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2016 Republican Party presidential primaries

Presidential primaries and caucuses of the Republican Party took place within all 50 U.S. states, the District of Columbia, and five U.S. territories between February 1 and June 7, 2016. These elections selected the 2,472 delegates that were sent to the Republican National Convention. Businessman and reality television star Donald Trump won the Republican nomination for president of the United States.

2016 Republican Party presidential primaries

← 2012 February 1 to June 7, 2016 2020 →

2,472 delegates to the Republican National Convention
1,237 delegate votes needed to win
 
Candidate Donald Trump Ted Cruz
Home state New York Texas
Delegate count 1,441[1] 551[1]
Contests won 41 11
Popular vote 14,015,993[1] 7,822,100[1]
Percentage 44.9% 25.1%

 
Candidate Marco Rubio John Kasich
Home state Florida Ohio
Delegate count 173[1] 161[1]
Contests won 3 1
Popular vote 3,515,576[1] 4,290,448[1]
Percentage 11.3% 13.8%

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Previous Republican nominee

Mitt Romney

Republican nominee

Donald Trump

A total of 17 major candidates entered the race. Prior to the 2020 Democratic Party presidential primaries, this was the largest presidential primary field for any political party in American history.[2] U.S. Senator Ted Cruz of Texas won the Iowa caucuses, and Trump won the New Hampshire primary and the South Carolina primary. From March 16, 2016, to May 3, 2016, only three candidates remained in the race: Trump, Cruz, and Ohio Governor John Kasich. Cruz won four Western contests and won in Wisconsin, keeping a reasonable path to denying Trump the nomination on first ballot with 1,237 delegates. However, Trump scored landslide victories in New York and five northeastern states in April, before taking every delegate in the Indiana primary of May 3 with yet another majority of that state's popular vote. Without any further chances of forcing a contested convention, Cruz suspended his campaign[3] and Trump was declared the presumptive Republican nominee by Republican National Committee chairman Reince Priebus on May 3.[4] Kasich ended his campaign the following day.[5] After winning the Washington primary and gaining support from unbound North Dakota delegates on May 26,[6] Trump passed the threshold of 1,237 delegates required to guarantee his nomination.[7] By the end of the primary voting process, Trump had a commanding lead in the number of pledged delegates, ensuring a very smooth process for being declared the nominee. However, at 44.95%, Trump had the lowest percentage of the popular primary vote for a major party nominee since the 1988 Democratic Party presidential primaries.

On July 19, 2016, Trump and his running mate, Indiana Governor Mike Pence, were officially nominated as the Republican presidential and vice presidential candidates at the Republican National Convention.[8] Trump and Pence went on to defeat the Democratic ticket of Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine in the general election on November 8, 2016, despite the latter ticket consistently leading in polls.[9][10]

Candidates and results

Seventeen major candidates were listed in major independent nationwide polls and filed as candidates with the Federal Election Commission.[citation needed] A total of 2,472 delegates attended the 2016 Republican National Convention, and the winning candidate needed a simple majority of 1,237 votes to become the Republican nominee.[citation needed]

Delegate breakdown

 
  Donald Trump: 1441 delegates
  Ted Cruz: 551 delegates
  Marco Rubio: 174 delegates
  John Kasich: 162 delegates
  Ben Carson: 9 delegates
  Jeb Bush: 4 delegates
  Rand Paul: 1 delegate
  Mike Huckabee: 1 delegate
  Carly Fiorina: 1 delegate
  Uncommitted: 130 delegates

Fifty-six primary contests were conducted to choose 2,472 delegates. In 50 states and territories the delegates were allocated to candidates by popular vote either statewide or on the congressional district level and then elected according to state rules. In six states and territories, the first-instance popular vote did not allocate any delegates; they were elected later at local conventions and either bound to a candidate or uncommitted.[11] Most delegates were elected as bound delegates, meaning that they were required to vote for a specific candidate on the first ballot at the national convention. Some delegates attended the convention as unbound or uncommitted delegates, meaning that they were free to vote for anyone at the first ballot. These 130 uncommitted delegates included 18 unbound RNC delegates[a] and 112 delegates that have been elected or allocated as uncommitted.[b] Uncommitted delegates were still at liberty to express a preference for a candidate, although that preference was not binding. Among the 901 delegates elected for candidates who later dropped out of the race, 155 were still bound to vote for their candidate on the first ballot[c] and 34 were released[d] according to the local rules of each state party. If no candidate were elected in the first round of voting, a progressively larger number of delegates would have been allowed to vote for the candidate of their choice. The voting rules on subsequent ballots were determined by individual states: most states released their delegates on the second round of voting, and only four states kept them bound on the third round and beyond.[15]

This table shows how many bound delegates each candidate had won before suspending his or her campaign;[d] it does not show how many unbound delegates pledged their support to any candidate during the primaries, nor does it show the expected result of the vote at the national convention. Although a state is considered won by a candidate if a plurality of the state's delegates are bound, RNC Rule 40(b)[16] required a candidate to demonstrate support from a majority of delegates in eight states to be eligible as the nominee. Convention rules are based on delegate votes, not the popular vote. In the context of Republican primaries, the term "states" refers collectively to the fifty states, the District of Columbia and the five inhabited territories (altogether 56 delegations) as specified in RNC Rule 1(b).[17] In the following table, states and territories where the candidates achieved a majority of bound delegates are marked in bold. States and territories where a candidate won a majority of delegates but not a majority of bound delegates are marked in italics.

Nominee

Candidate Most recent position Announced Campaign
Withdrawal date
Bound
delegates
(hard count;
then floor)
[18]
Popular
vote[18]
Contests won[e] Running mate Ref.
Donald Trump   Chairman of The Trump Organization
(1971–2017)
June 16, 2015  
(CampaignPositions)
Campaign site

Secured nomination:
May 26, 2016

[6]
1,441
(58.3%)
(floor 1,725)
14,015,993
(44.95%)
41
AL, AR, AS, AZ, CA, CT, DE, FL,
GA, GU, HI, IL, IN, KY, LA, MA,
MD, MI, MO, MP, MS, MT, NC, ND,
NE, NH, NV, NJ, NM, NY,OR, PA,
RI, SC, SD, TN, VA, VI, VT, WA, WV
Mike Pence [19]

Withdrew during the primaries

Candidate Portrait Most recent position Announced Campaign
Withdrawal date
Bound
delegates
(hard count;
then floor)
[18]
Popular
vote[18]
Contests won[f] Running mate Ref.
Ted Cruz   U.S. senator from Texas
(2013–present)
March 23, 2015  
(CampaignPositions)
Withdrew: May 3
(endorsed Donald Trump)[20]
551
(22.3%)
(floor 484)
7,822,100
(25.08%)
11
AK, CO, IA, ID, KS, ME,
OK, TX, UT, WI, WY
Carly Fiorina[21] [22][23]
Marco Rubio   U.S. senator from Florida
(2011–present)
April 13, 2015  
(CampaignPositions)
Withdrew: March 15
(endorsed Donald Trump)[24]
173
(7%)
(floor 123)
3,515,576
(11.27%)
3
DC, MN, PR
None [25][26]
John Kasich   69th
governor of Ohio
(2011–2019)
July 21, 2015  
(CampaignPositions)
Withdrew: May 4
(did not endorse any candidate, wrote-in John McCain for general election)[27]
161
(6.5%)
(floor 125)
4,290,448
(13.76%)
1
OH
None [28][29]
Ben Carson   Director of pediatric neurosurgery
for Johns Hopkins Children's Center
(1984–2013)
May 3, 2015  
(CampaignPositions)
Withdrew: March 4
(endorsed Donald Trump)[30]
9
(0.4%)
(floor 7)
857,039
(2.75%)
None None [31][32]
Jeb Bush   43rd
governor of Florida
(1999–2007)
June 15, 2015  
(CampaignPositions)
Withdrew: February 20
(endorsed Ted Cruz, then no endorsement)[33]
4
(0.2%)
(floor 3)
286,694
(0.92%)
None None [34][35]
Rand Paul   U.S. senator from Kentucky
(2011–present)
April 7, 2015  
(CampaignPositions)
Withdrew: February 3
(endorsed Donald Trump) [36]
1
(0%)
(floor 2)
66,788
(0.21%)
None None [37]
Mike Huckabee   44th
governor of Arkansas
(1996–2007)
May 5, 2015  
(CampaignPositions)
Withdrew: February 1
(endorsed Donald Trump)[38]
1
(0%)
(floor 0)
51,450
(0.16%)
None None [39][40]
Carly Fiorina   CEO of Hewlett-Packard
(1999–2005)
May 4, 2015  
(CampaignPositions)
Withdrew: February 10
(endorsed Ted Cruz, then Donald Trump—later rescinded endorsement)[41][42]
1
(0%)
(floor 0)
40,666
(0.13%)
None None [43][44]
Chris Christie   55th
governor of New Jersey
(2010–2018)
June 30, 2015  
(CampaignPositions)
Withdrew: February 10
(endorsed Donald Trump)[45]
None 57,637
(0.18%)
None None [46]
Jim Gilmore   68th
governor of Virginia
(1998–2002)
July 30, 2015  
(Campaign)
Withdrew: February 12
(endorsed Donald Trump)[47]
None 18,369
(0.06%)
None None [48][49]
Rick Santorum   U.S. senator from Pennsylvania
(1995–2007)
May 27, 2015  
(Campaign)
Withdrew: February 3
(endorsed Marco Rubio, then Donald Trump)[50][51]
None 16,627
(0.05%)
None None [52][53]

Withdrew before the primaries

Candidate Most recent position Announced Withdrawal date Bound
delegates
(hard count)[18]
Popular
vote[18]
Contests won[g] Ref.
George Pataki   53rd
governor of New York
(1995–2006)
May 28, 2015  
Withdrew: December 29, 2015
(endorsed Marco Rubio, then John Kasich, then no endorsement)[54][55]
None 2,036 None [56][57]
Lindsey Graham   U.S. senator
from South Carolina
(2003–present)
June 1, 2015  
Withdrew: December 21, 2015
(endorsed Jeb Bush, then Ted Cruz, then Evan McMullin)[58]
None 5,666 None [59][60]
Bobby Jindal   55th
governor of Louisiana
(2008–2016)
June 24, 2015  
Withdrew: November 17, 2015
(endorsed Marco Rubio, then Donald Trump)[61][62]
None 222 None [63][64]
Scott Walker   45th
governor of Wisconsin
(2011–2019)
July 13, 2015  
Withdrew: September 21, 2015
(endorsed Ted Cruz, then Donald Trump)[65][66]
None 1

[67]

None [68][69]
Rick Perry   47th
governor of Texas
(2000–2015)
June 4, 2015  
Withdrew: September 11, 2015
(endorsed Ted Cruz, then Donald Trump)[70][71]
None 1

[67]

None [72][73]

Results by delegates (hard total)

 

Results by state popular vote

 

Results by county popular vote

 

     Donald Trump       Ted Cruz       John Kasich       Marco Rubio       Ben Carson
     Tie       Uncommitted       No results (Colorado and North Dakota did not hold primaries/caucuses.)

 

Timeline of the race

Background

Former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, the 2012 GOP presidential nominee, lost the 2012 election to incumbent Democratic president Barack Obama. The Republican National Committee, believing that the long, drawn-out 2012 primary season had politically and personally damaged Romney, drafted plans to condense the 2016 primary season. As part of these plans, the 2016 Republican National Convention was scheduled for the relatively early date of July 18–21, 2016,[74] the earliest date since Republicans nominated Thomas Dewey in June 1948.[75][76]

When John Kasich entered the race on July 21, 2015, the field reached 16 candidates,[77] making it the largest presidential field in the history of the Republican Party (surpassing the 1948 primaries). With Jim Gilmore's announcement to enter the race for a second time on July 30, 2015,[78] the field reached 17 candidates, becoming the largest presidential field in American history (surpassing the 16 candidates in the Democratic Party presidential primaries of 1972 and 1976).[79][80]

In mid-December 2014, Jeb Bush—widely seen as a possible frontrunner for the nomination due to his relatively moderate stances, record as former governor of a crucial swing state, name recognition and access to high-paying donors—was the first candidate to form a political action committee (PAC) and an exploratory committee.[81] Many other candidates followed suit. The first candidate to declare his candidacy was Texas Senator Ted Cruz, who was popular among grassroots conservatives due to his association with the Tea Party movement, and who also received early backing of several prominent Republican donors including Robert Mercer.[82][83]

The 2016 candidates were roughly divided into three camps, with grassroots conservatives represented by Cruz and Carson, the Christian right represented by Huckabee and Santorum, and moderates (or establishment) represented by Bush and Christie. Several—such as Rubio, Walker, and Kasich—were seen as having political backgrounds that may be appealing to both conservatives and moderates. Additionally, not all of these candidates clearly toed the grassroots/establishment divide; for instance, Rubio and Cruz were both elected to the Senate in the early 2010s as members of the Tea Party movement, but by 2015 had been courting the support of prominent party elders, political operatives, and large donors with significant success. In contrast, only three of the candidates, Carson, Trump and Fiorina, were true non-establishment candidates in the sense that they had no formal political experience; though Fiorina is widely considered to have views in line with the establishment wing led by Bush and Christie.[84][85][86] Some called the diversity of candidates representing different wings of the party symptomatic of a struggle for the future direction of the party.[87]

The field was noted for its diversity, and was even called the most diverse presidential field in American history. It included two Latinos (Cruz and Rubio), a woman (Fiorina), an Indian-American (Jindal), and an African-American (Carson). Five were the children of immigrants: Cruz (Cuban father), Jindal (Indian parents), Rubio (Cuban parents), Santorum (Italian father) and Trump (Scottish mother).[88][89][90][91]

Overview

Widely viewed as a very open contest with no clear front-runner, potential candidates fluctuated in the polls for an extended period from late 2012 to the end of 2015. In the year prior to the election season, a total of 17 major candidates campaigned for the nomination, thus making it the single largest presidential primary field in American history at the time.[2] However, by the time the primary season started in early 2016, four candidates had clearly emerged ahead of the rest of the field: Ohio Governor John Kasich, Florida Senator Marco Rubio, Texas Senator Ted Cruz, and New York businessman Donald Trump. Trump maintained wide poll leads throughout 2015 and into 2016, primarily due to his brash and unapologetic style of speaking and campaigning. Trump emphasized a disregard for political correctness, as well as populist and nativist policies; he earned the support of working-class voters and voters without college educations, among other demographics.[92][93][94] However, Trump's brash attitude and polarizing policy stances generated numerous controversies in the media,[95] and many of the other candidates sought to become the "anti-Trump" candidate by condemning his rhetoric and policies. Senators Cruz and Rubio emphasized their youth in comparison to most other candidates and their possible appeal to Hispanic voters.[86][96][97] Additionally, Ohio governor John Kasich, a moderate Republican, remained in the race for an extended period despite being viewed as having little to no chance of winning the nomination.[98]

Despite Trump's lead in most national polls, the first-in-the-nation Iowa caucuses were won by Cruz due to his support among grassroots conservatives. However, Trump rebounded with strong wins in New Hampshire, South Carolina, and Nevada. On Super Tuesday, Trump expanded his lead by winning seven of the eleven states, while the Cruz campaign gained new energy with victories in Alaska, Oklahoma, and the significant stronghold of Cruz's home state Texas. Rubio maintained significant momentum with strong finishes in Iowa (third place), South Carolina (second place), and Nevada (second place), before finally claiming victory in Minnesota on Super Tuesday.

Between Super Tuesday and the beginning of the "winner-take-all" primaries, Cruz stayed nearly even with Trump, winning four states to Trump's five; Rubio won several smaller contests such as Puerto Rico and Washington, D.C. In the first round of winner-take-all contests on March 15, Trump greatly expanded his lead by winning five of the six contests. After a significant loss to Trump in his home state of Florida, Rubio suspended[d] his campaign that same day. Meanwhile, Kasich finally gained some momentum by winning his home state of Ohio.

As the primary season entered the spring, the mostly-consolidated field resulted in a closing of the gap between Trump and Cruz, with Trump sweeping the South, the Northeast, and parts of the Midwest while Cruz performed strongly in the West and scored a surprise victory in Maine. Kasich, unable to win any other states besides Ohio, remained far behind in third place. After Cruz's upset win in Wisconsin, speculation began to arise that the convention would be a brokered one in which the establishment would choose Kasich or someone else, since both Trump and Cruz were not viewed favorably by the establishment.[99][100]

As April came to a close and Trump won a resounding victory in his home state of New York, both Cruz and Kasich were mathematically eliminated from winning the nomination without a brokered convention. Both men then formed an alliance to block Trump from winning the nomination, ahead of the "Acela primaries" of five Northeastern states on April 26.[101] Subsequently, Trump swept all five states and greatly increased his delegate lead. In a final push to block Trump's path to the nomination, Cruz announced that one of the former candidates for the nomination, former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina, would be his running mate if he was the nominee.[102] Nevertheless, after Trump won the Indiana primary on May 3, Cruz suspended his campaign,[3] subsequently leading to Republican National Committee chairman Reince Priebus announcing Trump as the presumptive nominee.[103] Kasich announced the suspension of his campaign the next day, leaving Trump as the only candidate left in the race. Trump then went on to win all of the remaining primaries, sweeping the remainder of the West, Midwest and the entirety of the West Coast. With his victories in New Jersey and the remaining final states on June 7, not only did Trump officially surpass the necessary number of bound delegates, but he also broke the 2000 record of 12,034,676 popular votes received by the winner of the Republican presidential primaries,[104] with over 14 million votes.[18]

Rick Perry presidential campaign, 2016Scott Walker presidential campaign, 2016Bobby Jindal presidential campaign, 2016Lindsey Graham presidential campaign, 2016George Pataki presidential campaign, 2016Mike Huckabee presidential campaign, 2016Rick Santorum presidential campaign, 2016Rand Paul presidential campaign, 2016Carly Fiorina presidential campaign, 2016Chris Christie presidential campaign, 2016Jim Gilmore presidential campaign, 2016Jeb Bush presidential campaign, 2016Ben Carson presidential campaign, 2016Marco Rubio presidential campaign, 2016Ted Cruz presidential campaign, 2016John Kasich presidential campaign, 2016Donald Trump presidential campaign, 2016
Nominee
Suspended campaigns during primaries
Suspended campaigns before primaries

     

2012–2014: fluctuating polls

 
Governor Chris Christie polled highly until the 2014 "Bridgegate" scandal. He suspended his campaign after falling below the threshold in New Hampshire.

After Romney's unsuccessful 2012 campaign, the potential 2016 field was left without a clear future nominee, similar to that of 2008. Different speculations began rising from all sides of the right-leaning political spectrum as to who would make the best possible nominee: One faction of candidates included young freshmen senators, some with alliances to the Tea Party movement, such as Cruz, Paul, and Rubio, who in particular was the focus of attention immediately following 2012. In most national polls from late-2012 to mid-2013, Rubio was leading due to being young, articulate, having a broad appeal among conservatives and moderates and also for his Latino heritage and continued efforts on immigration reform, which many viewed as possible tools to draw Hispanic voters to the GOP.[105][106][107]

However, another narrative for the nomination, similar to that which drove Romney's 2012 campaign, was that the nominee needed to be a governor in a traditionally Democratic or swing state, with a proven record that would stand as proof that such a governor could be president as well. The possible candidates that fit this criteria included Bush, Gilmore, Kasich, Pataki, Walker and Christie, who in particular had been rising in popularity due to his loud and blunt manner of speaking at public events, championed by some as challenging conventional political rhetoric.[108][109] With his record as governor of New Jersey, a heavily Democratic state, factored in, Christie overtook Rubio in the polls from mid-2013 up until early 2014, when the "Bridgegate" scandal was first revealed and started to damage Christie's reputation and poll standing.[110] Although he was later cleared of personal responsibility in the subsequent investigation, Christie never regained frontrunner status.[111]

After Christie's fall, the polls fluctuated from January to November 2014. Candidates who often performed well included Rand Paul, who won CPAC straw polls in 2013, 2014 and 2015,[112][113][114] Wisconsin congressman and 2012 vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan (the eventual House speaker) and former candidates such as former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee and then-governor of Texas Rick Perry, further reflecting the uncertainty of the upcoming race for the nomination.[115][116]

April 2014 – January 2015: Jeb Bush leading the polls

 
Despite holding an unsteady lead in most of 2014 and early 2015, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush was unable to garner popular support and suspended[d] his campaign following the South Carolina primary.

