The outspoken New York businessman scored big wins in primaries in
Florida, Illinois and North Carolina on Tuesday, bringing him closer
to the 1,237 convention delegates he needs to win the nomination.
Trump also claimed victory in Missouri but lost the crucial state of
Ohio, and left the door open for those in the party trying to stop
him from becoming the Republican nominee for the Nov. 8 election.
Trump might fall short of the majority of delegates required,
enabling the party's establishment to put forward another name at
the July convention in Cleveland to formally pick its candidate.
In an interview with CNN on Wednesday, Trump said the party could
not deny him the nomination should he fail to win enough delegates.
"I don't think you can say that we don't get it automatically. I
think you'd have riots. I think you'd have riots. I'm representing
many, many millions of people."
While the Republicans were mired deeper in turmoil, Hillary Clinton
won victories in at least four states on Tuesday that put her in
good shape to defeat Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont and win the
Democratic Party's nomination.
 Republican Party leaders are appalled at Trump's incendiary rhetoric
and reject policies such as his vow to deport 11 million illegal
immigrants, temporarily ban Muslims from the United States and build
a wall along the Mexican border.
The party tried to play down his riot comments, only days after
Trump supporters and protesters clashed at a rally for the
Republican in Chicago that was later scrapped.
"First of all, I assume he is speaking figuratively," Republican
National Committee spokesman Sean Spicer told CNN.
Recent outbreaks of violence during protests at Trump rallies have
prompted President Barack Obama, a Democrat, and mainstream
Republican figures to speak out against the billionaire. David
Farber, a professor of modern American history at Temple University
in Philadelphia, said that, though there have been many episodes of
violent unrest at American political events, not least the 1968
Democratic convention, Trump's warning of a riot is unprecedented.
The nearest modern comparison would be former Alabama Governor
George Wallace, who unsuccessfully ran for president in 1968 as a
third-party candidate, Farber said
“We're in a situation somewhat like the 1960s in the United States,
a period of great polarization,” Farber said, “and there just isn't
a lot of common ground, and Trump supporters feel a lot of quiet
desperation that Trump is helping to fan the flames of.”
"VERY GOOD BRAIN"
In comments likely to raise more concern in the Republican
establishment about Trump's lack of experience and temperament,
the former reality TV show host said he was for the most part his
own foreign affairs adviser.
"I'm speaking with myself, number one, because I have a very good
brain," he told MSNBC's "Morning Joe" show. "I know what I'm doing.
... My primary consultant is myself."
Trump's closest national challenger is first-term U.S. Senator Ted
Cruz of Texas, who prides himself in being a grassroots conservative
often at odds with Republican leaders.
He too warned of severe reactions against an attempt to stage a
so-called brokered convention or contested convention to install a
Republican candidate supported by party leaders.
"I think that would be an absolute disaster. I think the people
would quite rightly revolt," Cruz told CNN.
[to top of second column] |

A brokered convention is a complicated process of sequential votes
that opens the way for horse trading.
The Republican establishment's bid to stop Trump may have come too
late as the field of candidates has dwindled to only three, with
Trump, 69, in command ahead of Cruz, 45, and Ohio Governor John
Kasich, 63, who won his state's Republican primary on Tuesday and is
the last moderate Republican presidential candidate standing.
Growing in confidence, Trump pulled out of a Republican debate
scheduled for Monday in Utah, saying it clashed with a speech he
plan to give to a pro-Israel group. Debate hosts Fox News then
canceled the event.
Senator Marco Rubio quit the White House race after defeat in his
home state of Florida.
Trump now needs to win about 55 percent of the roughly 1,100
delegates still up for grabs in state-by-state nominating contests
to guarantee the nomination. It is not an insurmountable challenge.
Republican strategist Ron Bonjean said it might be tough for the
party to block Trump at the convention.
"A contested convention would be justified if Trump only had around
35 or 40 percent of the delegates locked up. However, if he is very
close to getting the majority of delegates, it would be politically
difficult for the establishment to try stop him by backroom wheeling
and dealing without risking a serious backlash from voters,” said
Bonjean. The strategist is not affiliated with any of the
candidates.
Party figures are divided about whether to throw their weight behind
Trump despite his downsides or to go on trying to halt him. Florida
Governor Rick Scott endorsed Trump on Wednesday but another
influential Southern governor, South Carolina's Nikki Haley,
declared her support for Cruz, the state's Post and Courier
newspaper said.

The election season is likely to become more politicized after Obama
nominated judge Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court, setting up a
showdown with Senate Republicans who have vowed to block any Obama
nominee.
On the Democratic side, wins on Tuesday for former Secretary of
State Clinton, 68, gave her an almost insurmountable edge over
Sanders, 74. His campaign said it was not ruling out asking for a
recount in Tuesday's tight Missouri race.
Seeking to become the United States' first woman president, Clinton
needs to win only around a third of the Democratic delegates
remaining to become her party's nominee.
(Additional reporting by Doina Chiacu, Ginger Gibson, Megan Cassella
and Susan Heavey in Washington, James Oliphant in Florida and
Jonathan Allen in New York; Writing by Alistair Bell; Editing by
Bill Rigby and Jonathan Oatis)
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