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Trump previews debate, calls Cruz a ‘nervous wreck’
Trump’s rivals do have a little time.
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If Donald Trump becomes president he’s vowed he will keep Guantanamo Bay open.
Trump said he is now “winning the country”, and he will pick up more Republican supporters as his rivals drop out of the race.
Trump heads into Super Tuesday next week, leading in the polls, and more importantly, leading in the delegate count.
Trump speaks at a rally at the South Point Hotel & Casino on February 22, 2016 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
“First of all I think you need to take everything that we’ve applied, the lessons of every other campaign before and throw them out the window”.
Preliminary entrance polls taken of Republican caucus-goers show that almost 6 in 10 are angry at the way the government is working, and about half of them supported the billionaire businessman.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump enthusiastically declared his campaign to be a “winning” one in a speech after winning the Nevada Republican caucus on Tuesday.
It polled 759 likely Republican primary voters and 518 likely Democratic primary voters over the past week on their presidential preferences.
Clinton was looking for a commanding victory over Sanders in Saturday’s SC primary to give her a boost heading into Super Tuesday.
Trump’s win in Nevada cements him as the bully with the big stack in this year’s no-limit presidential poker game.
Finishing at the bottom of the heap were retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson with 4.8 per cent of the vote and Ohio Governor John Kasich with 3.6 per cent.
The projections were based on initial results and exits polls. It’s still a long way from the 1,237 needed to win the nomination. Ted Cruz and Florida Sen.
Jeremy Hughes, a Nevada strategist for Marco Rubio, said he was hearing about extensive problems at caucus sites across the state.
Harking back to own win in Iowa’s leadoff caucuses, Cruz told supporters “the only campaign that has defeated Donald Trump is this campaign”.
Key primaries are ahead on February 1 in states that include Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia, all states in which Trump could do well and further cement his front-running status.
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Experts said the focus was on whether Rubio and Cruz would be able to slow Trump’s momentum and which of the two candidates would come in second.