In April 2014, Robert Costa and Philip Rucker of The Washington Post reported that the period of networking and relationship-building that they dubbed the "credentials caucus" had begun, with prospective candidates "quietly studying up on issues and cultivating ties to pundits and luminaries from previous administrations".[117]

Though Bush often polled in the low double digits, he was considered a prominent candidate due to his high fundraising ability, record as governor of Florida (a crucial swing state) and apparent electability.[118][119] By November 2014, Bush had finally solidified his lead in the polls.[120][121] Around this time there were talks of the possibility of Romney making a third run for the presidency. During this period from November 2014 until late January 2015, the speculation fueled Romney's rise in many national polls as well, challenging Bush.[122] Although Romney admitted he was entertaining the idea after initially declining, he ultimately reaffirmed his decision not to run on January 30, 2015.[123]

However, by the end of February, another challenger rose to match Bush in the polls: Walker, who often touted his record as governor in a traditionally Democratic state, particularly noting his victory in a recall election in 2012 (the first governor in American history to do so), combined with his reelection in 2014. Walker and Bush balanced out in the polls from late February until about mid-June, at which point Trump entered the race.[citation needed] Walker's challenge to Bush also allowed other candidates to briefly resurge in some polls from late April up until mid-June, including former top performers Rubio, Paul and Huckabee, in addition to several newcomers to the top tier of polling, including Cruz and Carson.[115][116]

Mid-2015: Donald Trump and the rise of the outsiders

 
Donald Trump's poll numbers surged as he entered the race and he held a strong lead entering the primary season. After losing Iowa to Cruz, Trump won the next three February primaries.

Shortly after Trump announced his candidacy on June 16, 2015, many pundits noted his uniquely outspoken nature, blunt language and rhetoric, often directly contradicting traditional political candidates. This style was seen as resonating strongly with potential Republican primary voters and Trump began to rise in the polls.[124] After a few weeks of briefly matching Bush, Trump surged into first place in all major national polls by mid-July,[125] which he continued to lead consistently until November. Trump also polled well in the early-voting states of Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina, often leading or coming in second in those states.[citation needed]

 
Although Carly Fiorina rose in the polls after the second debate, she failed to capitalize on her momentum and faded quickly. She ultimately suspended her campaign after New Hampshire. She briefly served as Cruz's running mate from April 27 to May 3, until Cruz suspended his campaign as well.

With the surge of Trump, a man who had never held political office, the general focus began to shift over to other non-politician candidates, commonly known as "outsiders" and the other two outsiders in the field quickly rose in the polls as well in the wake of the first two debates: Carson, who rose into second place after a well-received performance in the first debate and Fiorina, who rose into the top three after her performance in the second debate.[126][127][128] The rising popularity of non-politician outsiders shocked many political analysts, and fueled a new conversation about how those with no political experience or prior runs for office could appeal more to potential primary voters than career politicians and what it means for the future of the Republican party and American politics in general.[129][130][131][132] Trump used ideas of populism to persuade the average American throughout the election process.[133] In mid-September, the first two major candidates dropped out of the race. Perry suspended his campaign on September 11, 2015, citing his failure to qualify for the primetime debates, his subsequent failure to raise a significant amount of money and his indictment as reasons.[134][135] Ten days later, on September 21, 2015, Walker suspended his campaign mainly due to his own poll numbers dropping after two lackluster debate performances.[136]

End of 2015: the field stabilizes, six candidates gain traction

 
Governor Scott Walker surprised many political observers when he announced the suspension of his campaign on September 21, 2015, in Wisconsin.

By the end of September, most polling averages indicated that the field was finally stabilizing in terms of public opinion and six candidates in particular were gaining traction and pulling away from the rest of the field by considerable margins. Polling averages indicated the top six as Trump, Carson, Rubio, Fiorina, Bush and Cruz.[137] Trump and Carson were consistently first and second, respectively; Fiorina was initially in third place before being surpassed by Rubio; while Bush and Cruz remained in fifth and sixth place, respectively.[138][139] The other candidates who had been in the top ten of polling—Christie, Huckabee, Paul and Kasich—all leveled out at roughly 3% or less, while the five remaining candidates outside the top ten—Santorum, Jindal, Pataki, Graham and Gilmore—were consistently polling below 1%. By the third debate in late October, Bush and Fiorina's numbers were also beginning to fade, while Cruz was on the rise and began coming in fourth by most poll averages.[137] The third debate only solidified these numbers: Bush and Fiorina remained in low digits as both were considered lackluster, while Cruz was widely held as the winner and rose even further.[140][141] Throughout this period, both Trump and Carson had pulled well ahead of the rest of the field and with Trump often registering in the low 30s and high 20s and Carson in the low 20s, the two of them combined often made up well over 50% of the electorate in a vast majority of national polls.[137] Later in October and in early November, Carson began to match even with Trump by most polling averages, rising into the mid 20s and often finishing either just behind or just ahead of Trump.[142][143]

 
An autumn surge had former neurosurgeon Ben Carson polling even with Trump at one point, but his support decreased significantly following the terrorist attacks in Paris, which highlighted Carson's perceived inexperience on foreign policy. He later suspended his campaign after four last-place finishes on Super Tuesday and endorsed Trump in response to Fiorina endorsing Cruz.[144]

By October, with the polls reflecting a field that seemed to be stabilizing, most commentators began to claim that the field had already established who the final four candidates—those who were in the race for the long-term and had the best chance of actually becoming the nominee—would be. The four were listed as being Trump, Carson, Rubio, and Cruz: Trump and Carson for their appeal as outsiders, as well as their opposite personalities—with Trump's blunt nature and tough foreign policy stances, against Carson's soft-spoken nature and personal favorability—Rubio for his appeal to Hispanics and his stance on such issues as immigration reform, combined with strong debate performances and significant donor backing and Cruz for his appeal to Tea Party and Christian Conservative voters, which was seen as possibly having a strong impact in the southern states.[145][146] On November 17, 2015, Jindal became the third major Republican candidate to drop out.[147] The November 2015 Paris attacks, which killed 130 people days before Jindal dropped out, were widely seen as having a significant impact on the 2016 presidential race, particularly on the Republican side.[148] The attacks were seen as boosting the campaigns of those with tough stances on immigration like Trump and Cruz, as well as the foreign policy hawks like Rubio.[149][150] Possibly as a result, Carson—who had previously been perceived as uninformed and relatively inarticulate on foreign policy—began to suffer in the polls, with Trump once again solidifying a double-digit lead over everyone else, while Rubio and Cruz began to steadily rise as Carson's numbers declined.[137][151]

 
Senator Ted Cruz saw a steady rise in the polls following the CNBC debate in late October. He began the election cycle with a win in Iowa and dropped out after being defeated by Trump in Indiana.

By December, Cruz had overtaken Carson by solidifying a base of support among Christian conservatives and averaged national polling of 18%, second only to Trump.[152] The non-interventionist Paul still failed to make traction at this juncture, while Carson fell down to about 10%, roughly even with Rubio.[137] On December 15, 2015, there was another presidential debate, which saw no major changes in the perceptions of the candidates. On December 21, 2015, the same day as the deadline to withdraw from the ballot in his home state of South Carolina, Graham suspended his campaign. Eight days later, on December 29, Pataki, who was struggling to poll above the margin of error, suspended his campaign as well.[153]

January 2016: the road to the early primaries

2016 dawned with the several-month-long truce between Trump and Cruz being broken.[154] Cruz accused Trump of not being a consistent conservative or an ethical businessman, while Trump questioned the Canadian-born Cruz's constitutional eligibility to be president—candidates have to be natural-born U.S. citizens to be eligible to be president—while noting Cruz's past calls for immigration reform.[155][156] This occurred as Trump and Cruz were vying for supremacy at the top of Iowa polls, in addition to both being the top two candidates in all national polls, ahead of the rest of the field by significant margins.[157][158] In the closing weeks before Iowa, Trump and Cruz ran dueling television commercials, each attacking the other's record.[159] Meanwhile, there was conflict between "establishment" candidates Rubio, Christie, Bush and Kasich, largely due to a media-reinforced belief that only a single establishment candidate could remain in the race past the early primaries. The establishment candidates staked their bids on strong showings in New Hampshire and both Christie and Kasich saw upticks in their polling in the weeks before the primary.[160][161] Both the Trump-Cruz conflict and the squabbling between establishment candidates was evident at the Republican debate on January 14. The Republican debate of January 28, devoid of Trump due to priorities and conflicts with moderator Megyn Kelly after the debate in August, was the candidates' last shot at honing their message before the Iowa caucuses. Immigration and foreign policy featured prominently in this debate and many candidates used the opportunity of a "Trump-less debate" to criticize the second-place Cruz, who was also being heavily criticized by prominent Republican leaders in the weeks before Iowa.[162][163]

February 2016: early primaries

Early states results
Candidate Trump Cruz Rubio Kasich Carson Bush Gilmore Christie Fiorina Paul Huckabee Santorum Total
Delegates won Delegates:82

Pledged:82 Unpledged:0

Delegates:17

Pledged:17 Unpledged:0

Delegates:16

Pledged:16 Unpledged:0

Delegates:6

Pledged:6 Unpledged:0

Delegates:5

Pledged:5 Unpledged:0

Delegates:4

Pledged:4 Unpledged:0

Delegates:0

Pledged:0 Unpledged:0

Delegates:0

Pledged:0 Unpledged:0

Delegates:1

Pledged:1 Unpledged:0

Delegates:1

Pledged:1 Unpledged:0

Delegates:1

Pledged:1 Unpledged:0

Delegates:0

Pledged:0 Unpledged:0

133

Pledged:133 Unpledged:0

Popular vote 421,577
(32.7%)
266,406
(20.7%)
257,804
(20.0%)
107,525
(8.4%)
81,091
(6.3%)
94,699
(7.3%)
146
(0.01%)
24,423
(1.9%)
15,281
(1.2%)
10,581
(0.8%)
3,582
(0.3%)
1,950
(0.2%)
1,289,211
States won 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4
Feb 1 Iowa 24.3%

Delegates won:7

27.6%

Delegates won:8

23.1%

Delegates won:7

1.9%

Delegates won:1

9.3%

Delegates won:3

2.8%

Delegates won:1

0.01%

Delegates won:0

1.8%

Delegates won:0

1.9%

Delegates won:1

4.5%

Delegates won:1

1.8%

Delegates won:1

1%

Delegates won: 0

Feb 9 New Hampshire

Proportional primary

35.2%

Delegates won:11

11.6%

Delegates won:3

10.5%

Delegates won:2

15.7%

Delegates won:4

2.3%

Delegates won:0

11%

Delegates won:3

0.05%

Delegates won:0

7.4%

Delegates won:0

4.1%

Delegates won:0

0.7%

Delegates won:0

Feb 20 South Carolina

Winner-take-most primary; 29 delegates for state winner, 3 per winner of each Congressional District

32.5%

Delegates won:50

22.3%

Delegates won:0

22.5%

Delegates won:0

7.6%

Delegates won:0

7.2%

Delegates won:0

7.8%

Delegates won:0

Feb 23 Nevada

Proportional caucus

45.7%

Delegates won:14

21.3%

Delegates won:6

23.8%

Delegates won:7

3.6%

Delegates won:1

4.8%

Delegates won:2

 
Ohio Governor John Kasich, shown here in Nashua, New Hampshire, finished second in New Hampshire after holding over 100 town hall meetings. He won his first and only state on March 15 in Ohio. He suspended his campaign on May 4.

In the first-in-the-nation Iowa caucuses, Cruz won a narrow victory over Trump and Rubio.[164] Following poor performances in Iowa, three candidates suspended their campaigns: Huckabee—the winner of the caucuses in 2008—Santorum—the winner of the caucuses in 2012—and Paul, whose father performed very well in the 2008 and 2012 caucuses. This caused the field to narrow to nine.[165][166][167] After coming third in the Iowa caucuses, the media quickly painted Rubio as the candidate most likely to pick up the establishment mantle and ride it to the nomination following a strong performance in New Hampshire, much as McCain and Romney had done in 2008 and 2012, respectively, before both ultimately lost the general election to Obama. Rubio used this narrative to pick up a number of endorsements in the days following the Iowa caucuses. However, in the New Hampshire debate of February 6, 2016, Rubio repeated a talking point four times almost verbatim during an exchange with Christie, which led to sharp criticism of his performance in the aftermath and the beginning of the end of Rubio's campaign.[168]

In the New Hampshire primary, Trump scored a decisive victory over the rest of the field, winning the primary with 35% of the vote. Kasich, who had held over 100 town halls in the state, finished second in a surprise to many in the media. Cruz coming in third in the contest was also a shock to many, while Rubio slipped to fifth, behind Trump, Kasich, Cruz and Bush, whose campaign appeared to be revitalized following several months of apparent stagnation. After coming in seventh place in both Iowa and New Hampshire, Fiorina suspended her campaign on February 10, 2016.[169] Later that same day, Christie, whose campaign was staked almost entirely on getting a strong showing in New Hampshire, suspended his campaign after coming in sixth in New Hampshire, failing to reach the minimum 10% vote threshold required to be allocated delegates from the state and qualifying for the next debate on CBS.[170][171] Later that week, Jim Gilmore, who had failed to gain traction, win delegates or be invited to most of the debates, suspended his campaign, narrowing the field to six.[172]

The third contest was in South Carolina. Prior to the primary, Rubio picked up the key endorsement of Governor Nikki Haley, a feat seen as renewing his momentum after a disappointing finish in New Hampshire.[173][174] Exit polling showed that 46% of voters had decided the week before the primary, and that the majority of these votes went to Rubio.[175] When the votes were counted, Trump again won by double digits, garnering 33% of the vote, ahead of Rubio with 22%, who edged out Cruz for second-place by 0.2%. Since Trump carried the vote both statewide and in each congressional district, his result netted him all 50 delegates available in the state.[176] Following disappointing finishes in the first three contests despite outspending his competitors, Bush suspended his campaign on February 20.[177]

Three days following the South Carolina primary, Trump won the Nevada caucuses, winning with 46% of the vote with Rubio in a distant second with 24% and Cruz slightly further behind with 21%.[178]

March 1, 2016: Super Tuesday

Super Tuesday voting, after the early voting in February, decided nearly half of the delegate votes needed to achieve the 1,237 votes to win the nomination at the 2016 Republican National Convention—595 delegates at stake, to be exact. Super Tuesday holds the primary voting for 11 states in the primary election process.[179] North Dakota held the last caucus on Super Tuesday, but there was no presidential straw poll and all the delegates elected later at its convention in April were unbound. Wyoming took a straw poll, but it was non-binding and no delegates were allocated on Super Tuesday. Leading up to Super Tuesday, a debate between the remaining five candidates took place in Houston on February 25, 2016. Political rhetoric and charges heated up with Cruz and Rubio teaming up to attack Trump.[180]

 
States holding primaries or caucuses on Super Tuesday, 2016:
  Primary or caucus; delegates bound and allocated
  Non-binding poll or caucus; delegates allocated later
  Primary or caucus already held
Super Tuesday results
Candidate Trump Cruz Rubio Kasich Carson Uncom. Total
Delegates won 255 218 96 21 3 2 595
Popular vote 2,955,120
(34.4%)
2,502,557
(29.2%)
1,881,068
(21.9%)
546,465
(6.4%)
493,912
(5.8%)
8,581,841
States won 7 3 1 0 0 0 11
Alabama 43.4%

Delegates won:36

21%

Delegates won:13

18.7%

Delegates won:1

4.4%

Delegates won:0

10.2%

Delegates won:0

Alaska 33.6%

Delegates won:11

36.4%

Delegates won:12

15.2%

Delegates won:5

4%

Delegates won:0

10.8%

Delegates won:0

Arkansas 32.8%

Delegates won:16

31% 25% 4% 6%
Georgia 39% 24% 24% 6% 6%
Massachusetts 49% 10% 18% 18% 3%
Minnesota 21% 29% 36% 6% 7%
Oklahoma 28% 34% 26% 4% 6%
Tennessee 39% 25% 21% 5% 8%
Texas 27% 44% 18% 4% 4%
Vermont 33% 10% 19% 30% 4%
Virginia 35% 17% 32% 10% 6%
 
Marco Rubio was considered a leading candidate for both establishment and tea party constituencies, polling in the top three in late 2015 and early 2016. He won his first state on Super Tuesday, capturing Minnesota. After a loss in his home state of Florida, he suspended his campaign on March 15, 2016.

Trump won the contests in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Massachusetts, Tennessee, Vermont, and Virginia, while Cruz netted a strong victory in his home state of Texas and added victories in Oklahoma and Alaska. Rubio won his first contest in the Minnesota Republican Caucus and finished a strong second in Virginia. Kasich won no contests, but he almost won in Vermont and finished second in Massachusetts. Carson did not win or place in any contest, netted only three delegates and though he initially expressed an intent to stay in the race, began showing signs of withdrawing in the days following Super Tuesday; he ultimately suspended his campaign on March 4, 2016.[181][182]

Early March 2016: between Super Tuesdays

After Super Tuesday voting, but before winner-take-all voting was to begin, nine states, two territories and Washington, D.C. held their primaries and caucuses. During this period, 377 delegates were at stake. On March 3, 2016, the day before Carson dropped out of the race, Romney criticized Trump in a heavily publicized speech. Later that day, there was another GOP debate, which again featured Trump, Cruz, Rubio and Kasich. Carson did not participate in the debate, as he announced the suspension of his campaign the next day, narrowing the field to four; he subsequently endorsed Trump on March 10, 2016, the day after Fiorina endorsed Cruz.[183] Meanwhile, as the prospect of a Trump nomination became more imminent, establishment Republicans pressured Romney or House Speaker Paul Ryan to enter the race; Romney had already decided not to enter the race on January 30, 2015, while Ryan announced he would not enter on April 13, 2016.[184][185]

 
Mike Huckabee at a book signing

On March 5, Cruz won the Kansas and Maine caucuses by comfortable margins. Trump narrowly won the Kentucky caucus and the Louisiana primary. Rubio and Kasich did not finish first or second on any primaries on "Super Saturday". The following day, the first of the 2016 primaries to be held in a U.S. territory went to Rubio, who won all of Puerto Rico's 23 delegates.[186] On March 8, Trump won in Michigan, Mississippi and Hawaii, while Cruz took the Idaho Republican Primary, and Rubio missed delegate thresholds in Michigan, Mississippi and Idaho, finishing the night with only a single delegate. Despite some favorable polling in Michigan,[187] Kasich did not win any primaries, but he still picked up 17 delegates. Neither Rubio nor Kasich finished first or second in any primaries held that day.

In the Virgin Islands caucuses on March 10, a slate composed wholly of uncommitted delegates was initially elected. However, the entire slate was later disqualified by the territorial party and was replaced by the elected alternates – two uncommitted, two for Rubio and one each for Cruz and Trump.[188] The dispute later went to court.[189] Also on March 10, there was a debate in Florida between the four surviving candidates, which was conducted in a more civil tone than prior debates.[190]

On March 12, the Guam caucuses endorsed eight uncommitted delegates and one unbound Cruz-supporting delegate.[191] Rubio won his final contest in D.C. and 9 delegates went to Cruz in the Wyoming county conventions. Rubio and Trump both earned one delegate and another was elected as uncommitted.[citation needed]

March 5–12 results[18]
Candidate Trump Cruz Rubio Kasich Uncom. Total
Delegates won 140 137 48 36 12[h] 373
Popular vote 987,571
(37.2%)
820,746
(30.9%)
299,397
(11.3%)
441,127
(16.6%)
24,662
(0.9%)
2,653,336
States won 5 3 0+PR+DC 0 0+VI+GU 8+4
Kansas 23% 47% 17% 11% 0.4%
Kentucky 36% 32% 16% 14% 0.2%
Louisiana 41% 38% 11% 6%
Maine 33% 46% 8% 12%
Puerto Rico 13% 9% 71% 1%
Hawaii 43% 32% 13% 10%
Idaho 28% 45% 16% 7%
Michigan 37% 25% 9% 24% 2%
Mississippi 47% 36% 5% 9%
Virgin Islands* 6% 12% 10% 65%
Guam 0 1 0 0 8
Washington D.C. 14% 12% 37% 36%
Wyoming 7.2%

Delegates won:1

66.3%

Delegates won:23

19.5%

Delegates won:1

0%

Delegates won:0

7.0%

Delegates won:1

* Virgin Islands results do not take account of the later disqualification of delegates. Accounting for the disqualified delegates, the results were as follows: Uncommitted 36%, Cruz 22%, Rubio 18%, Carson 12%, Trump 12%.
Delegate totals are given in Guam as no tally of the popular vote has been released and one delegate was elected by acclamation.
Wyoming held county conventions with no statewide popular vote; percentages represent the vote of county delegates.

