Donald Trump (Photo: Twitter)
It’s full-speed ahead for Republican front-runner Donald Trump, who steamrolled through the Nevada caucus Tuesday and was declared the winner right after the caucuses ended.
In Nevada polls leading up to the caucus, Trump’s top two rivals, Sens. Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio, weren’t even close to catching up to the GOP billionaire in the state. According to RealClearPolitics, Trump was leading in Nevada polls, with Cruz coming in second, Rubio third, Kasich fourth and Carson last.
Trump had a large following in Nevada, mostly due to his positions on illegal immigration and bringing jobs back to a stagnant U.S. economy.
“I just don’t know how you stop the raw enthusiasm behind Trump,” Kasich Nevada state director Zachary Moyle told the Los Angeles Times.
Nevada will send 30 delegates to the Republican National Convention. Delegates are awarded proportionally.
With 4.2 percent reporting, results Tuesday showed the following:
Trump: 41.95 percent
Rubio: 24.84 percent
Cruz: 20.94 percent
Carson: 8.1 percent
Kasich: 3.9 percent
Rubio had been trying to attract Jeb Bush’s large pool of big-money donors after the former Florida governor exited the race Saturday. Rubio hoped a strong performance in Nevada would set him up to be the most viable mainstream alternative to Trump.
Both Cruz and Rubio hired top campaign consultants to launch robust get-out-the vote efforts in the state.
According to data from Kantar Media/CMAG, Rubio spent $920,000 to Cruz’s $790,000 in Nevada advertising. Trump spent about $490,000, and Carson spent about $330,000. Kasich has spent nothing.
The Silver State has a large base of conservatives. Eighty-three percent of GOP caucus-goers identified as conservative in 2012, and half of all caucus-goers were “very conservative.”
CBS News entrance polls Tuesday evening showed 58 percent of Republican voters say they are angry about the federal government. And two-thirds of GOP caucus-goers said they want the next president to “be outside politics.”
Ted Cruz, Donald Trump and Marco Rubio (Photo: Twitter)
What’s next?
Republicans will face off in their next debate, hosted by CNN, Telemundo and Salem Radio on Feb. 25. The event, which will be broadcast in English and Spanish, will take place at the University of Houston. CNN’s Wolf Blitzer will moderate the debate. Telemundo’s Maria Celeste Arraras, Salem talk-radio host Hugh Hewitt and CNN chief political correspondent Dana Bash will also ask the candidates questions.
The South Carolina primary – scheduled for Feb. 27 – is the next Democrat primary.
And both Republicans and Democrats will face off on Super Tuesday, a group of 12 primaries and caucuses held on March 1 that includes the following states: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado, Georgia, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont and Virginia.
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