Tuesday 8 March 2016

Trump faces test of wider appeal

Washington (CNN)Donald Trump faces a test of resilience on Tuesday as four more nominating contests, including the important Michigan battleground, unfold alongside a quickening last-ditch bid by his foes to slow his march to the Republican nomination.
Democrat Hillary Clinton, meanwhile, hopes to register a win in Michigan to make a point about rival Bernie Sanders' limits after he won three weekend caucuses but failed to close her lead in pledged delegates or to turn the campaign in his favor.
Republicans are voting on what is being dubbed Super Tuesday 2 in primaries in Michigan, Idaho and Mississippi and in caucuses in Hawaii, with 150 delegates up for grabs. Democrats hold contests in Michigan and Mississippi, with 166 delegates at stake.
Clinton holds an overall lead of around 200 pledged delegates over Sanders, whose spirited campaign has enlivened grass-roots Democrats and tugged the former secretary of state to the left on some key issues.

The biggest prize

Michigan is the biggest prize in both races. The state will offer clues about the appeal of the leading candidates among blue-collar voters in the industrial Midwest and may hold omens for significant looming primaries in states like Ohio and Illinois.
    The state looms as particularly important for Trump following anecdotal evidence that fierce attacks on his character and qualifications by other candidates and the Republican establishment may be beginning to have an impact. The billionaire's margin of victory was smaller than expected in Louisiana and Kentucky over the weekend.
    There also were signs of widening support for his closest rival in the delegate count, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who shrugged off a disappointing showing on Super Tuesday last week.
    Still, a Monmouth University poll of Michigan on Monday showed Trump with a big lead and again benefitting from a split opposition against him. The front-runner was at 36%, Cruz was second with 23%, Ohio Gov. John Kasich had 21%, and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio was at 13%.
    A big win in Michigan is important for Trump because it would offer evidence for his argument that he is uniquely qualified among Republicans to attract swing voters in Rust Belt states and to expand the party's general-election coalition.
    "I'm not a normal Republican," Trump said last week in Macomb County, the place where the fabled phenomenon of Reagan Democrats, who dropped their party affiliation to side with the Republican president, was first identified.
    "A normal Republican cannot think in terms ... of bringing in Michigan. And if you don't bring in Michigan it's tough. You have a very narrow road," Trump said.
    Trump will be helped on Tuesday by the fact that both Michigan and Mississippi have open primaries, meaning that Democrats and independents attracted by his message can vote in the Republican contest.
    Cruz, currently the best-placed challenger to Trump, has tended to do better in closed races, where only registered GOP voters can take part and where conservatives hold more sway. The Texas senator, however, will be looking for a strong performance in Mississippi and a second-place finish in Michigan to bolster his case that he -- and not Rubio -- is the only viable alternative to Trump.

    Important moment for Kasich

    Tuesday's races represent an important moment for Kasich, who has spent several weeks effectively on the sidelines following a strong second-place showing in the New Hampshire primary last month. In the Southern primaries, he has proven to be less popular.

    No comments:

    Post a Comment