March 15, 2016: Super Tuesday II

March 15 featured winner-take-all primaries in the delegate-rich states of Florida—Rubio's home state—and Ohio—Kasich's home state. There were also contests in Illinois, Missouri, North Carolina, and the Northern Mariana Islands, totaling 367 delegates. It was widely seen as a very important day in the presidential race because of the large number of winner-take-all delegates at stake. In the days leading up to Florida, the remaining candidates announced prominent endorsements and Trump and Rubio in particular spent millions on television advertisements assailing the other in Florida. The level of protest and violence at Trump rallies meanwhile became an object of criticism by other candidates; one such incident led to the cancellation of a Trump event in Chicago on March 13, 2016.[192] On March 11, 2016, in an effort to stop Trump, Rubio told his supporters in Ohio to vote for Kasich, while Kasich refused to tell his Florida supporters to help Rubio, with a campaign spokesperson later quoted as saying: "We were going to win Ohio anyway even without his help, just as he's going to lose Florida to Trump without ours."[193] The Northern Mariana Islands caucuses were the first contest to close on March 15, with Trump taking 73% of the vote and collecting all nine delegates.[194] In Florida, Trump netted the biggest prize of the night, handily defeating Rubio in Rubio's home state.[195] Trump added to that wins in North Carolina, Illinois and Missouri. Soon after the announcement of his loss in Florida, Rubio suspended his campaign. Kasich got on the board for the first time, winning his home state of Ohio to stave off elimination. Kasich's victory in Ohio meant that the 2016 Republican primaries were the first since 1968 (and the first in which every state held a contest) in which more than three candidates won at least one state (though in 2012 three candidates (Mitt Romney, Rick Santorum, and Newt Gingrich) won states and a fourth (Ron Paul) won a territory (Virgin Islands)) while Democratic primaries have historically been more divided; examples are the Democratic primaries in 1968 (five candidates won states), 1972 (seven), 1976 (six), 1988 (five), 1992 (five), and 2004 (four). The election in Missouri was very close, with Trump beating Cruz by fewer than 2,000 votes (0.21%);[196][197] Cruz could have contested the outcome because the difference was less than 0.5%, but chose not to, thereby giving the 12 statewide delegates to Trump and 37 overall out of the 52.[198]

March 15 results
Candidate Trump Kasich Cruz Rubio Total
Delegates won 228 81 51 6 366
Popular vote 3,202,125
(40.6%)
1,620,506
(20.5%)
1,912,166
(24.2%)
957,976
(12.1%)
7,889,784
States won 4+NMP 1 0 0 5+NMP
Florida 46% 7% 17% 27%
Illinois 39% 20% 30% 9%
Missouri 40.8% 10% 40.6% 6%
North Carolina 40% 12% 36% 8%
N. Mariana Islands 73% 2% 24% 1%
Ohio 36% 47% 13% 2%

Late March – April 2016: a three-candidate race

 
Trump speaks at Fountain Park in Fountain Hills, Arizona.

Seven states and one territory voted between March 22 and April 19, 2016, totaling 315 delegates with New York the largest (winner-take-most, 95), followed by Arizona (winner-take-all, 58).[citation needed]

The final debate between the candidates, which had been scheduled to take place on March 21, 2016, in Salt Lake City, was cancelled after Trump and Kasich withdrew from the event. Trump had initially announced that he would be absent as there had been enough debates; Kasich subsequently stated that he would not attend a debate without Trump.[199]

On March 22, with concerns about the border, immigration and national security at the fore, Trump won all 58 delegates in Arizona. However, in Utah, Cruz garnered 69% of the vote, triggering the 50% rule to take all 40 delegates, buoyed by anti-Trump sentiment among many Mormons. All of American Samoa's delegates were uncommitted.[200] After Trump was declared the presumptive nominee, all of the American Samoa delegates committed to him.[201] American Samoa and Utah were the last caucuses of the 2016 Republican primary season.[citation needed]

As a Trump nomination became even more likely, the Club for Growth and other backers of the Stop Trump movement began adopting increasingly drastic strategies to derail his nomination, including all-out opposition to him in Wisconsin, seen as one opportunity to deny him the 1,237 delegates needed to clinch the nomination.[202] Trump stated that he foresaw the outbreak of riots if he were denied the nomination at the convention.[203] Despite often being viewed as anathema to the establishment, Cruz began picking up endorsements of establishment figures dismayed by the prospect of a Trump nomination, including that of Romney just before the Utah primary, Bush on March 23, 2016, and Walker on March 29, 2016.[204]

Toward the end of March, the competition between the three remaining candidates grew even fiercer.[205] The increasingly acrimonious back-and-forth between Cruz and Trump took a new turn after the National Enquirer accused Cruz of being involved in five extramarital affairs – claims Cruz denied, accusing Trump of planting the claim, but other sources linked it to Rubio's suspended campaign.[206] On March 29, the same day Walker endorsed Cruz, at a GOP town hall event hosted by CNN, all three remaining Republican candidates distanced themselves from the vow they had taken in September to support their party's eventual nominee. Referring to the pledge, Kasich stated, "all of us shouldn't even have answered that question".[207]

April 3 had a North Dakota convention where Cruz gained support of eight delegates and Trump got one. Cruz later got six extra delegates committed to him. After Cruz dropped out, three delegates switched their support to Trump. The 13 uncommitted delegates backed Trump, giving him the support of 17 delegates and a majority. On April 5, buoyed by support from Walker and the state's talk and national radio hosts, Cruz won the statewide contests by a 48–35% margin and six congressional districts at the Wisconsin primary for 36 delegates. Trump won two congressional districts for six delegates.[citation needed]

Following the Wisconsin primary, the three candidates moved on to Trump's home state of New York for its April 19 primary. Trump and Kasich teamed up to assail Cruz for his earlier criticism of Trump's "New York values", while Cruz reiterated his claim that Trump has an inconsistent conservative record and stated that "the only reason Kasich is attacking me now is because Kasich is afraid of going against Trump if I dropped out." Trump also received the support of former New York mayor and 2008 presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani during the lead-up to the New York primary. On April 9, 2016, Cruz won the Colorado delegates after taking a solid majority, the state's four uncommitted delegates declaring support for Cruz, bringing his total delegate count in Colorado to 34. On April 16, 2016, Cruz won all 14 at-large delegates in the Wyoming state convention.[208] He also received the support of RNC Committeewoman Marti Halverson, one of the 3 RNC delegates to the convention.[209]

On April 19, Trump won New York with 59% of the vote, taking 89 of its 95 delegates. Kasich was a distant second with 25% of the vote, taking the other six delegates. Cruz was completely shut-out from receiving any New York delegates, coming in third place with only 15% of the vote, as the threshold for obtaining any delegates was 20%. Following the New York primary, Cruz was mathematically eliminated from reaching the majority of 1,237 delegates to earn the nomination on the first ballot, as he needed 678 more while only 674 were available.[210]

March 22 – April 19 results
Candidate Trump Cruz Kasich Uncom. Total
Delegates won 154 123 6 5 288
Popular vote 1,254,994
(43.9%)
974,360
(34.1%)
485,025
(17.0%)
2,293
2,857,840
States won 3+AS 4 0 0
7+AS
American Samoa* 9 0 0 0
Arizona 46% 28% 11%
Utah 14% 69% 17%
North Dakota* 17 11 0 0
Wisconsin 35% 48% 14% 0.2%
Colorado# 1 29+4[i] 0 3
Wyoming[j]# 0 14 0 2
New York 59% 15% 25%

* The delegate count is given for American Samoa and North Dakota as no tally of the vote has been released. All delegates from American Samoa are unpledged. All delegates from North Dakota are unbound but some have declared support (committed to) for a candidate (they can still change their minds).
#The delegate count from Colorado and Wyoming is given because there is no tally for popular vote. These delegates, however, can choose to be bound to a candidate or to be left uncommitted. They indicated this when they filed to run for a delegate spot.

April 26, 2016: Acela primary

GOP candidates jockey for delegate ‘free agents’ in Virginia - video news report published on Apr 29, 2016 from PBS Newshour.

On April 26, 2016, five Northeastern primaries were contested—Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island—and were collectively termed the "Amtrak" or "Acela primary" in reference to the Acela Express, which runs through the area.[211] All five primaries were won by Trump by overwhelming margins between 29% and 41%; Trump received over 54% of the vote in all five. He claimed all the delegates available in Connecticut, Delaware and Maryland, as well as all 17 pledged delegates in Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania also elected 54 unpledged delegates and both the Trump campaign and The Washington Post estimated that Trump would win the support of at least 39 of the Keystone State's 54 unpledged delegates.[212] Only in Rhode Island, where delegates were allocated proportionally, did Kasich (5) or Cruz (2) win any pledged delegates. Trump attained 12 of the 19 there and 111 of the 118 by the end of the night. The night was also notable as Trump cleared 10 million votes, surpassing the vote total attained by McCain[213] and Romney[214] in 2008 and 2012 respectively. The two aforementioned contests were won with the candidate receiving a majority of the popular vote nationwide in both 2008 and 2012. The next day, Trump received the support of 31 unbound delegates from Pennsylvania, while Cruz nabbed four of them, Kasich three, and five remained uncommitted.[215] On April 28, 2016, a Trump rally in Costa Mesa, California, attracted protests that turned violent, with approximately twenty people arrested and a police car vandalized.[216] On April 29, the Trump campaign declared that they had accumulated 1,001 delegates, only 236 from the 1,237 necessary for the nomination.[217]

April 26 results
Candidate Trump Kasich Cruz Uncom. Total
Delegates won 111 5 2 6 124
Popular vote 1,356,152
(56.5%)
506,327
(21.1%)
475,112
(19.8%)
3,145 2,399,257
States won 5 0 0 0 5
Connecticut 58% 28% 12% 1%
Delaware 61% 20% 16%
Maryland 54% 23% 19%
Pennsylvania 57% 19% 22%
Rhode Island 63% 24% 10% 1%

May 3, 2016: Indiana primary

Five primaries were contested in May: Indiana, Nebraska, West Virginia, Oregon and Washington, with Indiana awarding the most, with 57 delegates. By late April, Cruz and Kasich had both been eliminated from getting 1,237 delegates, but they still had a chance to accumulate enough delegates to force a contested convention in Cleveland. Realizing this, Cruz and Kasich attempted to focus their efforts in different states, with Cruz challenging Trump head-to-head in Indiana and Kasich challenging Trump in Oregon and New Mexico.[218][219][220] The Indiana primary, whose delegates were awarded winner-take all statewide and by congressional district, was seen as essential to denying Trump the 1,237 delegates needed to secure the nomination.[101] Following the Acela primaries, Cruz attempted to bolster his chances by announcing that, if nominated, he would name Fiorina as his running mate[221] (Fiorina had served as a Cruz campaign surrogate since endorsing him in March after suspending her own presidential campaign in February and Cruz hoped that Fiorina could help his campaign in Indiana and her home state of California).[222] On April 29, 2016, Governor Mike Pence of Indiana announced that he would vote for Cruz in the primary election.[223] Nevertheless, although Trump was outspent by a margin of more than 4–1, he handily won Indiana with 53.3% of the vote, winning a plurality in every Congressional District and taking all 57 delegates.[224] Cruz subsequently dropped out of the race, eliminating any hope of a contested convention in July. As a result, Republican National Committee chairman Reince Priebus tweeted that Trump was the presumptive nominee in the GOP. The next day, Kasich also suspended his campaign, leaving Trump as the only candidate in the race. Many Republican leaders and even former presidential candidates endorsed Trump after the withdrawal of Kasich and Cruz, but other party leaders such as Ryan, Romney and the entire Bush family withheld their support,[225] although Ryan endorsed Trump on June 2, 2016.[226]

May 3 results
Candidate Trump Cruz Kasich Total
Delegates won 57 0 0 57[12]
Popular vote 591,514
(53.3%)
406,783
(36.6%)
84,111
(7.6%)
1,110,543
States won 1 0 0 1
Indiana 53% 37% 8%

May 2016: Trump as presumptive nominee

142 delegates were awarded between the Indiana primary and the final primaries in June; however, with Trump the only candidate remaining, Washington, Oregon, West Virginia and Nebraska became essentially uncontested, although Cruz and Kasich remained on the ballot. Trump won handily in West Virginia, Nebraska and Oregon, although Kasich received one delegate from West Virginia and five in Oregon, while Cruz took five in Oregon as well. The next week, Trump won decisively in Washington State, taking 76% of the vote and 41 of 44 delegates, with the other three uncommitted.[citation needed]

May 10–24 results
Candidate Trump Kasich Cruz Uncom. Total
Delegates won 127 6 5 4 142[12]
Popular vote 987,336
(70.5%)
157,632
(11.3%)
185,689
(13.3%)
1,399,967
States won 4 0 0 0 4
Nebraska 61% 11% 18%
West Virginia 77% 6% 9%
Oregon 64% 16% 17%
Washington 75% 10% 11%

After becoming the presumptive Republican nominee, Trump said regarding the Republican primaries: "You've been hearing me say it's a rigged system, but now I don't say it anymore because I won. It's true. Now I don't care."[227]

On May 26, 2016, the Associated Press announced that Trump had passed the threshold of 1,237 delegates required to guarantee his nomination,[6] thanks to unbound delegates from North Dakota who declared their support for Trump.[citation needed]

June 2016: final primaries

The final five primary contests were held on June 7, 2016, in California, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico and South Dakota, with California awarding the most with 172 delegates and New Jersey with 51. Though initially pegged by pundits as being an important primary, the suspension of the Cruz and Kasich campaigns following the Indiana primary made the California primary merely a formality at that point, as Trump shattered the all-time record for votes in the Republican primaries set by George W. Bush in 2000 of 12,034,676 votes.[104] After the final primaries, his vote total was 14,015,993 (44.9%), almost 2 million votes higher than the previous record.[18]

June 7 results
Candidate Trump Total
Delegates won 303 303
Popular vote 2,259,716
(75.2%)
3,003,652
States won 5
California 75%
Montana 74%
New Jersey 80%
New Mexico 71%
South Dakota 67%

July 2016: National Convention

The 2016 Republican National Convention was held from July 18–21 at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland. The delegates selected the Republican presidential and vice presidential nominees and wrote the party platform. A simple majority of 1,237 delegates was needed to win the presidential nomination.[228] Following Trump's decisive win in Indiana and the subsequent suspension of the Cruz and Kasich campaigns, as well as Trump reaching the threshold following his decisive win in Washington state, it became clear that there would not be a contested convention in Cleveland. On the first ballot, Trump won the nomination with 1,725 delegates, 488 more than required.[229]

Campaign finance

This is an overview of the money used in the campaign as it was reported to Federal Election Committee and released on July 21, 2016. Outside groups are independent expenditure-only committees, also called PACs and SuperPACs. Several such groups normally support each candidate but the numbers in the table are a total of all of them, meaning that a group of committees can be shown as technically insolvent even though it is not the case for all of them. The source of all the numbers is OpenSecrets.[230]

Candidate Campaign committee (as of June 30) Outside groups (as of July 21) Total spent Suspended
campaign[d]
Money raised Money spent Cash on hand Debt Money raised Money spent Cash on hand
Donald Trump $88,997,986 $68,787,021 $20,210,966 $0* $9,744,105 $7,620,376 $2,123,729 $76,407,397[231] Convention
John Kasich $18,973,502 $17,564,740 $1,408,688 $0 $15,245,069 $20,660,401 $−5,415,332 $38,225,141 May 4
Ted Cruz $89,322,157 $79,919,142 $9,403,015 $0 $67,463,363 $47,145,301 $20,318,062 $127,064,443 May 3
Marco Rubio $54,739,824 $51,964,471 $3,316,872 $2,067,041 $61,966,485 $59,868,636 $2,097,849 $111,833,107 March 15
Ben Carson $62,745,221 $60,873,041 $1,872,180 $266,884 $16,217,786 $16,815,756 $−597,970 $77,688,797 March 4
Jeb Bush $33,999,149 $33,967,964 $31,185 $261,703 $121,196,562 $104,124,340 $17,072,222 $138,092,304 February 20
Jim Gilmore $383,500 $383,300 $200 $0 $342,200 $368,600 $−125,050 $751,900 February 12
Chris Christie $8,294,352 $8,163,565 $130,786 $383,518 $23,654,517 $23,146,491 $508,026 $31,310,056 February 10
Carly Fiorina $11,932,371 $10,683,201 $1,249,170 $0 $14,565,281 $13,924,385 $640,896 $24,607,586 February 10
Rick Santorum $1,365,073 $1,361,497 $3,576 $556,860 $714,251 $1,143,235 $−428,984 $2,504,732 February 3
Rand Paul $12,101,426 $12,020,383 $81,044 $317,365 $10,856,091 $8,907,098 $1,948,994 $20,927,481 February 3
Mike Huckabee $4,290,564 $4,276,260 $14,304 $19,204 $5,874,843 $6,126,465 $−251,622 $10,402,725 February 1
George Pataki $544,183 $524,850 $5,301 $0 $1,547,674 $1,547,674 $0 $2,072,524 December 29
Lindsey Graham $5,423,113 $5,370,216 $52,898 $43,041 $4,560,305 $4,391,365 $168,940 $9,761,581 December 21
Bobby Jindal $1,442,464 $1,442,464 $0 $0 $4,517,207 $4,517,938 $−730 $5,960,401 November 17
Scott Walker $7,893,839 $7,877,050 $16,789 $898,676 $24,554,588 $24,489,961 $64,627 $32,367,011 September 21
Rick Perry $1,427,133 $1,767,404 $1,818 $0 $15,231,068 $15,356,117 $−125,050 $17,123,521 September 11

Process

 
U.S. States by the Total Number of Delegates (Republican Party).
 
U.S. States & Territories Election Method
 
Delegate allocation rules by state and territory
 
Schedule of primary elections, by month and/or date

The Republican National Committee (RNC) imposed strict new rules for states wishing to hold early contests in 2016.[232] Under these rules, no state was permitted to hold a primary or caucus in January; only Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada were entitled to February contests. States with primaries or caucuses in early March were to award their delegates proportionally. Any state that might have violated these rules was to have their delegation to the 2016 convention severely cut: states with more than 30 delegates would have been deprived of all but nine, plus RNC members from that state; states with fewer than 30 would have been reduced to six, plus RNC members.[232] In contrast to the 2012 cycle no states violated these rules.

The Republican Party presidential primaries and caucuses are indirect elections in which voters allocated or elect delegates to the 2016 Republican National Convention. These delegates can be bound or unbound to vote for a particular candidate. The election of the state delegation can happen directly or indirectly as the primary election table below shows.

