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Top Kansas Republicans say they’ll back Trump; some won’t

Ted Cruz and Ohio Gov. John Kasich withdrew from the race.

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On that, though, there are exceptions.

Trump is neither a conservative nor a true Republican, she said, adding that she dislikes his “personal demeanor”. I don’t even want certain people that were extraordinarily nasty.

Party Chairman David Pepper said Thursday that Democrats are preparing for a tough campaign in the swing state, but think Trump could lift turnout for Democrats while complicating other Republicans’ campaigns.

On the democratic side, Bernie Sanders says he not going anywhere.

The Republican competition changed dramatically with Trump’s IN victory and Ted Cruz’s abrupt decision to quit the race. Kasich won the state, shutting out Trump from securing pledged delegates here.

Trump has switched his focus to Clinton as well.

“The answer is simple: No”, Tweeted Nebraska Sen.

Since the Republican field has been cleared, Trump stands alone.

When asked Wednesday night if he would take the “low or high road” when responding to attacks from the Clinton campaign, Trump said he could “handle the low road if I had to do that”.

“When people said “Never Trump, ‘ it wasn’t ‘We don’t like Trump, ‘ it wasn’t ‘We’d prefer not Trump, we’d prefer somebody else” it was, ‘Never Trump, ‘” Fraley said. Trump didn’t identify any of the names under consideration. “We can now focus on the general election and winning in November”, Hayes said. He announced this morning on “Good Morning America” that he would accept “small contributions”, and he is now telling the Wall Street Journal that he won’t be entirely self-funding his campaign. Now you have four to five Supreme Court justices that will be picked by Hillary Clinton or whoever it is, but probably Hillary. Heading into Tuesday’s voting, Clinton had 92 percent of the delegates she needs.

“The bulk of the burden on unifying the party will have to come from our presumptive nominee”, Ryan said.

Trump will now turn his attention toward the general election against likely Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton – a more uphill fight than he had in the primary contest he dominated for much of the past year.

Clinton said she knows how to run a campaign against Trump and took a swipe at Trump’s 16 Republican presidential rivals who started out in the 2016 campaign.

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Trump has insisted for months that he is financing his own campaign, and he has loaned himself most of the dollars he spent in the primary, though his campaign website has a prominent link at which voters can donate. Some, like Douglas County Republican Party Executive Director John Sieler, enthusiastically support his candidacy. She said Trump’s critics within the GOP can back a third-party candidate, write in a candidate or simply not cast a vote. Both he and Kasich hoped to stop Trump from getting the 1,237 delegates necessary to clinch the nomination and then go on to prevail in an open convention.

John Kasich leaves Republican presidential race