With Super Tuesday 11 polls now open, Donald Trump's 2016 Republican presidential showdown with Ohio Governor John Kasich remains too close to call in Kasich's home state, but the GOP front-runner is expected to trounce Florida Senator Marco Rubio on his home turf.
Donald Trump's presidential campaign could potentially hit new milestones on Tuesday as new polling data has shown the businessman threatening John Kasich and Marco Rubio's White House hopes.
Despite his repeated boasts suggesting that he is expecting to net significant Latino support, a new Gallup Poll finds that Republican front-runner Donald Trump is looked upon unfavorably by more than three in every four Latino voters.
A new CNN Poll of Polls survey finds Republican front-runner Donald Trump on the verge of upsetting both Florida Senator Marco Rubio and Ohio Governor John Kasich in their home states.
The four remaining Republican presidential candidates made final pitches to registered votes in Florida, where 99 delegates are up for grabs in next week's winner-take-all Republican primary.
Amid Ted Cruz's call for GOP unity, and the strong forces from the Republican side ramping up their efforts to stop Donald Trump, the party's polarizing figure and frontrunner is getting a boost from an unlikely source and former rival. Ben Carson, who just recently opted to drop out of the race after a dismal showing in the polls, will be endorsing Trump.
The sudden increase of Puerto Rican voters in the United States might be the determining factor on who will get Florida’s electoral vote. However, who they will be voting for remains uncertain considering that they are notorious “swing voters.”
For Ted Cruz, there could be no better way to stop Trump than for the GOP to unite by his side. And it seems like he is now pushing for the Two-Man race strategy more than ever. According to Cruz, Trump benefits when there are multiple oppositions as votes get split among them.
Alex Conant, an adviser for Rubio, said that there isn't any truth to the rumors that there have been internal discussions within the Rubio camp to drop out of the race ahead of the Florida elections. He assured Rubio's supporters that they remain committed to the Florida primary and their plans will push through.
Some of Marco Rubio's handlers are advising the reeling Florida senator to drop out of 2016 Republican race for president before primary voters can take to the polls in his own state early next week.
Bernie Sanders appears to have stunned the political world on Tuesday night as his campaign won Michigan’s presidential primary against Hillary Clinton. It was also a good night for Republican candidate Donald Trump.
Republican Majority Leader Paul Ryan has held private conversations with 2016 leading GOP presidential candidates Donald Trump and Ted Cruz about the party's agenda.
More than 100 delegates will be available for Republican presidential candidates on March 8's "Super Tuesday 2," across states where the Latino electorate is on the rise.
In light of Donald Trump's seemingly unstoppable momentum, the GOP is poised to stand behind Ted Cruz, a candidate who was previously seen as too divisive and unpopular to consider.
Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto dubbed Donald Trump as today’s “Hitler,” pitching in his opinion on Trump’s proposed U.S.-Mexico border wall. Meanwhile, the Republican primaries remain consistent with the business tycoon in the lead.
It seems like money is going to play a huge role in some of the Republican groups' attempt of thwarting Trump's bid to the presidency. The anti-Trump campaign has already started and they are centered on the states that could potentially decide the fate for the party's official standard bearer.
As per one of the recent polls, Bernie Sanders has emerged the frontrunner after getting the better of every other US presidential candidate--- in the most number of deleted Twitter posts this 2016, that is. Sanders is ahead of the pack in terms of retracting previously published Twitter posts with a total of 58 for the period of January to March 4, 2016.