  • Date: The date given in the first column is the date of the popular primary or caucus in a particular state or territory. This event may or may not allocate delegates. Two more dates are also important in the process: the date on which Congressional District delegates are (s)elected, and the date on which state delegates are (s)elected. Some events stretch for more than one day; in these cases the date stated in the table is the final day of the event.
  • State delegation: Each delegation is made up of up to three kinds of delegates: party members, delegates from the congressional districts and delegates from the state at-large. They can either be bound, meaning that they are legally bound to vote for a particular candidate in the first ballot at the National Convention, or they can be unbound, meaning that they are free to vote for any candidate at the National Convention. Bound delegates' voting obligations are not necessarily in line with their own personal views, and thus cannot always be used as an indicator as to how a certain delegate will vote should there be more than one ballot at the convention. If a candidate suspends his campaign,[d] the delegates allocated and/or elected to him may become unbound or stay bound depending on state rules
    • RNC: Three Republican National Committee members from each state will go to the National Convention as delegates. Most of them will be bound to a candidate according to the result of the primary or caucuses. Only fifteen RNC members will be unbound, their states and territories are marked with a footnote.
    • AL: At Large delegates are elected as representatives of the whole state. Each state is allotted ten delegates and each territory six delegates. Each state can on top of this get bonus delegates based on whether it has a Republican governor, it has Republican majorities in one or all chambers of its state legislature, and whether it has Republican majorities in its delegation to the U.S. Congress, among other factors.[233] With the exception of Missouri all these delegates are allocated at the state level.
    • CD: Each Congregational District have been assigned three delegates. These are allocated either on the District or State level according to state rules.
  • Allocation: Delegates can either be allocated or unallocated at the starting primary or caucuses. They can be allocated to a candidate or as uncommitted. Those delegates that are not allocated at the starting event will later be elected either bound to a candidate or uncommitted also called unbound. The contests that allocate delegates on state and district levels use the following allocating systems:
    • Winner-take-all. The candidate receiving the most votes is allocated all the delegates. A few states allocated all their delegates based solely on the statewide vote, but most allocated the AL delegates based on the statewide vote and the CD delegates based on the district vote in each districts. This means a candidate can "win" a state without getting all the delegates in that state's delegation.
    • Proportional. All candidates receive delegates in accordance with the popular vote at the primary or caucuses.
    • Winner-take-most. This is a hybrid of winner-take-all and proportional. The delegates are allocated proportionally but different rules ensure that only the leading candidates take part in the allocation. If a candidate gets more than a certain threshold of the votes he will be allocated all the delegates, otherwise it is allocated proportionally. High thresholds are in place in winner-take-most primaries or caucuses. Additional rules are also in place in some states.
    • Direct election. Instead of voting for a candidate at the primary or caucuses the voters elect the delegates directly. The delegates can state their presidential preference (and be elected on a particular candidate's "ticket") or they can be elected as uncommitted.
  • Election: Delegates are elected before, at the same time or after the starting event depending on the allocation method and the state rules.
    • Convention. This including Congressional District Conventions, Congressional District Caucuses at State Conventions, Summer Meetings, State and CD delegation selection meetings and State Conventions where delegates are elected. Conventions where National Delegates are not (s)elected have not been included in the tablet.
    • Direct election. The National Convention delegates are elected directly on the ballot. They will either be bound, as a delegation, to the result of the contest or they will individually state on the ballot what candidate they will be bound to or if they wish to be elected as unbound delegates depending.
    • Slate. A slate can be made up in three ways: all candidates submitting a slate before the primary or caucuses, the winning candidate submitting their slate after the primary or caucuses, or the State Committee or Convention making up the slates before the primary or caucuses. The allocated delegates are then selected from these slates.
    • Committee. Each state has its own rules and regulations. Ordinarily, the state GOP executive committee or its chairman selects the delegates.

According to Rule 40(b) of the RNC Rules of the Republican Party,[16] enacted prior to the 2012 convention and amended most recently in 2014, nominations at the National Convention may be made only of candidates who demonstrate the support of a majority of delegates of at least eight state delegations. Previously, this had been a lower threshold of a plurality in five states. However, per Rule 42, Rules 26–42 are "Standing Rules for this convention (2012) and the temporary rules for the next convention (2016)". While the current candidates operate under these temporary rules, it is unclear whether they will remain in place for the 2016 convention.[needs update][234][235][236][237] As of March 16, 2016, RNC Chairman Reince Priebus has not taken a position on the potential rule change, while others in the party advocate for it.[238][239]

Schedule

Date State State delegation (only voting delegates) Allocation Election (CD) Election (AL) Thres-
hold
RNC AL CD Total U B Contest AL CD Date Type Date Type
Feb 1 Iowa 3 15 12 30 0 30[k] Caucus (closed) Proportional Proportional [l] Apr 9 Convention May 21 Convention N/A
Feb 9 New Hampshire 3 20 0 23 3[m] 18 Primary (semi-closed) Proportional N/A N/A N/A Feb 9 Slate 10%
Feb 20 South Carolina 3 26 21 50 0 50 Primary (open) Winner-take-all Winner-take-all April Convention May 7 Convention N/A
Feb 23 Nevada 3 27 0 30 2[m] 28 Caucus (closed) Proportional N/A N/A N/A May 7 Convention 3.33%[n]
Mar 1 Alabama 3 26 21 50 0 50 Primary (open) Winner-take-most Winner-take-most Mar 1 Slate Mar 1 Slate 20%
Alaska 3 25 0 28 0 28 Caucus (closed) Proportional N/A N/A N/A Apr 28 Convention 13%
Arkansas 3 25 12 40 9[m] 31 Primary (open) Winner-take-most Winner-take-most Apr 30 Convention May 14 Committee 15%
Colorado 3[a] 13 21 37 7 30 Caucus (closed) (No allocation) (No allocation) Apr 8 Convention [o] Apr 9 Convention [o] N/A
Georgia 3 31 42 76 0 76 Primary (open) Winner-take-most Winner-take-most Apr 16 Convention June 3 Convention 20%
Massachusetts 3 12 27 42 0 42 Primary (semi-closed) Proportional Proportional [l] Apr 23 Convention June 3 Committee 5%
Minnesota 3 11 24 38 17[m] 21 Caucus (open) Proportional Proportional May 7 Convention May 21 Convention 10%
North Dakota 3[a] 25 0 28 28 0 Caucus (closed) (No allocation) N/A N/A N/A Apr 3 Convention N/A
Oklahoma 3 25 15 43 3 40 Primary (closed) Winner-take-most Winner-take-most Apr 16 Convention May 14 Convention 15%
Tennessee 3 28 27 58 0 58 Primary (open) Winner-take-most Winner-take-most Mar 1 Direct Elec. Apr 2 Direct Elec.[p] 20%
Texas 3 44 108 155 0 155 Primary (open) Winner-take-most Winner-take-most May 14 Convention May 14 Convention 20%
Vermont 3 13 0 16 0 16 Primary (open) Winner-take-most N/A N/A N/A May 21 Convention 20%
Virginia 3 13 33 49 0 49 Primary (open) Proportional Proportional [l] May 21 Convention Apr 30 Convention N/A
Wyoming 3[a] 14 12 29 5[m] 24 Caucus (closed) (No allocation) (No allocation) Mar 12 Convention [o][q] Apr 16 Convention [o] N/A
Mar 5 Kansas 3 25 12 40 0 40 Caucus (closed) Proportional Proportional Apr 23 Convention May 21 Committee 10%
Kentucky 3 25 18 46 0 46 Caucus (closed) Proportional Proportional [l] May 17 Convention May 18 Convention 5%
Louisiana 3 25 18 46 5 41 Primary (closed) Proportional Proportional Mar 12 Convention Mar 12 Convention 20%
Maine 3 14 6 23 0 23 Caucus (closed) Winner-take-most Winner-take-most [l] Apr 22 Convention Apr 22 Convention 10%
Mar 6 Puerto Rico 3 20 0 23 0 23 Primary (open) Winner-take-most N/A N/A N/A Mar 6 Direct Elec. 20%
Mar 8 Hawaii 3 10 6 19 0 19 Caucus (closed) Proportional Proportional Mar 8 Slate Mar 8 Slate N/A
Idaho 3 29 0 32 0 32 Primary (closed) Winner-take-most N/A N/A N/A Jun 4 Convention 20%
Michigan 3 14 42 59 0 59 Primary (open) Winner-take-most N/A Apr 8 Convention Apr 9 Convention 15%
Mississippi 3 25 12 40 0 40 Primary (open) Proportional Winner-take-most May 14 Convention May 14 Convention 15%
Mar 10 U.S. Virgin Islands[r] 3[a] 6 0 9 5 4 Caucus (closed) Direct Elec.[o] N/A N/A N/A Mar 10 Convention N/A
Mar 12 District of Columbia 3 16 0 19 0 19 Convention (closed) Winner-take-most N/A N/A N/A Mar 12 Convention 15%
Guam 3[a] 6 0 9 9 0 Caucus (closed) (No allocation) N/A N/A N/A Mar 12 Convention N/A
Mar 15 Florida 0 18 81 99 0 99 Primary (closed) Winner-take-all Winner-take-all[l] Jun 3 Convention Jun 3 Committee N/A
Illinois 3 12 54 69 0 69 Primary (open) Winner-take-all Direct Elec.[o] Mar 15 Direct Elec. May 22 Convention N/A
Missouri 3 25[s] 24 52 0 52 Primary (open) Winner-take-all Proportional Apr 30 Convention Jun 2 Convention N/A
Northern Mariana Is. 3 6 0 9 0 9 Caucus (closed) Winner-take-all N/A N/A N/A Mar 15 Direct Elect. N/A
North Carolina 3 69 0 72 0 72 Primary (semi-closed) Proportional Proportional [l] Apr 27 Convention May 8 Convention N/A
Ohio 3 63 0 66 0 66 Primary (semi-closed) Winner-take-all N/A N/A N/A Mar 15 Slate N/A
Mar 22 American Samoa 3[a] 6 0 9 9 0 Caucus (open) (No allocation) N/A N/A N/A Mar 22 Convention N/A
Arizona 3 28 27 58 0 58 Primary (closed) Winner-take-all Winner-take-all[l] Apr 30 Convention Apr 30 Convention N/A
Utah 3 37 0 40 0 40 Caucus (semi-closed) Winner-take-most N/A N/A N/A Apr 23 Convention 15%[t]
Apr 5 Wisconsin 3 15 24 42 0 42 Primary (open) Winner-take-all Winner-take-all Apr 17 Convention May 14 Slate N/A
Apr 19 New York 3 11 81 95 0 95 Primary (closed) Winner-take-most Winner-take-most Apr 19 Slate May 26 Committee 20%[u]
Apr 26 Connecticut 3 10 15 28 0 28 Primary (closed) Winner-take-most Winner-take-all May 20 Slate May 20 Slate 20%
Delaware 3 13 0 16 0 16 Primary (closed) Winner-take-all N/A N/A N/A Apr 29 Convention N/A
Maryland 3 11 24 38 0 38 Primary (closed) Winner-take-all Winner-take-all Apr 26 Direct Elec. May 14 Convention N/A
Pennsylvania 3 14 54 71 54 17 Primary (closed) Winner-take-all (No allocation) Apr 26 Direct Elec. May 21 Committee N/A
Rhode Island 3 10 6 19 0 19 Primary (semi-closed) Proportional Proportional Apr 26 Direct Elec. Apr 26 Direct Elec. 10%
May 3 Indiana 3 27 27 57 0 57 Primary (open) Winner-take-all Winner-take-all Apr 9 Slate Apr 13 Slate N/A
May 10 Nebraska 3 24 9 36 0 36 Primary (semi-closed) Winner-take-all Winner-take-all[l] May 14 Convention May 14 Convention N/A
West Virginia 3 22 9 34 0 34 Primary (semi-closed) Direct Elec.[o] Direct Elec.[o] May 10 Direct Elec. May 10 Direct Elec. N/A
May 17 Oregon 3 10 15 28 0 28 Primary (closed) Proportional Proportional Jun 4 Convention Jun 4 Convention 3.57%[v]
May 24 Washington 3 11 30 44 0 44 Primary (closed) Proportional Winner-take-most May 24 Slate May 24 Slate 20%
June 7 California 3 10 159 172 0 172 Primary (closed) Winner-take-all Winner-take-all Jun 7 Slate Jun 7 Slate N/A
Montana 3 24 0 27 0 27 Primary (closed) Winner-take-all N/A N/A N/A May 14 Slate N/A
New Jersey 3 48 0 51 0 51 Primary (semi-closed) Winner-take-all N/A N/A N/A Jun 5 Slate N/A
New Mexico 3 12 9 24 0 24 Primary (closed) Proportional Proportional[l] May 21 Convention May 21 Convention 15%
South Dakota 3 26 0 29 0 29 Primary (closed) Winner-take-all N/A N/A N/A Mar 19 Convention N/A
  • Sources: Official Republican Schedule and Nominating Process November 8, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, USA Today and The Green Papers

Close races

States where the margin of victory was under 1%:[242]

  1. Missouri, Trump by 0.21%

States where the margin of victory was under 5%:

  1. District of Columbia, Rubio by 1.76%
  2. Arkansas, Trump by 2.29%
  3. Vermont, Trump by 2.35%
  4. Alaska, Cruz by 2.74%
  5. Virginia, Trump by 2.82%
  6. Iowa, Cruz by 3.34%
  7. North Carolina, Trump by 3.47%
  8. Louisiana, Trump by 3.62%
  9. Kentucky, Trump by 4.51%

States where the margin of victory was under 10%:

  1. Oklahoma, Cruz by 6.05%
  2. Minnesota, Rubio by 7.06%
  3. Illinois, Trump by 8.57%
  4. South Carolina, Trump by 9.99%

States where the margin of victory was under 20%:

  1. Ohio, Kasich by 11.08%
  2. Hawaii, Trump by 11.11%
  3. Mississippi, Trump by 11.12%
  4. Michigan, Trump by 11.62%
  5. Wisconsin, Cruz by 13.02%
  6. Maine, Cruz by 13.31%
  7. Tennessee, Trump by 14.23%
  8. Georgia, Trump by 14.36%
  9. Indiana, Trump by 16.62%
  10. Texas, Cruz by 17.01%
  11. Idaho, Cruz by 17.33%
  12. Arizona, Trump by 18.34%
  13. Florida, Trump by 18.64%
  14. New Hampshire, Trump by 19.52%

See also

Related

National conventions

Presidential primaries

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g RNC members from Colorado, Guam, North Dakota, Samoa, Virgin Islands and Wyoming attended the National Convention as unbound
  2. ^ Uncommitted delegates have been allocated or elected in Colorado (4), Guam (6), Louisiana (5), North Dakota (25), Oklahoma (3), Pennsylvania (54), Samoa (6), Virgin Islands (2), Washington (3), West Virginia (3), and Wyoming (1)[12]
  3. ^ Some delegates were bound to Bush (1), Carson (7), Fiorina (1), Huckabee (1), Paul (1) and Rubio (144)[13][12]
  4. ^ a b c d e f In US elections, suspending a campaign is a legal technicality allowing candidates to keep raising funds and paying off their debts.[14]
  5. ^ In bolded states and territories, the leading candidate won the support of an absolute majority of that state's delegation for the first ballot; according to Rule 40(b), 8 such states are needed to be eligible.[16] In states and territories that are not bolded, the leading candidate won the support of a simple plurality of delegates.
  6. ^ In bolded states and territories, the leading candidate won the support of an absolute majority of that state's delegation for the first ballot; according to Rule 40(b), 8 such states are needed to be eligible.[16] In states and territories that are not bolded, the leading candidate won the support of a simple plurality of delegates.
  7. ^ In bolded states and territories, the leading candidate won the support of an absolute majority of that state's delegation for the first ballot; according to Rule 40(b), 8 such states are needed to be eligible.[16] In states and territories that are not bolded, the leading candidate won the support of a simple plurality of delegates.
  8. ^ 3 uncommitted delegates were allocated from Louisiana, 5 from the Virgin Islands, 8 from Guam, 1 from Wyoming
  9. ^ Four Colorado delegates, while elected as unbound, have decided to vote for Cruz at the GOP's National Convention
  10. ^ The Wyoming GOP elected the remaining 14 of 26 delegates at its State Convention from April 14–16.
  11. ^ Iowa's delegates are bound for the first ballot to the candidates of their allocation even if the candidates have suspended their campaigns. This applies to fourteen delegates allocated to Bush, Carson, Fiorina, Huckabee, Paul and Rubio. If only one candidate is put forward for nomination at the National Convention Iowa's delegates are bound to vote for that candidate providing he received votes in caucuses
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Delegates are allocated in each Congregational District based on the statewide result – Not based on the result in the District – but they are elected at the District Conventions.
  13. ^ a b c d e Delegates bound to a candidate who later suspends his campaign become unbound in some states. This applies to 3 delegates from New Hampshire elected on the Bush slate and 29 delegates allocated to Rubio from Minnesota (17), Arkansas (9), New Hampshire (2) and Wyoming (1).[13] Additionally, Ben Carson released in writing 2 delegates allocated to him from Nevada.[240]
  14. ^ 3.33% refers to one delegate out of 30, or 130.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h Delegates indicate on the ballot what candidate they wish to be bound to or if they wish to be elected as unbound.
  16. ^ Tennessee: half of its at-large delegates will be elected by the State Executive Committee in accordance with the binding primary result
  17. ^ Wyoming has only one congressional district, so the 12 CD delegates are elected in the 23 counties that are paired together.
  18. ^ The six uncommitted candidates originally elected at the caucus were ruled ineligible and replaced.[241]
  19. ^ 16 delegates allocated in CD will be elected as at-large delegates at the state convention
  20. ^ With 69% of all votes Cruz triggered the 50% threshold giving him all the delegates
  21. ^ With more than half the votes in both the state contest and 23 out of 27 district contests Trump triggered the 50% threshold giving him all the delegates awarded in these contests
  22. ^ 3.57% refers to one delegate out of 28, or 128.

