Trump's Very Super Tuesday
Even as he faces growing resistance from Republican party leaders, Trump is growing his support with Republican voters.
PALM BEACH, Fla.— If it wasn’t already clear, last night’s results underscored that Donald Trump is a Teflon candidate who draws strength from the kind of controversy that would end most normal campaigns. The frenzied protests last weekend that led to Trump cancelling a Chicago rally only helped Trump build on his support from a disaffected Republican electorate. His clashes with the media are winning him support from conservative voters who never trusted the press in the first place. His aversion to facts and details are irrelevant to Republicans who want strength and bluster from their standard-bearer.
Indeed, Trump went a long way in securing the Republican nomination Tuesday night, slowly expanding his support within the Republican party even as GOP resistance against him is intensifying. He won 46 percent of the vote in Marco Rubio’s home state of Florida, despite anti-Trump outside groups saturating the airwaves there with over $10 million in scathing anti-Trump attack ads. He nearly hit 40 percent in Illinois, winning comfortably in the affluent Chicagoland suburbs where his rivals’ message seemed a better fit. Even his lone loss in Ohio was something of a moral victory: He tallied 36 percent of the vote in a state where Ohio Gov. John Kasich scores sky-high approval ratings.
For Trump, the name of the game is still winning a majority of delegates to avoid a contested convention, a task that remains challenging. He needs to win about 55 percent of the remaining delegates to hit the magic 1,237 number; my Cook Political Report colleague Dave Wasserman calculated he won about 67 percent of available delegates last night. But equally important, he shattered the notion of widespread GOP voter resistance, demonstrating a geographic and ideological breadth of support that will make him tough to beat in many of the remaining states, even with a consolidated field.
In Florida, Trump won an outright majority of the vote in affluent Palm Beach and Broward Counties, adjacent to Rubio’s home base in Miami-Dade. This, in a closed primary limited to registered Republicans. Two nights before the primary, Trump packed over 6,000 fans into an amphitheater in Boca Raton, wowing his supporters when Air Force Trump arrived in the skies above. The crowd was filled with self-described moderate Republicans, many of whom backed Obama in 2008 but long since turned against the president. Trump was their new avatar of hope and change, a politician of strength to counter Obama’s weakness.
“He’s saying what a lot of Americans have been thinking for a long time,” said Carol Fisher, a former Jeb Bush supporter from Delray Beach who said she usually backs the “establishment” candidates by default. “The more I heard him, the more I realized I agreed exactly with what he was saying.”
Despite the heated protests against Trump that forced the businessman to cancel his Chicago rally, he performed better in Illinois than he did in neighboring Michigan. In Obama’s home state, Trump won 40 percent of the wealthiest Illinois voters, received 31 percent of the vote from college graduates, and swept 41 percent of the moderate GOP vote. The Chicago suburbs that looked like a haven for Rubio and Kasich turned into Trump country.
There are signs that Trump would have rocked Ohio too if Kasich wasn’t in the race. Even in a loss, he consistently carried around 35 percent of the vote in the Cleveland and Cincinnati suburbs, a healthy total given Kasich’s home field advantage. Exit polls showed Trump beating Ted Cruz in a one-on-one matchup, 44 to 39 percent, a clear sign that Cruz is hardly a frontrunner if the field is narrowed to just two Republicans. In fact, the anti-Trump Republicans probably need a strengthened Kasich to dent Trump’s support in many remaining Midwestern and Northeastern states, where Cruz is a non-factor.
Outside of Ohio, the main silver linings for the anti-Trump movement came in Missouri, where Ted Cruz rallied evangelical support to come within 2,000 votes of Trump and in North Carolina, where Cruz’s strong showing in the suburbs demonstrated conservative resistance to the frontrunner. His weakness with Republican women is also a glaring red flag going forward, as he only won their vote in two of the five states (Florida and Illinois). A powerful ad featuring women reading lewd Trump quotes probably made a small impact, and is all but certain to be revived by Democrats if Trump is the GOP nominee.
But at this point, the only candidate that can realistically win the nomination outright is Trump. Circle two dates on the calendar to determine if he’s on a path to doing so: April 5, when Gov. Scott Walker will become the face of the anti-Trump movement in Wisconsin and April 26, when five Northeastern states head to the polls. If Trump can pair his Southern dominance with a Midwestern near-sweep in three weeks, he will be hard to stop. These races will offer a test of whether Cruz can expand his support outside his comfort zone and whether Kasich can parlay his home-state victory into momentum along the I-95 corridor and in the Rust Belt.
The math to a delegate majority is still challenging for Trump, but he demonstrated he’s capable of growing his support even in the face of growing resistance from rank-and-file members in his own party . Between 30 and 40 percent of Republican voters said they’d consider voting for a third-party candidate if Trump is the nominee, according to exit polls. But unless Cruz or Kasich can tally some actual victories in the coming month, the Trump train is looking harder to stop.
NEXT STORY: The Rubio Campaign Ends Where It Began