Donald Trump dominated once again Tuesday night, scoring what Fox
News projects to be a convincing victory in the Nevada Republican Caucus
— a third straight win that builds upon his momentum heading into Super
Tuesday and delivers a sharp warning to his rivals and the party
establishment that time may be running out to slow his march to the
nomination.
The battle was still under way for second place.
Incoming returns show Florida Sen. Marco Rubio holding an edge over
Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, but it was too early to call.
With 94 percent of precincts reporting, Trump led with 45 percent, followed by Rubio at 23 percent and Cruz at 21 percent.
Far behind are retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson and Ohio Gov. John Kasich.
Before a cheering crowd of supporters in Las Vegas,
Trump teased those who predicted he wouldn’t do well in this contest and
others.
“Now we’re winning, winning, winning,” Trump said. “Soon, the country is going to start winning, winning, winning.”
This is the third win in a row for Trump, who earlier
this month won South Carolina and New Hampshire -- after placing second
in Iowa. His winning streak gives him significant momentum as he heads
into Super Tuesday next week, the biggest prize of the campaign so far.
More than a dozen states hold primaries or caucuses
that day, awarding nearly 600 delegates – or more than four times the
number that have been awarded in the first four states combined.
Entrance polls in Nevada showed Trump was buoyed in
the state by support from a range of groups, including Hispanics and
evangelicals. And he dominated among caucus-goers saying they prefer an
outsider.
As Trump builds his base, Rubio and Cruz are still fighting to cut into Trump's lead, with diminishing opportunities to do so.
Rubio has enjoyed some momentum after his
second-place finish Saturday in the South Carolina primary. But even as
he wins over endorsements from "establishment" figures, the Florida
senator has yet to notch his first election victory, raising continuing
doubts over whether he could be a successful Trump alternative.
He did get one high-powered vote on Tuesday, though -- a spokeswoman said Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval cast his ballot for Rubio.
Cruz, meanwhile, is trying to shake doubts about his
campaign and recover after a tough stretch where his campaign repeatedly
was accused of "dirty tricks" -- and he fired his top spokesman over
one of the incidents.
Cruz, at his watch party in Vegas, maintained he’s
still the best candidate to go up against Trump – and the Democratic
nominee. In a knock at Rubio, he noted only two candidates, him and
Trump, have won one of the first three contests and said voters will
have a “clear choice” next Tuesday.
“One week from today will be the most important night of this campaign,” Cruz said.
Cruz won the Iowa caucuses, but has struggled to
follow that up since. He finished third in South Carolina, despite an
electorate full of the kind of evangelical voters who thus far have
carried his campaign.
Trump charged into Nevada with unrelenting attacks on Cruz’s character.
"There's something wrong with this guy," Trump said
at a Las Vegas rally Monday night. On Tuesday, he called Cruz a "soft,
weak, little baby" who lies.
Polls had shown him leading in the state, but polling
in the state is sparse and the contest is often unpredictable. Mitt
Romney won the last two GOP caucuses in Nevada.
Nevada’s voting took place in schools, community
centers and places of worship across the state. There were some reports
of long lines and even caucus volunteers wearing campaign attire –
specifically pro-Trump.
But state Republican officials said it’s “not against
the rules for volunteers to wear candidate gear.” Further, one GOP
official told reporters looking at complaints on Twitter to “take a deep
breath,” saying the state was looking at high turnout and enthusiasm.
The caucus marked the first Republican election in the West, and the fourth of the campaign.
Trump's rivals concede they are running out of time
to take him on. The election calendar suggests that if the New York
billionaire's rivals don't slow him by mid-March, they may not ever.
Trump swept all of South Carolina's 50 delegates, giving him a total of
67 compared to Cruz and Rubio who had 11 and 10, respectively, heading
into Nevada.
Nevada’s 30 delegates will be awarded to candidates
in proportion to their share of the statewide vote so long as they earn
at least 3.33 percent.
Rubio and Cruz have been laying into each other
viciously in recent days, an indication they know Trump can be slowed
only if one of them is eliminated.
Rubio -- who finished third in Iowa and fifth in New
Hampshire -- had already left Nevada, preferring to campaign in
Minnesota and Michigan. In recent days, he has also picked up support
from such Republican establishment heavyweights as Arkansas Gov. Asa
Hutchinson, North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis and Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch.
"We have incredible room to grow," Rubio told reporters during a Monday night news conference on his campaign plane.