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2016, republican, party, presidential, primaries, presidential, primaries, caucuses, republican, party, took, place, within, states, district, columbia, five, territories, between, february, june, 2016, these, elections, selected, delegates, that, were, sent, . Presidential primaries and caucuses of the Republican Party took place within all 50 U S states the District of Columbia and five U S territories between February 1 and June 7 2016 These elections selected the 2 472 delegates that were sent to the Republican National Convention Businessman and reality television star Donald Trump won the Republican nomination for president of the United States 2016 Republican Party presidential primaries 2012 February 1 to June 7 2016 2020 2 472 delegates to the Republican National Convention1 237 delegate votes needed to win Candidate Donald Trump Ted CruzHome state New York TexasDelegate count 1 441 1 551 1 Contests won 41 11Popular vote 14 015 993 1 7 822 100 1 Percentage 44 9 25 1 Candidate Marco Rubio John KasichHome state Florida OhioDelegate count 173 1 161 1 Contests won 3 1Popular vote 3 515 576 1 4 290 448 1 Percentage 11 3 13 8 First place by first instance voteFirst place by delegate allocationFirst place by convention roll call Donald Trump Ted Cruz Uncommitted Marco Rubio John Kasich TiePrevious Republican nomineeMitt Romney Republican nominee Donald TrumpA total of 17 major candidates entered the race Prior to the 2020 Democratic Party presidential primaries this was the largest presidential primary field for any political party in American history 2 U S Senator Ted Cruz of Texas won the Iowa caucuses and Trump won the New Hampshire primary and the South Carolina primary From March 16 2016 to May 3 2016 only three candidates remained in the race Trump Cruz and Ohio Governor John Kasich Cruz won four Western contests and won in Wisconsin keeping a reasonable path to denying Trump the nomination on first ballot with 1 237 delegates However Trump scored landslide victories in New York and five northeastern states in April before taking every delegate in the Indiana primary of May 3 with yet another majority of that state s popular vote Without any further chances of forcing a contested convention Cruz suspended his campaign 3 and Trump was declared the presumptive Republican nominee by Republican National Committee chairman Reince Priebus on May 3 4 Kasich ended his campaign the following day 5 After winning the Washington primary and gaining support from unbound North Dakota delegates on May 26 6 Trump passed the threshold of 1 237 delegates required to guarantee his nomination 7 By the end of the primary voting process Trump had a commanding lead in the number of pledged delegates ensuring a very smooth process for being declared the nominee However at 44 95 Trump had the lowest percentage of the popular primary vote for a major party nominee since the 1988 Democratic Party presidential primaries On July 19 2016 Trump and his running mate Indiana Governor Mike Pence were officially nominated as the Republican presidential and vice presidential candidates at the Republican National Convention 8 Trump and Pence went on to defeat the Democratic ticket of Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine in the general election on November 8 2016 despite the latter ticket consistently leading in polls 9 10 Contents 1 Candidates and results 1 1 Delegate breakdown 1 2 Nominee 1 3 Withdrew during the primaries 1 4 Withdrew before the primaries 1 5 Results by delegates hard total 1 6 Results by state popular vote 1 7 Results by county popular vote 2 Timeline of the race 2 1 Background 2 2 Overview 2 3 2012 2014 fluctuating polls 2 4 April 2014 January 2015 Jeb Bush leading the polls 2 5 Mid 2015 Donald Trump and the rise of the outsiders 2 6 End of 2015 the field stabilizes six candidates gain traction 2 7 January 2016 the road to the early primaries 2 8 February 2016 early primaries 2 9 March 1 2016 Super Tuesday 2 10 Early March 2016 between Super Tuesdays 2 11 March 15 2016 Super Tuesday II 2 12 Late March April 2016 a three candidate race 2 13 April 26 2016 Acela primary 2 14 May 3 2016 Indiana primary 2 15 May 2016 Trump as presumptive nominee 2 16 June 2016 final primaries 2 17 July 2016 National Convention 3 Campaign finance 4 Process 4 1 Schedule 5 Close races 6 See also 7 Footnotes 8 References 9 External linksCandidates and results EditMain articles 2016 Republican Party presidential candidates and Results of the 2016 Republican Party presidential primaries Further information Donald Trump 2016 presidential campaign and Ted Cruz 2016 presidential campaign Seventeen major candidates were listed in major independent nationwide polls and filed as candidates with the Federal Election Commission citation needed A total of 2 472 delegates attended the 2016 Republican National Convention and the winning candidate needed a simple majority of 1 237 votes to become the Republican nominee citation needed Delegate breakdown Edit Donald Trump 1441 delegates Ted Cruz 551 delegates Marco Rubio 174 delegates John Kasich 162 delegates Ben Carson 9 delegates Jeb Bush 4 delegates Rand Paul 1 delegate Mike Huckabee 1 delegate Carly Fiorina 1 delegate Uncommitted 130 delegates Fifty six primary contests were conducted to choose 2 472 delegates In 50 states and territories the delegates were allocated to candidates by popular vote either statewide or on the congressional district level and then elected according to state rules In six states and territories the first instance popular vote did not allocate any delegates they were elected later at local conventions and either bound to a candidate or uncommitted 11 Most delegates were elected as bound delegates meaning that they were required to vote for a specific candidate on the first ballot at the national convention Some delegates attended the convention as unbound or uncommitted delegates meaning that they were free to vote for anyone at the first ballot These 130 uncommitted delegates included 18 unbound RNC delegates a and 112 delegates that have been elected or allocated as uncommitted b Uncommitted delegates were still at liberty to express a preference for a candidate although that preference was not binding Among the 901 delegates elected for candidates who later dropped out of the race 155 were still bound to vote for their candidate on the first ballot c and 34 were released d according to the local rules of each state party If no candidate were elected in the first round of voting a progressively larger number of delegates would have been allowed to vote for the candidate of their choice The voting rules on subsequent ballots were determined by individual states most states released their delegates on the second round of voting and only four states kept them bound on the third round and beyond 15 This table shows how many bound delegates each candidate had won before suspending his or her campaign d it does not show how many unbound delegates pledged their support to any candidate during the primaries nor does it show the expected result of the vote at the national convention Although a state is considered won by a candidate if a plurality of the state s delegates are bound RNC Rule 40 b 16 required a candidate to demonstrate support from a majority of delegates in eight states to be eligible as the nominee Convention rules are based on delegate votes not the popular vote In the context of Republican primaries the term states refers collectively to the fifty states the District of Columbia and the five inhabited territories altogether 56 delegations as specified in RNC Rule 1 b 17 In the following table states and territories where the candidates achieved a majority of bound delegates are marked in bold States and territories where a candidate won a majority of delegates but not a majority of bound delegates are marked in italics Nominee Edit Candidate Most recent position Announced CampaignWithdrawal date Bounddelegates hard count then floor 18 Popularvote 18 Contests won e Running mate Ref Donald Trump Chairman of The Trump Organization 1971 2017 June 16 2015 Campaign Positions Campaign siteSecured nomination May 26 2016 6 1 441 58 3 floor 1 725 14 015 993 44 95 41 AL AR AS AZ CA CT DE FL GA GU HI IL IN KY LA MA MD MI MO MP MS MT NC ND NE NH NV NJ NM NY OR PA RI SC SD TN VA VI VT WA WV Mike Pence 19 Withdrew during the primaries Edit Candidate Portrait Most recent position Announced CampaignWithdrawal date Bounddelegates hard count then floor 18 Popularvote 18 Contests won f Running mate Ref Ted Cruz U S senator from Texas 2013 present March 23 2015 Campaign Positions Withdrew May 3 endorsed Donald Trump 20 551 22 3 floor 484 7 822 100 25 08 11 AK CO IA ID KS ME OK TX UT WI WY Carly Fiorina 21 22 23 Marco Rubio U S senator from Florida 2011 present April 13 2015 Campaign Positions Withdrew March 15 endorsed Donald Trump 24 173 7 floor 123 3 515 576 11 27 3 DC MN PR None 25 26 John Kasich 69thgovernor of Ohio 2011 2019 July 21 2015 Campaign Positions Withdrew May 4 did not endorse any candidate wrote in John McCain for general election 27 161 6 5 floor 125 4 290 448 13 76 1 OH None 28 29 Ben Carson Director of pediatric neurosurgeryfor Johns Hopkins Children s Center 1984 2013 May 3 2015 Campaign Positions Withdrew March 4 endorsed Donald Trump 30 9 0 4 floor 7 857 039 2 75 None None 31 32 Jeb Bush 43rdgovernor of Florida 1999 2007 June 15 2015 Campaign Positions Withdrew February 20 endorsed Ted Cruz then no endorsement 33 4 0 2 floor 3 286 694 0 92 None None 34 35 Rand Paul U S senator from Kentucky 2011 present April 7 2015 Campaign Positions Withdrew February 3 endorsed Donald Trump 36 1 0 floor 2 66 788 0 21 None None 37 Mike Huckabee 44thgovernor of Arkansas 1996 2007 May 5 2015 Campaign Positions Withdrew February 1 endorsed Donald Trump 38 1 0 floor 0 51 450 0 16 None None 39 40 Carly Fiorina CEO of Hewlett Packard 1999 2005 May 4 2015 Campaign Positions Withdrew February 10 endorsed Ted Cruz then Donald Trump later rescinded endorsement 41 42 1 0 floor 0 40 666 0 13 None None 43 44 Chris Christie 55thgovernor of New Jersey 2010 2018 June 30 2015 Campaign Positions Withdrew February 10 endorsed Donald Trump 45 None 57 637 0 18 None None 46 Jim Gilmore 68thgovernor of Virginia 1998 2002 July 30 2015 Campaign Withdrew February 12 endorsed Donald Trump 47 None 18 369 0 06 None None 48 49 Rick Santorum U S senator from Pennsylvania 1995 2007 May 27 2015 Campaign Withdrew February 3 endorsed Marco Rubio then Donald Trump 50 51 None 16 627 0 05 None None 52 53 Withdrew before the primaries Edit Candidate Most recent position Announced Withdrawal date Bounddelegates hard count 18 Popularvote 18 Contests won g Ref George Pataki 53rdgovernor of New York 1995 2006 May 28 2015 Withdrew December 29 2015 endorsed Marco Rubio then John Kasich then no endorsement 54 55 None 2 036 None 56 57 Lindsey Graham U S senator from South Carolina 2003 present June 1 2015 Withdrew December 21 2015 endorsed Jeb Bush then Ted Cruz then Evan McMullin 58 None 5 666 None 59 60 Bobby Jindal 55thgovernor of Louisiana 2008 2016 June 24 2015 Withdrew November 17 2015 endorsed Marco Rubio then Donald Trump 61 62 None 222 None 63 64 Scott Walker 45thgovernor of Wisconsin 2011 2019 July 13 2015 Withdrew September 21 2015 endorsed Ted Cruz then Donald Trump 65 66 None 1 67 None 68 69 Rick Perry 47thgovernor of Texas 2000 2015 June 4 2015 Withdrew September 11 2015 endorsed Ted Cruz then Donald Trump 70 71 None 1 67 None 72 73 Results by delegates hard total Edit Results by state popular vote Edit Results by county popular vote Edit Donald Trump Ted Cruz John Kasich Marco Rubio Ben Carson Tie Uncommitted No results Colorado and North Dakota did not hold primaries caucuses Timeline of the race EditBackground Edit Former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney the 2012 GOP presidential nominee lost the 2012 election to incumbent Democratic president Barack Obama The Republican National Committee believing that the long drawn out 2012 primary season had politically and personally damaged Romney drafted plans to condense the 2016 primary season As part of these plans the 2016 Republican National Convention was scheduled for the relatively early date of July 18 21 2016 74 the earliest date since Republicans nominated Thomas Dewey in June 1948 75 76 When John Kasich entered the race on July 21 2015 the field reached 16 candidates 77 making it the largest presidential field in the history of the Republican Party surpassing the 1948 primaries With Jim Gilmore s announcement to enter the race for a second time on July 30 2015 78 the field reached 17 candidates becoming the largest presidential field in American history surpassing the 16 candidates in the Democratic Party presidential primaries of 1972 and 1976 79 80 In mid December 2014 Jeb Bush widely seen as a possible frontrunner for the nomination due to his relatively moderate stances record as former governor of a crucial swing state name recognition and access to high paying donors was the first candidate to form a political action committee PAC and an exploratory committee 81 Many other candidates followed suit The first candidate to declare his candidacy was Texas Senator Ted Cruz who was popular among grassroots conservatives due to his association with the Tea Party movement and who also received early backing of several prominent Republican donors including Robert Mercer 82 83 The 2016 candidates were roughly divided into three camps with grassroots conservatives represented by Cruz and Carson the Christian right represented by Huckabee and Santorum and moderates or establishment represented by Bush and Christie Several such as Rubio Walker and Kasich were seen as having political backgrounds that may be appealing to both conservatives and moderates Additionally not all of these candidates clearly toed the grassroots establishment divide for instance Rubio and Cruz were both elected to the Senate in the early 2010s as members of the Tea Party movement but by 2015 had been courting the support of prominent party elders political operatives and large donors with significant success In contrast only three of the candidates Carson Trump and Fiorina were true non establishment candidates in the sense that they had no formal political experience though Fiorina is widely considered to have views in line with the establishment wing led by Bush and Christie 84 85 86 Some called the diversity of candidates representing different wings of the party symptomatic of a struggle for the future direction of the party 87 The field was noted for its diversity and was even called the most diverse presidential field in American history It included two Latinos Cruz and Rubio a woman Fiorina an Indian American Jindal and an African American Carson Five were the children of immigrants Cruz Cuban father Jindal Indian parents Rubio Cuban parents Santorum Italian father and Trump Scottish mother 88 89 90 91 Overview Edit Widely viewed as a very open contest with no clear front runner potential candidates fluctuated in the polls for an extended period from late 2012 to the end of 2015 In the year prior to the election season a total of 17 major candidates campaigned for the nomination thus making it the single largest presidential primary field in American history at the time 2 However by the time the primary season started in early 2016 four candidates had clearly emerged ahead of the rest of the field Ohio Governor John Kasich Florida Senator Marco Rubio Texas Senator Ted Cruz and New York businessman Donald Trump Trump maintained wide poll leads throughout 2015 and into 2016 primarily due to his brash and unapologetic style of speaking and campaigning Trump emphasized a disregard for political correctness as well as populist and nativist policies he earned the support of working class voters and voters without college educations among other demographics 92 93 94 However Trump s brash attitude and polarizing policy stances generated numerous controversies in the media 95 and many of the other candidates sought to become the anti Trump candidate by condemning his rhetoric and policies Senators Cruz and Rubio emphasized their youth in comparison to most other candidates and their possible appeal to Hispanic voters 86 96 97 Additionally Ohio governor John Kasich a moderate Republican remained in the race for an extended period despite being viewed as having little to no chance of winning the nomination 98 Despite Trump s lead in most national polls the first in the nation Iowa caucuses were won by Cruz due to his support among grassroots conservatives However Trump rebounded with strong wins in New Hampshire South Carolina and Nevada On Super Tuesday Trump expanded his lead by winning seven of the eleven states while the Cruz campaign gained new energy with victories in Alaska Oklahoma and the significant stronghold of Cruz s home state Texas Rubio maintained significant momentum with strong finishes in Iowa third place South Carolina second place and Nevada second place before finally claiming victory in Minnesota on Super Tuesday Between Super Tuesday and the beginning of the winner take all primaries Cruz stayed nearly even with Trump winning four states to Trump s five Rubio won several smaller contests such as Puerto Rico and Washington D C In the first round of winner take all contests on March 15 Trump greatly expanded his lead by winning five of the six contests After a significant loss to Trump in his home state of Florida Rubio suspended d his campaign that same day Meanwhile Kasich finally gained some momentum by winning his home state of Ohio As the primary season entered the spring the mostly consolidated field resulted in a closing of the gap between Trump and Cruz with Trump sweeping the South the Northeast and parts of the Midwest while Cruz performed strongly in the West and scored a surprise victory in Maine Kasich unable to win any other states besides Ohio remained far behind in third place After Cruz s upset win in Wisconsin speculation began to arise that the convention would be a brokered one in which the establishment would choose Kasich or someone else since both Trump and Cruz were not viewed favorably by the establishment 99 100 As April came to a close and Trump won a resounding victory in his home state of New York both Cruz and Kasich were mathematically eliminated from winning the nomination without a brokered convention Both men then formed an alliance to block Trump from winning the nomination ahead of the Acela primaries of five Northeastern states on April 26 101 Subsequently Trump swept all five states and greatly increased his delegate lead In a final push to block Trump s path to the nomination Cruz announced that one of the former candidates for the nomination former Hewlett Packard CEO Carly Fiorina would be his running mate if he was the nominee 102 Nevertheless after Trump won the Indiana primary on May 3 Cruz suspended his campaign 3 subsequently leading to Republican National Committee chairman Reince Priebus announcing Trump as the presumptive nominee 103 Kasich announced the suspension of his campaign the next day leaving Trump as the only candidate left in the race Trump then went on to win all of the remaining primaries sweeping the remainder of the West Midwest and the entirety of the West Coast With his victories in New Jersey and the remaining final states on June 7 not only did Trump officially surpass the necessary number of bound delegates but he also broke the 2000 record of 12 034 676 popular votes received by the winner of the Republican presidential primaries 104 with over 14 million votes 18 NomineeSuspended campaigns during primariesSuspended campaigns before primariesIowa caucusesSuper TuesdaySuper Tuesday IIIndiana primaryPrimary elections endConvention 2016 2012 2014 fluctuating polls Edit Governor Chris Christie polled highly until the 2014 Bridgegate scandal He suspended his campaign after falling below the threshold in New Hampshire After Romney s unsuccessful 2012 campaign the potential 2016 field was left without a clear future nominee similar to that of 2008 Different speculations began rising from all sides of the right leaning political spectrum as to who would make the best possible nominee One faction of candidates included young freshmen senators some with alliances to the Tea Party movement such as Cruz Paul and Rubio who in particular was the focus of attention immediately following 2012 In most national polls from late 2012 to mid 2013 Rubio was leading due to being young articulate having a broad appeal among conservatives and moderates and also for his Latino heritage and continued efforts on immigration reform which many viewed as possible tools to draw Hispanic voters to the GOP 105 106 107 However another narrative for the nomination similar to that which drove Romney s 2012 campaign was that the nominee needed to be a governor in a traditionally Democratic or swing state with a proven record that would stand as proof that such a governor could be president as well The possible candidates that fit this criteria included Bush Gilmore Kasich Pataki Walker and Christie who in particular had been rising in popularity due to his loud and blunt manner of speaking at public events championed by some as challenging conventional political rhetoric 108 109 With his record as governor of New Jersey a heavily Democratic state factored in Christie overtook Rubio in the polls from mid 2013 up until early 2014 when the Bridgegate scandal was first revealed and started to damage Christie s reputation and poll standing 110 Although he was later cleared of personal responsibility in the subsequent investigation Christie never regained frontrunner status 111 After Christie s fall the polls fluctuated from January to November 2014 Candidates who often performed well included Rand Paul who won CPAC straw polls in 2013 2014 and 2015 112 113 114 Wisconsin congressman and 2012 vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan the eventual House speaker and former candidates such as former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee and then governor of Texas Rick Perry further reflecting the uncertainty of the upcoming race for the nomination 115 116 April 2014 January 2015 Jeb Bush leading the polls Edit Despite holding an unsteady lead in most of 2014 and early 2015 former Florida Governor Jeb Bush was unable to garner popular support and suspended d his campaign following the South Carolina primary In April 2014 Robert Costa and Philip Rucker of The Washington Post reported that the period of networking and relationship building that they dubbed the credentials caucus had begun with prospective candidates quietly studying up on issues and cultivating ties to pundits and luminaries from previous administrations 117 Though Bush often polled in the low double digits he was considered a prominent candidate due to his high fundraising ability record as governor of Florida a crucial swing state and apparent electability 118 119 By November 2014 Bush had finally solidified his lead in the polls 120 121 Around this time there were talks of the possibility of Romney making a third run for the presidency During this period from November 2014 until late January 2015 the speculation fueled Romney s rise in many national polls as well challenging Bush 122 Although Romney admitted he was entertaining the idea after initially declining he ultimately reaffirmed his decision not to run on January 30 2015 123 However by the end of February another challenger rose to match Bush in the polls Walker who often touted his record as