Latest update : 2016-05-04
Republican front-runner Donald Trump went from long-shot contender to become the party's presumptive nominee on Tuesday after his top rival Ted Cruz bowed out of the race on the heels of a resounding defeat in Indiana.
The New York billionaire, who has never held public
office, had repeatedly defied pundits' predictions that his campaign
would implode. He prevailed despite making outrageous statements along
the way that drew biting criticism but still fed his anti-establishment
appeal.
Addressing jubilant supporters at Trump Tower in New York after
romping to his seventh straight state-wide victory in the Indiana
primary, the real-estate mogul promised them: “We’re going to win in
November, and we’re going to win big, and it’s going to be America
first.”
Tuesday’s contest in the Midwestern state was seen as a final
firewall by the “stop Trump” movement seeking to prevent him from
locking in the party nomination.
But as the race was called overwhelmingly in Trump’s favour, Cruz conceded to supporters in Indianapolis that he no longer had a viable path to the nomination.
But as the race was called overwhelmingly in Trump’s favour, Cruz conceded to supporters in Indianapolis that he no longer had a viable path to the nomination.
“We left it all on the field in Indiana,” Cruz said. “We gave it everything we’ve got, but the voters chose another path.”
“And so with a heavy heart, but with boundless optimism for the long-term future of our nation, we are suspending our campaign.”
Reporting from Washington DC, FRANCE 24’s Philip Crowther called
Trump and Cruz “two competitors who do not like each other at all. In
fact, they largely hate each other, at least that’s what we’ve heard
over the past few weeks and months. Despite this, there was gratitude
from Donald Trump
for Ted Cruz having exited the race this quickly, that he succumbed to
this very, very large defeat in Indiana and now the road for Donald
Trump is wide open toward the Republican nomination.”
The former reality-TV star is now free to prepare for a matchup in the Nov. 8 election, with Hillary Clinton expected to be his Democratic opponent. Clinton's march to the Democratic nomination was slowed by rival Bernie Sanders's victory over her in Indiana.
‘We're going after Hillary Clinton’
Trump's immediate challenge is to unite deep fissures within the
Republican Party, as many party loyalists are appalled at his bullying
style, his treatment of women and his signature proposals to build a
wall on the border with Mexico and deport 11 million illegal immigrants.
"We have to unite the party if we want to win in November," said
Henry Barbour, a Republican National Committee leader from Mississippi.
"Donald Trump is the guy with the keys to the car. He's the one who
needs to unite us. Now is his opportunity. The voters have picked him."
Trump himself called for unity in a speech at a victory rally that was free of his usual bombast and flamboyance.
Trump's victory put to rest a belief that Republicans would choose
their nominee at a contested convention when party leaders gather in
Cleveland July 18-21.
Reacting to the Cruz pullout, conservative pundits and politicians
took to Twitter Tuesday night calling unity within the GOP party ranks.
Shortly after the Indiana results were declared, Republican National
Committee chairman Reince Priebus noted that, “@realDonaldTrump will be
presumptive @GOP nominee, we all need to unite and focus on defeating
@HillaryClinton."
“Trump got that crucial phone call from the chairman of the
Republican National Committee,” noted Crowther. “He’s called Donald
Trump the presumptive nominee and if he says that, well so be it: he’s
the nominee for the Republican party according to the establishment that
had put so much in the way of his nomination. Now it’s time for the
party to unite, said Reince Priebus, but that will be easier said than
done because remember how many in the Republican Party establishment
wanted to stop Donald Trump from this nomination that is now virtually
his.”
At his victory rally at Trump Tower in New York, Trump walked on
stage with wife Melania and other family members as the Rolling Stones'
"Start Me Up" blared over loudspeakers.
He is likely to formally wrap up the nomination on June 7 when
California votes, although Ohio Governor John Kasich vowed to stay in
the race as Trump's last challenger.
Trump called Indiana a "tremendous victory" and immediately directed fire at Clinton.
"We're going after Hillary Clinton," he said. "She will not be a
great president, she will not be a good president, she will be a poor
president. She doesn't understand trade."
Cruz sounds beaten, but defiant
As the vote returns flowed in, Cruz announced that he has ended his
campaign in Indianapolis, with his wife, Heidi, at his side. Cruz, 45,
sounding beaten but defiant, said he no longer sees a viable path to the
nomination.
"We gave it everything we got. But the voters chose another path, and
so with a heavy heart, but with boundless optimism for the long-term
future of our nation, we are suspending our campaign," said Cruz, a US
senator from Texas.
Clinton's campaign signaled the former secretary of state's approach
to dealing with Trump in a statement issued by senior Clinton adviser
John Podesta, who said Trump seeks to "bully and divide Americans."
"Throughout this campaign, Donald Trump has demonstrated that he's
too divisive and lacks the temperament to lead our nation and the free
world. With so much at stake, Donald Trump is simply too big of a risk,"
he said.
Cruz had hoped to show he was still a factor in the race. Some at his
event expressed shock at the decision by Cruz, who had been the last
serious challenger to Trump out of an original field of 17 candidates.
Dan Follis, 62, was too rocked by Cruz's announcement to know for
sure his next thought on the campaign. But he was sure of one thing: "I
will not vote for Trump."
Trump won at least 51 of 57 possible delegates awarded in Indiana,
according to the Associated Press delegate tracker. His victory in the
state pushed him to 1,047 delegates of the 1,237 needed to clinch the
nomination, compared with 153 for Kasich.
Cruz had 565 delegates before suspending his campaign.
On the Democratic side, Clinton now has 2,202 of the 2,383 needed, while Sanders has 1,400.
Trump declared Cruz a tough man to beat.
"Ted Cruz, I don't know if he likes me or doesn't like me. But he is
one hell of a competitor. He is one smart guy. And he has got an amazing
future," Trump said.
Trump also reached out to both Hispanics and African-Americans as he
talked about ensuring jobs and saying he would "make America great
again."
"This is going to be a beautiful and loving country," Trump said.
Still eyeing a third-party alternative
But anti-Trump groups said they would continue fighting, and Lanhee
Chen, who had advised former Republican candidate Marco Rubio, broached
the possibility of a third-party candidate.
"Tonight's outcome raises seriousness & urgency of discussions
about third-party alternative; how real it is depends on who steps up to
run," he tweeted.
Cruz had been counting on a win in Tuesday's primary to slow the New
York businessman's progress toward the nomination. But Trump rode
momentum from wins in five Northeastern states a week ago to wrest
Indiana from Cruz, whose brand of Christian conservatism had been
expected to have wide appeal in the state.
The only hope Kasich has for becoming the Republican nominee is to
somehow deny Trump the 1,237 delegates he needs to win the nomination
outright and force Republicans at the July convention to choose one of
them.
Kasich vowed to stay in the race.
"As long as it remains possible Governor Kasich will fight for the
higher path," said Kasich senior strategist John Weaver. "Governor
Kasich will continue to campaign and offer the voters a clear choice for
our country."
(FRANCE 24 with AFP and REUTERS)
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