Columbus, Ohio (CNN)Front-runners
Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump dominated one of the biggest days of
the 2016 presidential race so far. Trump overcame controversy about the
violent clashes that have marked his rallies this week and Clinton muted
the criticism over her history on trade deals with big wins in Ohio and
Illinois over Bernie Sanders.
But
the Republican delegate count is about to become a national obsession.
Ohio Gov. John Kasich's win in his home state -- and 66 delegates --
makes Trump's path to the nomination more difficult, and will have
everyone in the political world looking for their calculator.
Here are five takeaways from Tuesday's contests:
Clinton's pivot, take two
After
her big Super Tuesday wins two weeks earlier, Clinton sought to pivot
to the general election. She dropped her usual attacks on Sanders and
started trying to smooth things over with his younger, more liberal
supporters.
Then Sanders threw a wrench into all of that by shocking her in Michigan last week.
A
steadier Clinton campaign made up for that loss, and then some, by
crushing Sanders in Florida, North Carolina and Ohio on Tuesday, denying
him a repeat. She also won Illinois and as of 2 a.m. was battling
Sanders in Missouri.
And afterward,
Clinton -- who knows Sanders won't be dropping out anytime soon --
turned her eyes to November, and to Trump. The message to Democrats: The
general election is here, and I'm going to stand up to the GOP
front-runner.
She hammered Trump
repeatedly during her speech in West Palm Beach, Florida, only a few
minutes from Trump's resort there, saying at one point: "When we hear a
candidate for president call for rounding up 12 million immigrants,
banning Muslims from entering the United States, when he embraces
torture, that doesn't make him strong, it makes him wrong."
Another big night for Trump
Trump
won big -- routing Marco Rubio in Florida and running up the score in
Illinois and North Carolina, while duking it out to the end with Cruz in
Missouri.
This was a defiant
candidate. The violence that erupted at his rally in Chicago last
weekend didn't stop him from winning the state. The media criticism led
him only to take a whack at "disgusting reporters" and leave without
taking a single question, even though his campaign had advertised his
election-night event as a "press conference."
As the volume and fear about Trump rose to a new level, once again the Republican front-runner gets to say: Scoreboard.
Perhaps
the best evidence of Trump's supreme confidence: Embattled campaign
manager Corey Lewandowski, accused by a female reporter from the
pro-Trump outlet Breitbart of grabbing her during a rally last week, was
parked on stage next to Trump, who gave him a shout-out.
"Corey -- good job, Corey. Great job," Trump said.
Kasich's narrow road to Cleveland
So Kasich won his home state of Ohio, and all 66 of its delegates. It was an impressive victory over Trump.
But where does he go from here?
It's
the first time Kasich has won a state, and he's far behind Trump and
Cruz in the delegate race. He's made big bets on two other states, New
Hampshire and Michigan, and he lost them both. If he can't win there,
it's not clear where he can win — except for as a dark horse at the
Republican National Convention in Cleveland in July.
But
there are hurdles ahead for a candidate who will now face more intense
scrutiny. Trump has relentlessly attacked the Ohio governor. Ted Cruz
will likely hammer his decision to expand Medicaid under Obamacare. And
his Not-Quite-Mr.-Nice-Guy persona from his Capitol Hill days could do
him damage.
Kasich is betting on
strong showings in states that award delegates proportionally, like New
York, Connecticut, Oregon and Washington, and the winner-take-alls
including Wisconsin, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Indiana and California.
At
the convention, Kasich's campaign said in a memo, Rubio's delegates are
likely to side with the Ohio governor, "bringing the three candidates
very close to parity on a second ballot."
From there, he'd make the argument that he's the best-equipped candidate to take on Clinton.
Kasich's
message has been overwhelmingly positive, but he did begin drawing some
implicit contrasts with Trump on Tuesday night.
"It's about pulling us together, not pulling us apart," he said.
In another Trump-focused line, Kasich said: "I will not take the low road to the highest office in the land."
A contested convention is more probable
Trump's big night still wasn't enough to stave off the likelihood of a contested convention in Cleveland.
Kasich
seizing Ohio's 66 delegates complicates things for Trump. Even after
winning 18 of the first 27 states with Missouri still counting, Trump
needs to capture about three out of every five remaining delegates to
win the 1,237 necessary to claim the GOP nomination outright.
With Cruz and Kasich continuing on, that won't be easy.
Cruz,
in particular, represents a pesky challenge. He argued Tuesday night --
as he has each of the past Tuesdays -- that he and Trump are the only
candidates with a shot at the nomination.
"Nobody else has any mathematical possibility whatsoever," Cruz said.
Does a contested convention mean Trump would be denied the nomination? Not necessarily.
The anti-Trump forces are now divided into three camps: Anger, bargaining and acceptance.
Some
are convinced that allowing him to advance to the general election
would permanently damage the party. Some -- particularly those those who
have for president or are still in the race -- are still convinced that
there's some alternative option. And some believe denying the will of
the voters on the convention floor would destroy the party.
Aware
of the challenge he faces, Trump talked party unity on Tuesday night
from his Mar-A-Lago estate in Florida -- name-dropping House Speaker
Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.
"We need to bring our party together," Trump said.
Rubio's 2020 play
Rubio knew his path to the Republican nomination was non-existent once Trump crushed him in Florida.
So
he made a big bet on his political future: He went down swinging
against Trump, hoping that a rebalancing might swing the Republican
pendulum back in his direction in the future.
"I ask the American people, do not give in to the fear. Do not give in to the frustration," Rubio said.
Of his own campaign, Rubio said, "I chose a different path, and I'm proud of that."
Make
no mistake: Rubio's Florida loss didn't just mark the end of his
candidacy; it's the defining moment in the electorate's total
repudiation of the GOP's efforts to reboot -- with a more inclusive,
optimistic message aimed at minority populations -- after its loss in
2012.
Still, at only 44, Rubio's political star could very well rise again.
And
while he won't stray far from the conservative movement -- in his exit
speech, he railed against Washington elites -- his calculus depends on
Trump ultimately faltering, likely in the general election.
Republican
operative Rick Wilson made that much clear on Twitter, when he compared
Rubio's 2016 campaign to Ronald Reagan's unsuccessful primary against
President Gerald Ford in 1976 -- four years before Reagan began eight
years of Republican rule and influenced an entire generation of young
conservatives.
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