governor in a traditionally Democratic state particularly noting his victory in a recall election in 2012 the first governor in American history to do so combined with his reelection in 2014 Walker and Bush balanced out in the polls from late February until about mid June at which point Trump entered the race citation needed Walker s challenge to Bush also allowed other candidates to briefly resurge in some polls from late April up until mid June including former top performers Rubio Paul and Huckabee in addition to several newcomers to the top tier of polling including Cruz and Carson 115 116 Mid 2015 Donald Trump and the rise of the outsiders Edit Donald Trump s poll numbers surged as he entered the race and he held a strong lead entering the primary season After losing Iowa to Cruz Trump won the next three February primaries Shortly after Trump announced his candidacy on June 16 2015 many pundits noted his uniquely outspoken nature blunt language and rhetoric often directly contradicting traditional political candidates This style was seen as resonating strongly with potential Republican primary voters and Trump began to rise in the polls 124 After a few weeks of briefly matching Bush Trump surged into first place in all major national polls by mid July 125 which he continued to lead consistently until November Trump also polled well in the early voting states of Iowa New Hampshire and South Carolina often leading or coming in second in those states citation needed Although Carly Fiorina rose in the polls after the second debate she failed to capitalize on her momentum and faded quickly She ultimately suspended her campaign after New Hampshire She briefly served as Cruz s running mate from April 27 to May 3 until Cruz suspended his campaign as well With the surge of Trump a man who had never held political office the general focus began to shift over to other non politician candidates commonly known as outsiders and the other two outsiders in the field quickly rose in the polls as well in the wake of the first two debates Carson who rose into second place after a well received performance in the first debate and Fiorina who rose into the top three after her performance in the second debate 126 127 128 The rising popularity of non politician outsiders shocked many political analysts and fueled a new conversation about how those with no political experience or prior runs for office could appeal more to potential primary voters than career politicians and what it means for the future of the Republican party and American politics in general 129 130 131 132 Trump used ideas of populism to persuade the average American throughout the election process 133 In mid September the first two major candidates dropped out of the race Perry suspended his campaign on September 11 2015 citing his failure to qualify for the primetime debates his subsequent failure to raise a significant amount of money and his indictment as reasons 134 135 Ten days later on September 21 2015 Walker suspended his campaign mainly due to his own poll numbers dropping after two lackluster debate performances 136 End of 2015 the field stabilizes six candidates gain traction Edit Governor Scott Walker surprised many political observers when he announced the suspension of his campaign on September 21 2015 in Wisconsin By the end of September most polling averages indicated that the field was finally stabilizing in terms of public opinion and six candidates in particular were gaining traction and pulling away from the rest of the field by considerable margins Polling averages indicated the top six as Trump Carson Rubio Fiorina Bush and Cruz 137 Trump and Carson were consistently first and second respectively Fiorina was initially in third place before being surpassed by Rubio while Bush and Cruz remained in fifth and sixth place respectively 138 139 The other candidates who had been in the top ten of polling Christie Huckabee Paul and Kasich all leveled out at roughly 3 or less while the five remaining candidates outside the top ten Santorum Jindal Pataki Graham and Gilmore were consistently polling below 1 By the third debate in late October Bush and Fiorina s numbers were also beginning to fade while Cruz was on the rise and began coming in fourth by most poll averages 137 The third debate only solidified these numbers Bush and Fiorina remained in low digits as both were considered lackluster while Cruz was widely held as the winner and rose even further 140 141 Throughout this period both Trump and Carson had pulled well ahead of the rest of the field and with Trump often registering in the low 30s and high 20s and Carson in the low 20s the two of them combined often made up well over 50 of the electorate in a vast majority of national polls 137 Later in October and in early November Carson began to match even with Trump by most polling averages rising into the mid 20s and often finishing either just behind or just ahead of Trump 142 143 An autumn surge had former neurosurgeon Ben Carson polling even with Trump at one point but his support decreased significantly following the terrorist attacks in Paris which highlighted Carson s perceived inexperience on foreign policy He later suspended his campaign after four last place finishes on Super Tuesday and endorsed Trump in response to Fiorina endorsing Cruz 144 By October with the polls reflecting a field that seemed to be stabilizing most commentators began to claim that the field had already established who the final four candidates those who were in the race for the long term and had the best chance of actually becoming the nominee would be The four were listed as being Trump Carson Rubio and Cruz Trump and Carson for their appeal as outsiders as well as their opposite personalities with Trump s blunt nature and tough foreign policy stances against Carson s soft spoken nature and personal favorability Rubio for his appeal to Hispanics and his stance on such issues as immigration reform combined with strong debate performances and significant donor backing and Cruz for his appeal to Tea Party and Christian Conservative voters which was seen as possibly having a strong impact in the southern states 145 146 On November 17 2015 Jindal became the third major Republican candidate to drop out 147 The November 2015 Paris attacks which killed 130 people days before Jindal dropped out were widely seen as having a significant impact on the 2016 presidential race particularly on the Republican side 148 The attacks were seen as boosting the campaigns of those with tough stances on immigration like Trump and Cruz as well as the foreign policy hawks like Rubio 149 150 Possibly as a result Carson who had previously been perceived as uninformed and relatively inarticulate on foreign policy began to suffer in the polls with Trump once again solidifying a double digit lead over everyone else while Rubio and Cruz began to steadily rise as Carson s numbers declined 137 151 Senator Ted Cruz saw a steady rise in the polls following the CNBC debate in late October He began the election cycle with a win in Iowa and dropped out after being defeated by Trump in Indiana By December Cruz had overtaken Carson by solidifying a base of support among Christian conservatives and averaged national polling of 18 second only to Trump 152 The non interventionist Paul still failed to make traction at this juncture while Carson fell down to about 10 roughly even with Rubio 137 On December 15 2015 there was another presidential debate which saw no major changes in the perceptions of the candidates On December 21 2015 the same day as the deadline to withdraw from the ballot in his home state of South Carolina Graham suspended his campaign Eight days later on December 29 Pataki who was struggling to poll above the margin of error suspended his campaign as well 153 January 2016 the road to the early primaries Edit 2016 dawned with the several month long truce between Trump and Cruz being broken 154 Cruz accused Trump of not being a consistent conservative or an ethical businessman while Trump questioned the Canadian born Cruz s constitutional eligibility to be president candidates have to be natural born U S citizens to be eligible to be president while noting Cruz s past calls for immigration reform 155 156 This occurred as Trump and Cruz were vying for supremacy at the top of Iowa polls in addition to both being the top two candidates in all national polls ahead of the rest of the field by significant margins 157 158 In the closing weeks before Iowa Trump and Cruz ran dueling television commercials each attacking the other s record 159 Meanwhile there was conflict between establishment candidates Rubio Christie Bush and Kasich largely due to a media reinforced belief that only a single establishment candidate could remain in the race past the early primaries The establishment candidates staked their bids on strong showings in New Hampshire and both Christie and Kasich saw upticks in their polling in the weeks before the primary 160 161 Both the Trump Cruz conflict and the squabbling between establishment candidates was evident at the Republican debate on January 14 The Republican debate of January 28 devoid of Trump due to priorities and conflicts with moderator Megyn Kelly after the debate in August was the candidates last shot at honing their message before the Iowa caucuses Immigration and foreign policy featured prominently in this debate and many candidates used the opportunity of a Trump less debate to criticize the second place Cruz who was also being heavily criticized by prominent Republican leaders in the weeks before Iowa 162 163 February 2016 early primaries Edit Early states results Candidate Trump Cruz Rubio Kasich Carson Bush Gilmore Christie Fiorina Paul Huckabee Santorum TotalDelegates won Delegates 82 Pledged 82 Unpledged 0 Delegates 17 Pledged 17 Unpledged 0 Delegates 16 Pledged 16 Unpledged 0 Delegates 6 Pledged 6 Unpledged 0 Delegates 5 Pledged 5 Unpledged 0 Delegates 4 Pledged 4 Unpledged 0 Delegates 0 Pledged 0 Unpledged 0 Delegates 0 Pledged 0 Unpledged 0 Delegates 1 Pledged 1 Unpledged 0 Delegates 1 Pledged 1 Unpledged 0 Delegates 1 Pledged 1 Unpledged 0 Delegates 0 Pledged 0 Unpledged 0 133 Pledged 133 Unpledged 0Popular vote 421 577 32 7 266 406 20 7 257 804 20 0 107 525 8 4 81 091 6 3 94 699 7 3 146 0 01 24 423 1 9 15 281 1 2 10 581 0 8 3 582 0 3 1 950 0 2 1 289 211States won 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4Feb 1 Iowa 24 3 Delegates won 7 27 6 Delegates won 8 23 1 Delegates won 7 1 9 Delegates won 1 9 3 Delegates won 3 2 8 Delegates won 1 0 01 Delegates won 0 1 8 Delegates won 0 1 9 Delegates won 1 4 5 Delegates won 1 1 8 Delegates won 1 1 Delegates won 0 Feb 9 New Hampshire Proportional primary 35 2 Delegates won 11 11 6 Delegates won 3 10 5 Delegates won 2 15 7 Delegates won 4 2 3 Delegates won 0 11 Delegates won 3 0 05 Delegates won 0 7 4 Delegates won 0 4 1 Delegates won 0 0 7 Delegates won 0 Feb 20 South Carolina Winner take most primary 29 delegates for state winner 3 per winner of each Congressional District 32 5 Delegates won 50 22 3 Delegates won 0 22 5 Delegates won 0 7 6 Delegates won 0 7 2 Delegates won 0 7 8 Delegates won 0 Feb 23 Nevada Proportional caucus 45 7 Delegates won 14 21 3 Delegates won 6 23 8 Delegates won 7 3 6 Delegates won 1 4 8 Delegates won 2 Ohio Governor John Kasich shown here in Nashua New Hampshire finished second in New Hampshire after holding over 100 town hall meetings He won his first and only state on March 15 in Ohio He suspended his campaign on May 4 In the first in the nation Iowa caucuses Cruz won a narrow victory over Trump and Rubio 164 Following poor performances in Iowa three candidates suspended their campaigns Huckabee the winner of the caucuses in 2008 Santorum the winner of the caucuses in 2012 and Paul whose father performed very well in the 2008 and 2012 caucuses This caused the field to narrow to nine 165 166 167 After coming third in the Iowa caucuses the media quickly painted Rubio as the candidate most likely to pick up the establishment mantle and ride it to the nomination following a strong performance in New Hampshire much as McCain and Romney had done in 2008 and 2012 respectively before both ultimately lost the general election to Obama Rubio used this narrative to pick up a number of endorsements in the days following the Iowa caucuses However in the New Hampshire debate of February 6 2016 Rubio repeated a talking point four times almost verbatim during an exchange with Christie which led to sharp criticism of his performance in the aftermath and the beginning of the end of Rubio s campaign 168 In the New Hampshire primary Trump scored a decisive victory over the rest of the field winning the primary with 35 of the vote Kasich who had held over 100 town halls in the state finished second in a surprise to many in the media Cruz coming in third in the contest was also a shock to many while Rubio slipped to fifth behind Trump Kasich Cruz and Bush whose campaign appeared to be revitalized following several months of apparent stagnation After coming in seventh place in both Iowa and New Hampshire Fiorina suspended her campaign on February 10 2016 169 Later that same day Christie whose campaign was staked almost entirely on getting a strong showing in New Hampshire suspended his campaign after coming in sixth in New Hampshire failing to reach the minimum 10 vote threshold required to be allocated delegates from the state and qualifying for the next debate on CBS 170 171 Later that week Jim Gilmore who had failed to gain traction win delegates or be invited to most of the debates suspended his campaign narrowing the field to six 172 The third contest was in South Carolina Prior to the primary Rubio picked up the key endorsement of Governor Nikki Haley a feat seen as renewing his momentum after a disappointing finish in New Hampshire 173 174 Exit polling showed that 46 of voters had decided the week before the primary and that the majority of these votes went to Rubio 175 When the votes were counted Trump again won by double digits garnering 33 of the vote ahead of Rubio with 22 who edged out Cruz for second place by 0 2 Since Trump carried the vote both statewide and in each congressional district his result netted him all 50 delegates available in the state 176 Following disappointing finishes in the first three contests despite outspending his competitors Bush suspended his campaign on February 20 177 Three days following the South Carolina primary Trump won the Nevada caucuses winning with 46 of the vote with Rubio in a distant second with 24 and Cruz slightly further behind with 21 178 March 1 2016 Super Tuesday Edit Super Tuesday voting after the early voting in February decided nearly half of the delegate votes needed to achieve the 1 237 votes to win the nomination at the 2016 Republican National Convention 595 delegates at stake to be exact Super Tuesday holds the primary voting for 11 states in the primary election process 179 North Dakota held the last caucus on Super Tuesday but there was no presidential straw poll and all the delegates elected later at its convention in April were unbound Wyoming took a straw poll but it was non binding and no delegates were allocated on Super Tuesday Leading up to Super Tuesday a debate between the remaining five candidates took place in Houston on February 25 2016 Political rhetoric and charges heated up with Cruz and Rubio teaming up to attack Trump 180 States holding primaries or caucuses on Super Tuesday 2016 Primary or caucus delegates bound and allocated Non binding poll or caucus delegates allocated later Primary or caucus already held Super Tuesday results Candidate Trump Cruz Rubio Kasich Carson Uncom TotalDelegates won 255 218 96 21 3 2 595Popular vote 2 955 120 34 4 2 502 557 29 2 1 881 068 21 9 546 465 6 4 493 912 5 8 8 581 841States won 7 3 1 0 0 0 11Alabama 43 4 Delegates won 36 21 Delegates won 13 18 7 Delegates won 1 4 4 Delegates won 0 10 2 Delegates won 0 Alaska 33 6 Delegates won 11 36 4 Delegates won 12 15 2 Delegates won 5 4 Delegates won 0 10 8 Delegates won 0 Arkansas 32 8 Delegates won 16 31 25 4 6 Georgia 39 24 24 6 6 Massachusetts 49 10 18 18 3 Minnesota 21 29 36 6 7 Oklahoma 28 34 26 4 6 Tennessee 39 25 21 5 8 Texas 27 44 18 4 4 Vermont 33 10 19 30 4 Virginia 35 17 32 10 6 Marco Rubio was considered a leading candidate for both establishment and tea party constituencies polling in the top three in late 2015 and early 2016 He won his first state on Super Tuesday capturing Minnesota After a loss in his home state of Florida he suspended his campaign on March 15 2016 Trump won the contests in Alabama Arkansas Georgia Massachusetts Tennessee Vermont and Virginia while Cruz netted a strong victory in his home state of Texas and added victories in Oklahoma and Alaska Rubio won his first contest in the Minnesota Republican Caucus and finished a strong second in Virginia Kasich won no contests but he almost won in Vermont and finished second in Massachusetts Carson did not win or place in any contest netted only three delegates and though he initially expressed an intent to stay in the race began showing signs of withdrawing in the days following Super Tuesday he ultimately suspended his campaign on March 4 2016 181 182 Early March 2016 between Super Tuesdays Edit After Super Tuesday voting but before winner take all voting was to begin nine states two territories and Washington D C held their primaries and caucuses During this period 377 delegates were at stake On March 3 2016 the day before Carson dropped out of the race Romney criticized Trump in a heavily publicized speech Later that day there was another GOP debate which again featured Trump Cruz Rubio and Kasich Carson did not participate in the debate as he announced the suspension of his campaign the next day narrowing the field to four he subsequently endorsed Trump on March 10 2016 the day after Fiorina endorsed Cruz 183 Meanwhile as the prospect of a Trump nomination became more imminent establishment Republicans pressured Romney or House Speaker Paul Ryan to enter the race Romney had already decided not to enter the race on January 30 2015 while Ryan announced he would not enter on April 13 2016 184 185 Mike Huckabee at a book signing On March 5 Cruz won the Kansas and Maine caucuses by comfortable margins Trump narrowly won the Kentucky caucus and the Louisiana primary Rubio and Kasich did not finish first or second on any primaries on Super Saturday The following day the first of the 2016 primaries to be held in a U S territory went to Rubio who won all of Puerto Rico s 23 delegates 186 On March 8 Trump won in Michigan Mississippi and Hawaii while Cruz took the Idaho Republican Primary and Rubio missed delegate thresholds in Michigan Mississippi and Idaho finishing the night with only a single delegate Despite some favorable polling in Michigan 187 Kasich did not win any primaries but he still picked up 17 delegates Neither Rubio nor Kasich finished first or second in any primaries held that day In the Virgin Islands caucuses on March 10 a slate composed wholly of uncommitted delegates was initially elected However the entire slate was later disqualified by the territorial party and was replaced by the elected alternates two uncommitted two for Rubio and one each for Cruz and Trump 188 The dispute later went to court 189 Also on March 10 there was a debate in Florida between the four surviving candidates which was conducted in a more civil tone than prior debates 190 On March 12 the Guam caucuses endorsed eight uncommitted delegates and one unbound Cruz supporting delegate 191 Rubio won his final contest in D C and 9 delegates went to Cruz in the Wyoming county conventions Rubio and Trump both earned one delegate and another was elected as uncommitted citation needed March 5 12 results 18 Candidate Trump Cruz Rubio Kasich Uncom TotalDelegates won 140 137 48 36 12 h 373Popular vote 987 571 37 2 820 746 30 9 299 397 11 3 441 127 16 6 24 662 0 9 2 653 336States won 5 3 0 PR DC 0 0 VI GU 8 4Kansas 23 47 17 11 0 4 Kentucky 36 32 16 14 0 2 Louisiana 41 38 11 6 Maine 33 46 8 12 Puerto Rico 13 9 71 1 Hawaii 43 32 13 10 Idaho 28 45 16 7 Michigan 37 25 9 24 2 Mississippi 47 36 5 9 Virgin Islands 6 12 10 65 Guam 0 1 0 0 8Washington D C 14 12 37 36 Wyoming 7 2 Delegates won 1 66 3 Delegates won 23 19 5 Delegates won 1 0 Delegates won 0 7 0 Delegates won 1 Virgin Islands results do not take account of the later disqualification of delegates Accounting for the disqualified delegates the results were as follows Uncommitted 36 Cruz 22 Rubio 18 Carson 12 Trump 12 Delegate totals are given in Guam as no tally of the popular vote has been released and one delegate was elected by acclamation Wyoming held county conventions with no statewide popular vote percentages represent the vote of county delegates March 15 2016 Super Tuesday II Edit March 15 featured winner take all primaries in the delegate rich states of Florida Rubio s home state and Ohio Kasich s home state There were also contests in Illinois Missouri North Carolina and the Northern Mariana Islands totaling 367 delegates It was widely seen as a very important day in the presidential race because of the large number of winner take all delegates at stake In the days leading up to Florida the remaining candidates announced prominent endorsements and Trump and Rubio in particular spent millions on television advertisements assailing the other in Florida The level of protest and violence at Trump rallies meanwhile became an object of criticism by other candidates one such incident led to the cancellation of a Trump event in Chicago on March 13 2016 192 On March 11 2016 in an effort to stop Trump Rubio told his supporters in Ohio to vote for Kasich while Kasich refused to tell his Florida supporters to help Rubio with a campaign spokesperson later quoted as saying We were going to win Ohio anyway even without his help just as he s going to lose Florida to Trump without ours 193 The Northern Mariana Islands caucuses were the first contest to close on March 15 with Trump taking 73 of the vote and collecting all nine delegates 194 In Florida Trump netted the biggest prize of the night handily defeating Rubio in Rubio s home state 195 Trump added to that wins in North Carolina Illinois and Missouri Soon after the announcement of his loss in Florida Rubio suspended his campaign Kasich got on the board for the first time winning his home state of Ohio to stave off elimination Kasich s victory in Ohio meant that the 2016 Republican primaries were the first since 1968 and the first in which every state held a contest in which more than three candidates won at least one state though in 2012 three candidates Mitt Romney Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich won states and a fourth Ron Paul won a territory Virgin Islands while Democratic primaries have historically been more divided examples are the Democratic primaries in 1968 five candidates won states 1972 seven 1976 six 1988 five 1992 five and 2004 four The election in Missouri was very close with Trump beating Cruz by fewer than 2 000 votes 0 21 196 197 Cruz could have contested the outcome because the difference was less than 0 5 but chose not to thereby giving the 12 statewide delegates to Trump and 37 overall out of the 52 198 March 15 results Candidate Trump Kasich Cruz Rubio TotalDelegates won 228 81 51 6 366Popular vote 3 202 125 40 6 1 620 506 20 5 1 912 166 24 2 957 976 12 1 7 889 784States won 4 NMP 1 0 0 5 NMPFlorida 46 7 17 27 Illinois 39 20 30 9 Missouri 40 8 10 40 6 6 North Carolina 40 12 36 8 N Mariana Islands 73 2 24 1 Ohio 36 47 13 2 Late March April 2016 a three candidate race Edit Trump