
attempt to revive his campaign following the 26 April primaries by
choosing former rival Carly Fiorina as his running mate. Unfortunately,
the move failed to help his campaign.
By dropping out, Cruz cleared the path for
Trump to win the Republican nomination in the first round of voting at
the GOP convention in July. Less than an hour after his decision to
suspend his campaign was made public, Republican Party chairman Reince
Priebus named Trump the "presumptive" GOP nominee and called on the
party to "unite and focus on defeating" Democrat Hillary Clinton.
Unlike
Cruz, Kasich announced early in the night that he would remain in the
race until the convention. "Tonight's results are not going to alter Gov
Kasich's campaign plans," a statement from his campaign said. "Our
strategy has been and continues to be one that involves winning the
nomination at an open convention. The comments from Trump, on the verge
of winning in Indiana, heighten the differences between Governor Kasich
and his positive, inclusive approach and the disrespectful ramblings
from Donald Trump."
Kasich and Trump will face off once again on
10 May for the Nebraska and West Virginia primaries, where 36 and 34
delegates are at stake respectively. Polls show that Trump will easily
take home a win in West Virginia, while there are no polls coming out of
Nebraska.
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