Monday, 14 March 2016

Candidates Prepare for Tuesday as 5 States Set to Hold Primaries Print Comment Share:

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Candidates Prepare for Tuesday as 5 States Set to Hold Primaries

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump acknowledges applauds from the crowd after speaking during a campaign rally, March 11, 2016.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump acknowledges applauds from the crowd after speaking during a campaign rally, March 11, 2016.
VOA News
U.S. presidential candidates are looking ahead to Tuesday when five delegate-rich states hold their primary elections, with the rest of the field blaming Republican front-runner Donald Trump for the violence that has erupted at his rallies.
The primaries in Florida, Ohio, Illinois, Missouri and North Carolina are particularly important for Trump's opponents who want to prevent him from grabbing a potentially insurmountable lead.
But Trump denied that his campaign has provoked violence, telling a crowd in Bloomington, Illinois Sunday that he wants peace and not trouble.
There have been fights and pushing and shoving between his supporters and protesters opposing his candidacy at rallies in several of Tuesday's primary states, and authorities have arrested a small number of protesters at those sites.
U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally at the downtown Midland Theater in Kansas City, Mo., March 12, 2016.
U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally at the downtown Midland Theater in Kansas City, Mo., March 12, 2016.
What to Watch For in Tuesday's US Presidential Primaries
It isn't quite "Super Tuesday," but voters in five states are taking part in key primaries to decide which Democrat and Republican will compete in the November presidential election.
Why is it important?
After Tuesday, more than half of the 50 U.S. states will have held their nominating contests, so trailing candidates are running out of time to catch front-runners Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton.  The next time nearly as many delegates are available on one day is June 7 when it may already be too late.
Republican Delegate Count (1,237 needed to win)
Trump - 460
Cruz - 370
Rubio - 163
Kasich - 63
Democratic Delegate Count (2,383 needed to win)
Clinton - 1,231
Sanders - 576
Up for Grabs Tuesday
Florida - Republicans 99 (winner-take-all), Democrats 246
Ohio - Republicans 66 (winner-take-all), Democrats 159
Illinois - Republicans 69 (winner-take-most), Democrats 182
North Carolina - Republicans 66, Democrats 121
Missouri - Republicans 52, Democrats 84
At Stake for Candidates
Florida Senator Marco Rubio - Far behind in delegates, he needs the 99 from his home state to have a chance.  A loss could mean he drops out.
Ohio Governor John Kasich - Facing the same long odds as Rubio, he is banking his campaign's future on Ohioans delivering him 66 delegates.
Texas Senator Ted Cruz - Says he is the only one who can beat Trump, but if polls hold, Cruz gets no delegates from Florida or Ohio and only a second-place portion from Illinois, Missouri and North Carolina.
Businessman Donald Trump - Winning both Florida and Ohio would really distance him from the field, but either way he should finish Tuesday more than halfway to clinching the nomination.
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton - A stack of wins further solidifies her hold on the nomination with proportionate delegate math helping keep her there.
Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders - Needs to start winning states with big margins to catch up, but anywhere he loses Tuesday has to at least be close to keep Clinton in range.
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the leader in the Democratic race, said Sunday night that Trump is "trafficking in hate and fear."  She said criticism of Trump does not matter if people do not show up on election day to vote against him.
Clinton's opponent, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders said he hopes Trump tones down his campaign and tells supporters that violence is not acceptable.
Trump in recent days blamed Sanders for the increasingly frequent disruptions at events and threatened to retaliate by sending his supporters to Sanders' rallies.
Sanders responded: "Send them. They deserve to see what a real honest politician sounds like.''
Texas Senator Ted Cruz is in second place in terms of delegates Republicans need to clinch the party's nomination and on Sunday added fresh criticism of Trump.
"When you have a campaign that disrespects the voters, when you have a campaign that affirmatively encourages violence, you create an environment that only encourages this sort of nastiness," Cruz said on NBC's Meet The Press.
Florida Senator Marco Rubio and Ohio Governor John Kasich are far behind in terms of delegates and used words like "dangerous" and "toxic" to describe Trump's campaign. 
Both Rubio and Kasich are banking on a first place finish in the winner-take-all primaries in their home states Tuesday.  Polls indicate Trump holds a big lead in Florida, but is locked in a tight race with Kasich in Ohio.
The primary elections and caucuses are apportioning delegates to the Republican and Democratic national conventions in July when the presidential nominees will be formally selected.
Clinton and Sanders will continue to collect pledged convention delegates roughly based on their vote totals in each state, not winner-take-all.

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