speaks at Fountain Park in Fountain Hills Arizona Seven states and one territory voted between March 22 and April 19 2016 totaling 315 delegates with New York the largest winner take most 95 followed by Arizona winner take all 58 citation needed The final debate between the candidates which had been scheduled to take place on March 21 2016 in Salt Lake City was cancelled after Trump and Kasich withdrew from the event Trump had initially announced that he would be absent as there had been enough debates Kasich subsequently stated that he would not attend a debate without Trump 199 On March 22 with concerns about the border immigration and national security at the fore Trump won all 58 delegates in Arizona However in Utah Cruz garnered 69 of the vote triggering the 50 rule to take all 40 delegates buoyed by anti Trump sentiment among many Mormons All of American Samoa s delegates were uncommitted 200 After Trump was declared the presumptive nominee all of the American Samoa delegates committed to him 201 American Samoa and Utah were the last caucuses of the 2016 Republican primary season citation needed As a Trump nomination became even more likely the Club for Growth and other backers of the Stop Trump movement began adopting increasingly drastic strategies to derail his nomination including all out opposition to him in Wisconsin seen as one opportunity to deny him the 1 237 delegates needed to clinch the nomination 202 Trump stated that he foresaw the outbreak of riots if he were denied the nomination at the convention 203 Despite often being viewed as anathema to the establishment Cruz began picking up endorsements of establishment figures dismayed by the prospect of a Trump nomination including that of Romney just before the Utah primary Bush on March 23 2016 and Walker on March 29 2016 204 Toward the end of March the competition between the three remaining candidates grew even fiercer 205 The increasingly acrimonious back and forth between Cruz and Trump took a new turn after the National Enquirer accused Cruz of being involved in five extramarital affairs claims Cruz denied accusing Trump of planting the claim but other sources linked it to Rubio s suspended campaign 206 On March 29 the same day Walker endorsed Cruz at a GOP town hall event hosted by CNN all three remaining Republican candidates distanced themselves from the vow they had taken in September to support their party s eventual nominee Referring to the pledge Kasich stated all of us shouldn t even have answered that question 207 April 3 had a North Dakota convention where Cruz gained support of eight delegates and Trump got one Cruz later got six extra delegates committed to him After Cruz dropped out three delegates switched their support to Trump The 13 uncommitted delegates backed Trump giving him the support of 17 delegates and a majority On April 5 buoyed by support from Walker and the state s talk and national radio hosts Cruz won the statewide contests by a 48 35 margin and six congressional districts at the Wisconsin primary for 36 delegates Trump won two congressional districts for six delegates citation needed Following the Wisconsin primary the three candidates moved on to Trump s home state of New York for its April 19 primary Trump and Kasich teamed up to assail Cruz for his earlier criticism of Trump s New York values while Cruz reiterated his claim that Trump has an inconsistent conservative record and stated that the only reason Kasich is attacking me now is because Kasich is afraid of going against Trump if I dropped out Trump also received the support of former New York mayor and 2008 presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani during the lead up to the New York primary On April 9 2016 Cruz won the Colorado delegates after taking a solid majority the state s four uncommitted delegates declaring support for Cruz bringing his total delegate count in Colorado to 34 On April 16 2016 Cruz won all 14 at large delegates in the Wyoming state convention 208 He also received the support of RNC Committeewoman Marti Halverson one of the 3 RNC delegates to the convention 209 On April 19 Trump won New York with 59 of the vote taking 89 of its 95 delegates Kasich was a distant second with 25 of the vote taking the other six delegates Cruz was completely shut out from receiving any New York delegates coming in third place with only 15 of the vote as the threshold for obtaining any delegates was 20 Following the New York primary Cruz was mathematically eliminated from reaching the majority of 1 237 delegates to earn the nomination on the first ballot as he needed 678 more while only 674 were available 210 March 22 April 19 results Candidate Trump Cruz Kasich Uncom TotalDelegates won 154 123 6 5 288Popular vote 1 254 994 43 9 974 360 34 1 485 025 17 0 2 293 2 857 840States won 3 AS 4 0 0 7 ASAmerican Samoa 9 0 0 0 Arizona 46 28 11 Utah 14 69 17 North Dakota 17 11 0 0Wisconsin 35 48 14 0 2 Colorado 1 29 4 i 0 3Wyoming j 0 14 0 2New York 59 15 25 The delegate count is given for American Samoa and North Dakota as no tally of the vote has been released All delegates from American Samoa are unpledged All delegates from North Dakota are unbound but some have declared support committed to for a candidate they can still change their minds The delegate count from Colorado and Wyoming is given because there is no tally for popular vote These delegates however can choose to be bound to a candidate or to be left uncommitted They indicated this when they filed to run for a delegate spot April 26 2016 Acela primary Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source source source GOP candidates jockey for delegate free agents in Virginia video news report published on Apr 29 2016 from PBS Newshour On April 26 2016 five Northeastern primaries were contested Connecticut Delaware Maryland Pennsylvania and Rhode Island and were collectively termed the Amtrak or Acela primary in reference to the Acela Express which runs through the area 211 All five primaries were won by Trump by overwhelming margins between 29 and 41 Trump received over 54 of the vote in all five He claimed all the delegates available in Connecticut Delaware and Maryland as well as all 17 pledged delegates in Pennsylvania Pennsylvania also elected 54 unpledged delegates and both the Trump campaign and The Washington Post estimated that Trump would win the support of at least 39 of the Keystone State s 54 unpledged delegates 212 Only in Rhode Island where delegates were allocated proportionally did Kasich 5 or Cruz 2 win any pledged delegates Trump attained 12 of the 19 there and 111 of the 118 by the end of the night The night was also notable as Trump cleared 10 million votes surpassing the vote total attained by McCain 213 and Romney 214 in 2008 and 2012 respectively The two aforementioned contests were won with the candidate receiving a majority of the popular vote nationwide in both 2008 and 2012 The next day Trump received the support of 31 unbound delegates from Pennsylvania while Cruz nabbed four of them Kasich three and five remained uncommitted 215 On April 28 2016 a Trump rally in Costa Mesa California attracted protests that turned violent with approximately twenty people arrested and a police car vandalized 216 On April 29 the Trump campaign declared that they had accumulated 1 001 delegates only 236 from the 1 237 necessary for the nomination 217 April 26 results Candidate Trump Kasich Cruz Uncom TotalDelegates won 111 5 2 6 124Popular vote 1 356 152 56 5 506 327 21 1 475 112 19 8 3 145 2 399 257States won 5 0 0 0 5Connecticut 58 28 12 1 Delaware 61 20 16 Maryland 54 23 19 Pennsylvania 57 19 22 Rhode Island 63 24 10 1 May 3 2016 Indiana primary Edit Five primaries were contested in May Indiana Nebraska West Virginia Oregon and Washington with Indiana awarding the most with 57 delegates By late April Cruz and Kasich had both been eliminated from getting 1 237 delegates but they still had a chance to accumulate enough delegates to force a contested convention in Cleveland Realizing this Cruz and Kasich attempted to focus their efforts in different states with Cruz challenging Trump head to head in Indiana and Kasich challenging Trump in Oregon and New Mexico 218 219 220 The Indiana primary whose delegates were awarded winner take all statewide and by congressional district was seen as essential to denying Trump the 1 237 delegates needed to secure the nomination 101 Following the Acela primaries Cruz attempted to bolster his chances by announcing that if nominated he would name Fiorina as his running mate 221 Fiorina had served as a Cruz campaign surrogate since endorsing him in March after suspending her own presidential campaign in February and Cruz hoped that Fiorina could help his campaign in Indiana and her home state of California 222 On April 29 2016 Governor Mike Pence of Indiana announced that he would vote for Cruz in the primary election 223 Nevertheless although Trump was outspent by a margin of more than 4 1 he handily won Indiana with 53 3 of the vote winning a plurality in every Congressional District and taking all 57 delegates 224 Cruz subsequently dropped out of the race eliminating any hope of a contested convention in July As a result Republican National Committee chairman Reince Priebus tweeted that Trump was the presumptive nominee in the GOP The next day Kasich also suspended his campaign leaving Trump as the only candidate in the race Many Republican leaders and even former presidential candidates endorsed Trump after the withdrawal of Kasich and Cruz but other party leaders such as Ryan Romney and the entire Bush family withheld their support 225 although Ryan endorsed Trump on June 2 2016 226 May 3 results Candidate Trump Cruz Kasich TotalDelegates won 57 0 0 57 12 Popular vote 591 514 53 3 406 783 36 6 84 111 7 6 1 110 543States won 1 0 0 1Indiana 53 37 8 May 2016 Trump as presumptive nominee Edit 142 delegates were awarded between the Indiana primary and the final primaries in June however with Trump the only candidate remaining Washington Oregon West Virginia and Nebraska became essentially uncontested although Cruz and Kasich remained on the ballot Trump won handily in West Virginia Nebraska and Oregon although Kasich received one delegate from West Virginia and five in Oregon while Cruz took five in Oregon as well The next week Trump won decisively in Washington State taking 76 of the vote and 41 of 44 delegates with the other three uncommitted citation needed May 10 24 results Candidate Trump Kasich Cruz Uncom TotalDelegates won 127 6 5 4 142 12 Popular vote 987 336 70 5 157 632 11 3 185 689 13 3 1 399 967States won 4 0 0 0 4Nebraska 61 11 18 West Virginia 77 6 9 Oregon 64 16 17 Washington 75 10 11 After becoming the presumptive Republican nominee Trump said regarding the Republican primaries You ve been hearing me say it s a rigged system but now I don t say it anymore because I won It s true Now I don t care 227 On May 26 2016 the Associated Press announced that Trump had passed the threshold of 1 237 delegates required to guarantee his nomination 6 thanks to unbound delegates from North Dakota who declared their support for Trump citation needed June 2016 final primaries Edit See also Free the Delegates The final five primary contests were held on June 7 2016 in California Montana New Jersey New Mexico and South Dakota with California awarding the most with 172 delegates and New Jersey with 51 Though initially pegged by pundits as being an important primary the suspension of the Cruz and Kasich campaigns following the Indiana primary made the California primary merely a formality at that point as Trump shattered the all time record for votes in the Republican primaries set by George W Bush in 2000 of 12 034 676 votes 104 After the final primaries his vote total was 14 015 993 44 9 almost 2 million votes higher than the previous record 18 June 7 results Candidate Trump TotalDelegates won 303 303Popular vote 2 259 716 75 2 3 003 652States won 5California 75 Montana 74 New Jersey 80 New Mexico 71 South Dakota 67 July 2016 National Convention Edit Main article 2016 Republican National Convention The 2016 Republican National Convention was held from July 18 21 at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland The delegates selected the Republican presidential and vice presidential nominees and wrote the party platform A simple majority of 1 237 delegates was needed to win the presidential nomination 228 Following Trump s decisive win in Indiana and the subsequent suspension of the Cruz and Kasich campaigns as well as Trump reaching the threshold following his decisive win in Washington state it became clear that there would not be a contested convention in Cleveland On the first ballot Trump won the nomination with 1 725 delegates 488 more than required 229 Campaign finance EditThis is an overview of the money used in the campaign as it was reported to Federal Election Committee and released on July 21 2016 Outside groups are independent expenditure only committees also called PACs and SuperPACs Several such groups normally support each candidate but the numbers in the table are a total of all of them meaning that a group of committees can be shown as technically insolvent even though it is not the case for all of them The source of all the numbers is OpenSecrets 230 Candidate Campaign committee as of June 30 Outside groups as of July 21 Total spent Suspendedcampaign d Money raised Money spent Cash on hand Debt Money raised Money spent Cash on handDonald Trump 88 997 986 68 787 021 20 210 966 0 9 744 105 7 620 376 2 123 729 76 407 397 231 ConventionJohn Kasich 18 973 502 17 564 740 1 408 688 0 15 245 069 20 660 401 5 415 332 38 225 141 May 4Ted Cruz 89 322 157 79 919 142 9 403 015 0 67 463 363 47 145 301 20 318 062 127 064 443 May 3Marco Rubio 54 739 824 51 964 471 3 316 872 2 067 041 61 966 485 59 868 636 2 097 849 111 833 107 March 15Ben Carson 62 745 221 60 873 041 1 872 180 266 884 16 217 786 16 815 756 597 970 77 688 797 March 4Jeb Bush 33 999 149 33 967 964 31 185 261 703 121 196 562 104 124 340 17 072 222 138 092 304 February 20Jim Gilmore 383 500 383 300 200 0 342 200 368 600 125 050 751 900 February 12Chris Christie 8 294 352 8 163 565 130 786 383 518 23 654 517 23 146 491 508 026 31 310 056 February 10Carly Fiorina 11 932 371 10 683 201 1 249 170 0 14 565 281 13 924 385 640 896 24 607 586 February 10Rick Santorum 1 365 073 1 361 497 3 576 556 860 714 251 1 143 235 428 984 2 504 732 February 3Rand Paul 12 101 426 12 020 383 81 044 317 365 10 856 091 8 907 098 1 948 994 20 927 481 February 3Mike Huckabee 4 290 564 4 276 260 14 304 19 204 5 874 843 6 126 465 251 622 10 402 725 February 1George Pataki 544 183 524 850 5 301 0 1 547 674 1 547 674 0 2 072 524 December 29Lindsey Graham 5 423 113 5 370 216 52 898 43 041 4 560 305 4 391 365 168 940 9 761 581 December 21Bobby Jindal 1 442 464 1 442 464 0 0 4 517 207 4 517 938 730 5 960 401 November 17Scott Walker 7 893 839 7 877 050 16 789 898 676 24 554 588 24 489 961 64 627 32 367 011 September 21Rick Perry 1 427 133 1 767 404 1 818 0 15 231 068 15 356 117 125 050 17 123 521 September 11Process EditSee also United States presidential primary Process and Results of the Republican Party presidential primaries 2016 U S States by the Total Number of Delegates Republican Party U S States amp Territories Election Method Primary Open Semi Closed Closed Caucus Open Semi Closed Closed Delegate allocation rules by state and territory Schedule of primary elections by month and or date The Republican National Committee RNC imposed strict new rules for states wishing to hold early contests in 2016 232 Under these rules no state was permitted to hold a primary or caucus in January only Iowa New Hampshire South Carolina and Nevada were entitled to February contests States with primaries or caucuses in early March were to award their delegates proportionally Any state that might have violated these rules was to have their delegation to the 2016 convention severely cut states with more than 30 delegates would have been deprived of all but nine plus RNC members from that state states with fewer than 30 would have been reduced to six plus RNC members 232 In contrast to the 2012 cycle no states violated these rules The Republican Party presidential primaries and caucuses are indirect elections in which voters allocated or elect delegates to the 2016 Republican National Convention These delegates can be bound or unbound to vote for a particular candidate The election of the state delegation can happen directly or indirectly as the primary election table below shows Date The date given in the first column is the date of the popular primary or caucus in a particular state or territory This event may or may not allocate delegates Two more dates are also important in the process the date on which Congressional District delegates are s elected and the date on which state delegates are s elected Some events stretch for more than one day in these cases the date stated in the table is the final day of the event State delegation Each delegation is made up of up to three kinds of delegates party members delegates from the congressional districts and delegates from the state at large They can either be bound meaning that they are legally bound to vote for a particular candidate in the first ballot at the National Convention or they can be unbound meaning that they are free to vote for any candidate at the National Convention Bound delegates voting obligations are not necessarily in line with their own personal views and thus cannot always be used as an indicator as to how a certain delegate will vote should there be more than one ballot at the convention If a candidate suspends his campaign d the delegates allocated and or elected to him may become unbound or stay bound depending on state rules RNC Three Republican National Committee members from each state will go to the National Convention as delegates Most of them will be bound to a candidate according to the result of the primary or caucuses Only fifteen RNC members will be unbound their states and territories are marked with a footnote AL At Large delegates are elected as representatives of the whole state Each state is allotted ten delegates and each territory six delegates Each state can on top of this get bonus delegates based on whether it has a Republican governor it has Republican majorities in one or all chambers of its state legislature and whether it has Republican majorities in its delegation to the U S Congress among other factors 233 With the exception of Missouri all these delegates are allocated at the state level CD Each Congregational District have been assigned three delegates These are allocated either on the District or State level according to state rules Allocation Delegates can either be allocated or unallocated at the starting primary or caucuses They can be allocated to a candidate or as uncommitted Those delegates that are not allocated at the starting event will later be elected either bound to a candidate or uncommitted also called unbound The contests that allocate delegates on state and district levels use the following allocating systems Winner take all The candidate receiving the most votes is allocated all the delegates A few states allocated all their delegates based solely on the statewide vote but most allocated the AL delegates based on the statewide vote and the CD delegates based on the district vote in each districts This means a candidate can win a state without getting all the delegates in that state s delegation Proportional All candidates receive delegates in accordance with the popular vote at the primary or caucuses Winner take most This is a hybrid of winner take all and proportional The delegates are allocated proportionally but different rules ensure that only the leading candidates take part in the allocation If a candidate gets more than a certain threshold of the votes he will be allocated all the delegates otherwise it is allocated proportionally High thresholds are in place in winner take most primaries or caucuses Additional rules are also in place in some states Direct election Instead of voting for a candidate at the primary or caucuses the voters elect the delegates directly The delegates can state their presidential preference and be elected on a particular candidate s ticket or they can be elected as uncommitted Election Delegates are elected before at the same time or after the starting event depending on the allocation method and the state rules Convention This including Congressional District Conventions Congressional District Caucuses at State Conventions Summer Meetings State and CD delegation selection meetings and State Conventions where delegates are elected Conventions where National Delegates are not s elected have not been included in the tablet Direct election The National Convention delegates are elected directly on the ballot They will either be bound as a delegation to the result of the contest or they will individually state on the ballot what candidate they will be bound to or if they wish to be elected as unbound delegates depending Slate A slate can be made up in three ways all candidates submitting a slate before the primary or caucuses the winning candidate submitting their slate after the primary or caucuses or the State Committee or Convention making up the slates before the primary or caucuses The allocated delegates are then selected from these slates Committee Each state has its own rules and regulations Ordinarily the state GOP executive committee or its chairman selects the delegates According to Rule 40 b of the RNC Rules of the Republican Party 16 enacted prior to the 2012 convention and amended most recently in 2014 nominations at the National Convention may be made only of candidates who demonstrate the support of a majority of delegates of at least eight state delegations Previously this had been a lower threshold of a plurality in five states However per Rule 42 Rules 26 42 are Standing Rules for this convention 2012 and the temporary rules for the next convention 2016 While the current candidates operate under these temporary rules it is unclear whether they will remain in place for the 2016 convention needs update 234 235 236 237 As of March 16 2016 RNC Chairman Reince Priebus has not taken a position on the potential rule change while others in the party advocate for it 238 239 Schedule Edit Date State State delegation only voting delegates Allocation Election CD Election AL Thres holdRNC AL CD Total U B Contest AL CD Date Type Date TypeFeb 1 Iowa 3 15 12 30 0 30 k Caucus closed Proportional Proportional l Apr 9 Convention May 21 Convention N AFeb 9 New Hampshire 3 20 0 23 3 m 18 Primary semi closed Proportional N A N A N A Feb 9 Slate 10 Feb 20 South Carolina 3 26 21 50 0 50 Primary open Winner take all Winner take all April Convention May 7 Convention N AFeb 23 Nevada 3 27 0 30 2 m 28 Caucus closed Proportional N A N A N A May 7 Convention 3 33 n Mar 1 Alabama 3 26 21 50 0 50 Primary open Winner take most Winner take most Mar 1 Slate Mar 1 Slate 20 Alaska 3 25 0 28 0 28 Caucus closed Proportional N A N A N A Apr 28 Convention 13 Arkansas 3 25 12 40 9 m 31 Primary open Winner take most Winner take most Apr 30 Convention May 14 Committee 15 Colorado 3 a 13 21 37 7 30 Caucus closed No allocation No allocation Apr 8 Convention o Apr 9 Convention o N AGeorgia 3 31 42 76 0 76 Primary open Winner take most Winner take most Apr 16 Convention June 3 Convention 20 Massachusetts 3 12 27 42 0 42 Primary semi closed Proportional Proportional l Apr 23 Convention June 3 Committee 5 Minnesota 3 11 24 38 17 m 21 Caucus open Proportional Proportional May 7 