It was a wild basic season. A year ago, no one would guess that Senator Bernie Sanders from Vermont gave the alleged democratic candidate Hillary Clinton for his money, or that the businessman and television star/reality, Donald Trump, will lead the republican process of nomination.
But here we are.
Until now, Trump has won three of the first four clubs or basic presidents for the Republican Nomination: New Hampshire, South Karolina and Nevada. In addition, over the past few weeks, due to the bad election results, the field of republican candidates has been made aware. Chris Christie, Rand Paul, Carly Fiorina, Jeb Bush, Rick Santorum and Mike Huckabee leaned away from the race.
Of the 16 candidates originally covered by election data on the Real Clear Politics website, only 5 remained in the race: Trump, Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz, John Kasich and Ben Carson. Looking at the last results, the Republican nomination is really three candidates: Trump, Rubio and Cruz.
While Trump was at the top, until March 15, all delegates are awarded proportionally (SC was a lonely exception, and all Trump’s delegates). Of the 1,237 delegates needed to win the convention, Trump is far at the age of 81, both with Cruz and Rubio at the age of 17.
Trump announced a victory in Nevada with 46 percent of votes. Rubio took second place with 24 percent, and Cruz was third with 21 percent. Activities at Electoral Night were more intriguing than voting. Trump celebrated in Las Vegas, talking to a crowd of fans; Rubio was already in Michigan, and Cruz focused on the next competition, in which his home Texas will be.
The next week is the first seismic change in the nomination process. The race moves from the state competition to Super on Tuesday, when 13 states will take place. A week between Nevada and Super Tuesday clubs will require campaign to determine how to allocate money, staff, volunteers and time among different states.
The states that will vote next week are Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado, Georgia, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia and Wyoming. In total, these countries represent 595 delegates who will be divided proportionally on the basis of votes. Texas has the largest number of delegates at the age of 155, and Georgia ranks second at 76.
For Cruz in Texas, he is a must win, so expect that he will spend a lot of time, effort and money. Cruz overtook Trump in Texas polls at the end of January and can be able to win his family state, but with proportional allocation a diminutive win is not so helpful – he simply moves away for embarrassment that Al Gore survived, losing his native state.
After a great Tuesday, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine and Puerto Rico appears – on March 5 and 6. On March 8 in Hawaje, Idaho, Michigan and Mississippi. On March 12, Guam and the Colombia district vote.
Idemes Marc marks another huge change in the process when the competitions become the winner-evidence. These include Florida (99 delegates), Illinois, Missouri, North Karolina, Northern Marianas and Ohio (66 delegates) for combined 367 delegates. The question is: will Cruz or Rubio last for so long?
There is no doubt that the Rubio campaign is trying to design a future that includes sticking to Florida Primary, but because Trump has been in Florida surveys since August, Rubio may have an earlier assembly.
You can be among people who scratch their heads, wondering how we finished here, with Trump in the first and without a clear vision to stop Tornado Trump. The Washington Post article written by James Hohmann in August last year entitled “Trump: maybe America should try to create the President of the Paltents”, contains a view of the tump’s presence.
Speaking of examining the cross card, the article notes that Trump said: “The only thing I did wrong was: is he a nice person? I was the last in terms of kindness, “he said.
“Campaigns deep at the Bible belt, again turned it as not responsibility – but by an act.
“I think I’m the nicest of all” – I just don’t want to be used! “
“Continuing the main line of attack on Jeba Bush, Trump predicted that the choice of Republicans in choosing a candidate would be kindness vs. competence.
“We are tired of nice,” he said. “” We don’t need nice. We need competent. “
Perhaps Trump is right – after eight years of kindness, we may prefer to choose competences over courtesy.
