The News
Thursday 21 of November 2024

Trump Wins Indiana, Looks Close to Unstoppable


U.S. Republican presidential candidate Trump speaks at a campaign event at The Palladium at the Center for Performing Arts in Carmel, Indiana,photo: Reuters/Aaron P. Bernstein
U.S. Republican presidential candidate Trump speaks at a campaign event at The Palladium at the Center for Performing Arts in Carmel, Indiana,photo: Reuters/Aaron P. Bernstein
U.S. Republican presidential candidate Trump's victory in Indiana further paves the way for his Republican nomination

INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana – Republican front-runner Donald Trump scored an important victory over rival Ted Cruz in Indiana on Tuesday, a win that moves him close to being unstoppable in his march to the party’s presidential nomination.

U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump won a state rival Ted Cruz hoped would slow his winning streak. Photo: Reuters/Kamil Krzaczynski
U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump won a state rival Ted Cruz hoped would slow his winning streak. Photo: Reuters/Kamil Krzaczynski

The New York billionaire was quickly projected to be the winner by television networks shortly after polling places closed in the Midwestern state. Trump was on track to take well over 50 percent of the vote, eclipsing Cruz, a U.S. senator from Texas. Ohio Governor John Kasich was running a distant third.

Cruz had been counting on a win in Tuesday’s primary to slow the New York businessman’s progress toward the nomination. But polls in recent days showed Trump opening up a substantial lead in the Midwestern state over the senator, whose brand of Christian conservatism had been expected to have wide appeal in the state.

Campaigning in Evansville, in the state’s southwest corner, Cruz sounded deeply frustrated by the bombastic real estate mogul, who has ripped Cruz at every turn.

“The man cannot tell the truth but he combines it with being a narcissist,” Cruz said, “a narcissist at a level I don’t think this country has ever seen.”

Cruz’s fury was triggered when Trump said in a television appearance that the senator’s father, Cuban emigre Rafael Cruz, was linked to John F. Kennedy’s assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald. Trump was referring to a report by the National Enquirer, a supermarket tabloid known for celebrity gossip and alien sightings.

Cruz termed Trump a “serial philanderer” — likely as part of his strategy to try to win the support of evangelical voters. Trump, in response, said Cruz had become “more and more unhinged.”

GINGER GIBSON
ALANA WISE