Convention May 21 Convention 10 North Dakota 3 a 25 0 28 28 0 Caucus closed No allocation N A N A N A Apr 3 Convention N AOklahoma 3 25 15 43 3 40 Primary closed Winner take most Winner take most Apr 16 Convention May 14 Convention 15 Tennessee 3 28 27 58 0 58 Primary open Winner take most Winner take most Mar 1 Direct Elec Apr 2 Direct Elec p 20 Texas 3 44 108 155 0 155 Primary open Winner take most Winner take most May 14 Convention May 14 Convention 20 Vermont 3 13 0 16 0 16 Primary open Winner take most N A N A N A May 21 Convention 20 Virginia 3 13 33 49 0 49 Primary open Proportional Proportional l May 21 Convention Apr 30 Convention N AWyoming 3 a 14 12 29 5 m 24 Caucus closed No allocation No allocation Mar 12 Convention o q Apr 16 Convention o N AMar 5 Kansas 3 25 12 40 0 40 Caucus closed Proportional Proportional Apr 23 Convention May 21 Committee 10 Kentucky 3 25 18 46 0 46 Caucus closed Proportional Proportional l May 17 Convention May 18 Convention 5 Louisiana 3 25 18 46 5 41 Primary closed Proportional Proportional Mar 12 Convention Mar 12 Convention 20 Maine 3 14 6 23 0 23 Caucus closed Winner take most Winner take most l Apr 22 Convention Apr 22 Convention 10 Mar 6 Puerto Rico 3 20 0 23 0 23 Primary open Winner take most N A N A N A Mar 6 Direct Elec 20 Mar 8 Hawaii 3 10 6 19 0 19 Caucus closed Proportional Proportional Mar 8 Slate Mar 8 Slate N AIdaho 3 29 0 32 0 32 Primary closed Winner take most N A N A N A Jun 4 Convention 20 Michigan 3 14 42 59 0 59 Primary open Winner take most N A Apr 8 Convention Apr 9 Convention 15 Mississippi 3 25 12 40 0 40 Primary open Proportional Winner take most May 14 Convention May 14 Convention 15 Mar 10 U S Virgin Islands r 3 a 6 0 9 5 4 Caucus closed Direct Elec o N A N A N A Mar 10 Convention N AMar 12 District of Columbia 3 16 0 19 0 19 Convention closed Winner take most N A N A N A Mar 12 Convention 15 Guam 3 a 6 0 9 9 0 Caucus closed No allocation N A N A N A Mar 12 Convention N AMar 15 Florida 0 18 81 99 0 99 Primary closed Winner take all Winner take all l Jun 3 Convention Jun 3 Committee N AIllinois 3 12 54 69 0 69 Primary open Winner take all Direct Elec o Mar 15 Direct Elec May 22 Convention N AMissouri 3 25 s 24 52 0 52 Primary open Winner take all Proportional Apr 30 Convention Jun 2 Convention N ANorthern Mariana Is 3 6 0 9 0 9 Caucus closed Winner take all N A N A N A Mar 15 Direct Elect N ANorth Carolina 3 69 0 72 0 72 Primary semi closed Proportional Proportional l Apr 27 Convention May 8 Convention N AOhio 3 63 0 66 0 66 Primary semi closed Winner take all N A N A N A Mar 15 Slate N AMar 22 American Samoa 3 a 6 0 9 9 0 Caucus open No allocation N A N A N A Mar 22 Convention N AArizona 3 28 27 58 0 58 Primary closed Winner take all Winner take all l Apr 30 Convention Apr 30 Convention N AUtah 3 37 0 40 0 40 Caucus semi closed Winner take most N A N A N A Apr 23 Convention 15 t Apr 5 Wisconsin 3 15 24 42 0 42 Primary open Winner take all Winner take all Apr 17 Convention May 14 Slate N AApr 19 New York 3 11 81 95 0 95 Primary closed Winner take most Winner take most Apr 19 Slate May 26 Committee 20 u Apr 26 Connecticut 3 10 15 28 0 28 Primary closed Winner take most Winner take all May 20 Slate May 20 Slate 20 Delaware 3 13 0 16 0 16 Primary closed Winner take all N A N A N A Apr 29 Convention N AMaryland 3 11 24 38 0 38 Primary closed Winner take all Winner take all Apr 26 Direct Elec May 14 Convention N APennsylvania 3 14 54 71 54 17 Primary closed Winner take all No allocation Apr 26 Direct Elec May 21 Committee N ARhode Island 3 10 6 19 0 19 Primary semi closed Proportional Proportional Apr 26 Direct Elec Apr 26 Direct Elec 10 May 3 Indiana 3 27 27 57 0 57 Primary open Winner take all Winner take all Apr 9 Slate Apr 13 Slate N AMay 10 Nebraska 3 24 9 36 0 36 Primary semi closed Winner take all Winner take all l May 14 Convention May 14 Convention N AWest Virginia 3 22 9 34 0 34 Primary semi closed Direct Elec o Direct Elec o May 10 Direct Elec May 10 Direct Elec N AMay 17 Oregon 3 10 15 28 0 28 Primary closed Proportional Proportional Jun 4 Convention Jun 4 Convention 3 57 v May 24 Washington 3 11 30 44 0 44 Primary closed Proportional Winner take most May 24 Slate May 24 Slate 20 June 7 California 3 10 159 172 0 172 Primary closed Winner take all Winner take all Jun 7 Slate Jun 7 Slate N AMontana 3 24 0 27 0 27 Primary closed Winner take all N A N A N A May 14 Slate N ANew Jersey 3 48 0 51 0 51 Primary semi closed Winner take all N A N A N A Jun 5 Slate N ANew Mexico 3 12 9 24 0 24 Primary closed Proportional Proportional l May 21 Convention May 21 Convention 15 South Dakota 3 26 0 29 0 29 Primary closed Winner take all N A N A N A Mar 19 Convention N ASources Official Republican Schedule and Nominating Process Archived November 8 2016 at the Wayback Machine USA Today and The Green PapersClose races EditStates where the margin of victory was under 1 242 Missouri Trump by 0 21 States where the margin of victory was under 5 District of Columbia Rubio by 1 76 Arkansas Trump by 2 29 Vermont Trump by 2 35 Alaska Cruz by 2 74 Virginia Trump by 2 82 Iowa Cruz by 3 34 North Carolina Trump by 3 47 Louisiana Trump by 3 62 Kentucky Trump by 4 51 States where the margin of victory was under 10 Oklahoma Cruz by 6 05 Minnesota Rubio by 7 06 Illinois Trump by 8 57 South Carolina Trump by 9 99 States where the margin of victory was under 20 Ohio Kasich by 11 08 Hawaii Trump by 11 11 Mississippi Trump by 11 12 Michigan Trump by 11 62 Wisconsin Cruz by 13 02 Maine Cruz by 13 31 Tennessee Trump by 14 23 Georgia Trump by 14 36 Indiana Trump by 16 62 Texas Cruz by 17 01 Idaho Cruz by 17 33 Arizona Trump by 18 34 Florida Trump by 18 64 New Hampshire Trump by 19 52 See also Edit Politics portal United States portalRelated 2016 Republican Party vice presidential candidate selection Nationwide opinion polling for the Republican Party 2016 presidential primaries Statewide opinion polling for the 2016 Republican Party presidential primaries 2016 Republican Party presidential debates and forums Republican Party presidential primariesNational conventions 2016 Constitution Party National Convention 2016 Democratic National Convention 2016 Green National Convention 2016 Libertarian National Convention 2016 Republican National ConventionPresidential primaries 2016 Democratic Party presidential primaries 2016 Constitution Party presidential primaries 2016 Green Party presidential primaries 2016 Libertarian Party presidential primariesFootnotes Edit a b c d e f g RNC members from Colorado Guam North Dakota Samoa Virgin Islands and Wyoming attended the National Convention as unbound Uncommitted delegates have been allocated or elected in Colorado 4 Guam 6 Louisiana 5 North Dakota 25 Oklahoma 3 Pennsylvania 54 Samoa 6 Virgin Islands 2 Washington 3 West Virginia 3 and Wyoming 1 12 Some delegates were bound to Bush 1 Carson 7 Fiorina 1 Huckabee 1 Paul 1 and Rubio 144 13 12 a b c d e f In US elections suspending a campaign is a legal technicality allowing candidates to keep raising funds and paying off their debts 14 In bolded states and territories the leading candidate won the support of an absolute majority of that state s delegation for the first ballot according to Rule 40 b 8 such states are needed to be eligible 16 In states and territories that are not bolded the leading candidate won the support of a simple plurality of delegates In bolded states and territories the leading candidate won the support of an absolute majority of that state s delegation for the first ballot according to Rule 40 b 8 such states are needed to be eligible 16 In states and territories that are not bolded the leading candidate won the support of a simple plurality of delegates In bolded states and territories the leading candidate won the support of an absolute majority of that state s delegation for the first ballot according to Rule 40 b 8 such states are needed to be eligible 16 In states and territories that are not bolded the leading candidate won the support of a simple plurality of delegates 3 uncommitted delegates were allocated from Louisiana 5 from the Virgin Islands 8 from Guam 1 from Wyoming Four Colorado delegates while elected as unbound have decided to vote for Cruz at the GOP s National Convention The Wyoming GOP elected the remaining 14 of 26 delegates at its State Convention from April 14 16 Iowa s delegates are bound for the first ballot to the candidates of their allocation even if the candidates have suspended their campaigns This applies to fourteen delegates allocated to Bush Carson Fiorina Huckabee Paul and Rubio If only one candidate is put forward for nomination at the National Convention Iowa s delegates are bound to vote for that candidate providing he received votes in caucuses a b c d e f g h i j Delegates are allocated in each Congregational District based on the statewide result Not based on the result in the District but they are elected at the District Conventions a b c d e Delegates bound to a candidate who later suspends his campaign become unbound in some states This applies to 3 delegates from New Hampshire elected on the Bush slate and 29 delegates allocated to Rubio from Minnesota 17 Arkansas 9 New Hampshire 2 and Wyoming 1 13 Additionally Ben Carson released in writing 2 delegates allocated to him from Nevada 240 3 33 refers to one delegate out of 30 or 1 30 a b c d e f g h Delegates indicate on the ballot what candidate they wish to be bound to or if they wish to be elected as unbound Tennessee half of its at large delegates will be elected by the State Executive Committee in accordance with the binding primary result Wyoming has only one congressional district so the 12 CD delegates are elected in the 23 counties that are paired together The six uncommitted candidates originally elected at the caucus were ruled ineligible and replaced 241 16 delegates allocated in CD will be elected as at large delegates at the state convention With 69 of all votes Cruz triggered the 50 threshold giving him all the delegates With more than half the votes in both the state contest and 23 out of 27 district contests Trump triggered the 50 threshold giving him all the delegates awarded in these contests 3 57 refers to one delegate out of 28 or 1 28 References Edit a b c d e f g h Berg Andersson Richard E Republican Convention The Green Papers Retrieved August 10 2016 a b Linshi Jack More People Are Running for Presidential Nomination Than Ever Time Retrieved February 14 2016 a b Rosenfeld Everett May 4 2016 Ted Cruz suspends presidential campaign CNBC Retrieved May 4 2016 Reince Priebus Reince May 3 2016 realDonaldTrump will be presumptive GOP nominee we all need to unite and focus on defeating HillaryClinton NeverClinton Tweet via Twitter Kaplan Thomas May 4 2016 John Kasich Drops Out of Presidential Race The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 4 2016 a b c Ohlemacher Stephen May 26 2016 Mister 1 237 North Dakota delegate puts Trump over the top Associated Press Retrieved June 11 2016 Ohlemacher Stephen Colvin Jill May 26 2016 With GOP nomination locked up Trump goes hard after Clinton MSN Associated Press Archived from the original on May 27 2016 It s Official Trump Wins GOP Presidential Nomination NBC News July 20 2016 Trump defeats Clinton in US presidential race ABC News November 9 2016 General election Trump vs Clinton RealClear Politics Retrieved February 2 2023 See detailed schedule below a b c d Berg Andersson Richard E Presidential Primaries 2016 Republican Pledged and Unpledged Delegate Summary The Green Papers Retrieved June 11 2016 a b Johnson Eliana March 18 2016 What Happens to Rubio s Delegates National Review Retrieved March 30 2016 Ballhaus Rebecca February 11 2016 Why Candidates Suspend Losing Campaigns Rather Than Say I Quit The Wall Street Journal Bump Philip April 15 2016 Here s what happens to Republican delegates if no one clinches a majority before the convention The Washington Post Retrieved April 15 2016 a b c d e The rules of the Republican Party PDF Republican National Convention August 8 2014 p 20 Retrieved March 5 2016 The rules of the Republican Party PDF Republican National Convention August 8 2014 p 3 Retrieved March 5 2016 a b c d e f g h i Berg Andersson Richard E Republican Convention The Green Papers Retrieved August 4 2016 Santucci John June 16 2015 Donald Trump Announces 2016 Presidential Campaign We Are Going Make our Country Great Again ABC News Ted Cruz endorses Donald Trump CNN September 23 2016 Retrieved September 23 2016 Kopan Tal April 27 2016 Ted Cruz names Carly Fiorina as VP pick CNN Corasaniti Nick March 23 2015 Ted Cruz Becomes First Major Candidate to Announce Presidential Bid for 2016 The New York Times Reston Maeve May 4 2015 Ted Cruz drops presidential bid CNN King Ledyard May 27 2016 Sen Marco Rubio now all in for Donald Trump USA Today Sarlin Benjy April 15 2015 Marco Rubio enters the 2016 race MSNBC Taylor Jessica March 15 2016 Marco Rubio Ends His Presidential Campaign NPR Gittleson Ben October 31 2016 John Kasich Snubs Trump With Write In Vote for McCain ABC News Altman Alex July 21 2015 John Kasich Enters Presidential Race As Compassionate Republican Time Kaplan Thomas May 5 2016 John Kasich Suspends Campaign for President The New York Times Ben Carson endorses Donald Trump CNN March 11 2016 Retrieved June 25 2016 Allen Cooper May 3 2015 Report Ben Carson to run for president USA Today Victor John March 7 2016 Ben Carson 73 exits presidential race Yale News Levin Michael Jeb Bush endorses Ted Cruz Politico com Retrieved June 25 2016 Reinhard Beth June 15 2015 Jeb Bush Says He Will Run as a Political Outsider Wall Street Journal O Keefe Ed February 20 2016 Jeb Bush drops out of 2016 presidential campaign The Washington Post Wartman Scott April 1 2018 Rand Paul I ll support Trump if he s the nominee The Cincinnati Enquirer Retrieved November 17 2018 Senator Rand Paul Presidential Campaign Announcement C SPAN April 7 2015 Kopan Tal May 4 2016 Mike Huckabee endorses Donald Trump CNN Retrieved June 25 2016 Mike Huckabee Presidential Campaign Announcement C SPAN May 5 2015 Mike Huckabee suspends presidential campaign PBS News February 1 2016 Goldmacher Shane March 9 2016 Carly Fiorina endorses Ted Cruz Politico Glueck Katie October 8 2016 Top Republican women pull support from Trump Politico Lee MJ May 5 2015 Carly Fiorina announces presidential bid CNN Detrow Scott February 10 2016 Carly Fiorina Ends Bid For Republican Presidential Nomination NPR Rafferty Andrew Chris Christie Endorses Donald Trump for President NBC News Retrieved June 25 2016 Isenstadt Alex June 30 2015 Chris Christie I mean what I say and I m running for president Politico Drucker David M Jim Gilmore will vote for Trump Washington Examiner Retrieved June 25 2016 Lovelace Ryan July 29 2015 Jim Gilmore enters GOP presidential race Washington Examiner Krieg Gregory February 12 2016 Jim Gilmore leaves presidential race CNN Rick Santorum endorses Marco Rubio The Washington Times Retrieved June 25 2016 Byrnes Jesse May 24 2016 Santorum endorses Trump after long heart to heart The Hill Rosenfeld Everett May 27 2015 Rick Santorum officially launches presidential bid CNBC Pramuk Jacob February 3 2016 Rick Santorum suspends campaign endorses Rubio CNBC Struyk Ryan January 26 2016 George Pataki Endorses Marco Rubio for President ABC News Thompson Chrissie April 14 2016 George Pataki endorses John Kasich ahead of N Y primary USAToday Chappell Bill May 28 2015 George Pataki Announces 2016 Presidential Bid NPR Koenig Kailani December 29 2015 George Pataki Ends 2016 Presidential Bid NBC News Glueck Katie March 17 2016 Lindsey Graham throws support to Ted Cruz Politico Bauerlein Valerie May 31 2015 Sen Lindsey Graham to Launch Long Odds Bid for White House Wall Street Journal Lindsey Graham ends his 2016 presidential campaign PBS News December 21 2015 Scherer Michael February 5 2016 Bobby Jindal Endorses Marco Rubio For President Fortune Rappeport Alan May 9 2016 Bobby Jindal Decides to Vote for Donald Trump the Lesser of Two Evils The New York Times Bobby Jindal presidential campaign 2016 Ballotpedia Rafferty Andrew November 17 2015 Bobby Jindal Ends 2016 Presidential Campaign NBC News Sullivan Sean March 29 2016 Wisconsin Gov Scott Walker endorses Ted Cruz for president The Washington Post Gass Nick July 20 2016 Walker absolutely endorses Trump Politico a b 2016 Presidential Primary Republican President NHSOS sos nh gov Archived from the original on October 10 2016 Retrieved October 9 2016 Hains Tim July 13 2015 Scott Walker Launches Campaign Run On Our Principles RealClearPolitics Taylor Jessica September 21 2015 Scott Walker Ends Presidential Campaign With A Shot At Trump NPR Bash Dana January 25 2016 Rick Perry endorses Ted Cruz CNN Abadi Mark May 5 2016 Rick Perry endorses Donald Trump whom he once called a cancer to conservatism Business Insider Fernandez Manny June 4 2015 Rick Perry to Run for President in 2016 Shrugging Off 2012 Missteps The New York Times Schleifer Theodore September 11 2015 Rick Perry drops out of presidential race CNN Isenstadt Alex January 14 2014 GOP convention set for July 18 21 in 2016 Politico Retrieved January 15 2015 Hamby Peter December 11 2013 First on CNN Republicans moving to overhaul 2016 primary process CNN Retrieved January 11 2014 Hamby Peter January 24 2014 GOP adopts changes to 2016 presidential primary process CNN Retrieved February 24 2014 Isenstadt Alex July 21 2015 John Kasich announces his presidential run Politico Tau Byron July 29 2015 Former Virginia Gov Jim Gilmore Enters Presidential Race The Wall Street Journal Retrieved August 18 2015 Benen Steve May 5 2015 Biggest Field Ever MSNBC Blake Aaron June 15 2015 The 2016 GOP primary is basically the most wide open race ever The Washington Post DelReal Jose A December 16 2014 Jeb Bush forms PAC to explore presidential run The Washington Post Retrieved December 17 2014 Mascaro Lisa Lauter David March 22 2015 Texas Republican Sen Ted Cruz Launches Presidential Bid Los Angeles Times Retrieved March 23 2015 Zezima Katie March 23 2015 Ted Cruz Announces He s Running for President The Washington Post Retrieved March 23 2015 Bump Philip March 25 2015 The 2016 GOP presidential race broken down into 5 lanes The Washington Post Jaffe Alexandra December 29 2014 The GOP s 2016 problem CNN a b Ante III W James July 2 2015 Which Republican is winning the 2016 conservative primary Washington Examiner Kolasa Matthew November 7 2016 The Republican Party Beyond Trump Fair Observer Retrieved August 3 2018 Bump Philip May 4 2015 The 2016 Republican field might be the most diverse ever for either party The Washington Post Abdullah Halimah February 6 2014 2016 A more diverse slate of GOP hopefuls CNN Aldo Santorum s Obituary on The Island Packet The Island Packet Retrieved January 30 2016 Scottish Genealogy Scottish Family Tree History Research Genealogists Donald Trump scottishroots com Retrieved January 30 2016 The 2016 Republican Primary As Told by Donald Trump Time Retrieved November 14 2017 Jonah Goldberg August 19 2015 Donald Trump amp Bernie Sanders America s Populist Backlash National Review Online National Review Philip Bump December 4 2015 Why Donald Trump s big advantage among those without college degrees is important The Washington Post See Donald Trump Deflects Withering Fire on Muslim Plan The New York Times December 8 2015 M J Lee November 24 2015 Why some conservatives say Donald Trump s talk is fascist CNN Philip Bump March 25 2015 The 2016 GOP presidential race broken down into 5 lanes The Washington Post Alexandra Jaffe December 29 2014 The GOP s 2016 problem CNN John Kasich wins Ohio keeps chances of a contested convention alive Slate March 16 2016 Retrieved May 7 2016 Why a brokered GOP convention would be bad news for both Trump and Cruz Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on October 6 2012 Retrieved May 7 2016 Cruz beats Trump in Wisconsin increasing chances of open convention USA Today Retrieved May 7 2016 a b Ted Cruz and John Kasich team up in deal to stop Trump The Guardian April 24 2016 Retrieved April 24 2016 Sullivan Sean Costa Robert April 27 2016 Cruz announces Carly Fiorina as his running mate The Washington Post Retrieved May 7 2016 Nussbaum Matthew May 4 2016 RNC chairman Trump is our nominee Politico Retrieved May 4 2016 a b Graph Trump s Historic 13 Million Primary Votes Compared To Every GOP Nominee Since 1908 Hannity com June 8 2016 Archived from the original on June 10 2016 Retrieved June 9 2016 Rubio s popularity makes him the conservative frontrunner in 2016 Reason February 19 2013 Poll Marco Rubio 2016 Presidential Frontrunner Business Insider Marco Rubio Forgotten Frontrunner Cook Political Report Archived from the original on September 25 2015 Chris Christie s frontrunner status is an asset not a hindrance IB Times December 3 2013 Christie now frontrunner for 2016 New York Post November 6 2013 Chris Christie s Access Lanes to the GOP Nomination are Closed Five Thirty Eight May 2015 Christie blames N J Dems liberal media for his weak 2016 polls The Star Ledger July 2015 Rand Paul wins The Washington Times CPAC 2013 Straw Poll The Washington Times Retrieved April 3 2020 Rand Paul wins 2014 CPAC straw poll Ted Cruz finishes a distant second The Washington Times Retrieved April 3 2020 CPAC 2015 Straw Poll Rand Paul wins again but Scott Walker is surging The Washington Times Retrieved April 3 2020 a b 2016 National Republican Primary Polls HuffPost Pollster The Huffington Post a b 2016 Republican Presidential Nomination Retrieved September 20 2015 Rucker Philip Costa Robert April 6 2014 In the credentials caucus GOP s 2016 hopefuls study policy and seek advisers The Washington Post Retrieved April 6 2014 Pols and polls say the same thing Jeb Bush is a weak frontrunner Five Thirty Eight June 15 2015 Why Jeb Bush would be the frontrunner in 2016 Business Insider Hartmann Margaret August 5 2015 Is Jeb Bush the Mitt Romney of 2016 New York Sappenfield Mark April 19 2015 Jeb Bush Is he 2016 s Mitt Romney The Christian Science Monitor For Jeb Bush and Mitt Romney a history of ambition fuels a possible 2016 collision The Washington Post Romney out A boost for Jeb Bush and who else The Washington Post Donald Trump comments spark poll surge puts 2016 Republican hopefuls on the spot The Washington Times Campbell Colin July 9 2015 Donald Trump has surged to the top of 2 new 2016 polls Business Insider Ben Carson Rise of the anti Trump CNN Bump Philip September 15 2015 Is Ben Carson the next Donald Trump The Washington Post Axelson Ben September 21 2015 Poll Carly Fiorina surges to second place behind Donald Trump after GOP debates The Post Standard Diamond Jeremy Trump draws on populist campaign roots as 100th day nears CNN Retrieved November 14 2017 Rise of the Outsiders Politico August 19 2015 The rise of the political outsiders in the 2016 race Fox Business Singleton Shermichael September 4 2015 The rise of the political outsiders The Hill Retrieved September 24 2015 Kazin Michael 2017 The Populist Persuasion Cornell University Schleifer Theodore September 11 2015 Rick Perry Drops out of Presidential Race CNN Retrieved September 21 2015 Condon Stephanie September 11 2015 Rick Perry Drops out of 2016 Presidential Race CBS News Retrieved September 21 2015 O Connor Patrick Epstein Reid J September 21 2015 Scott Walker Drops out of 2016 Presidential Race The Wall Street Journal Retrieved September 21 2015 a b c d e Poll Chart June to December 2015 2016 National Republican Primary The Huffington Post December 31 2015 Retrieved April 23 2016 GOP Field Narrows to Top 6 The Huffington Post October 6 2015 Retrieved November 23 2015 Here s How the GOP Race Looks Now Rasmussen Reports November 13 2015 Retrieved November 23 2015 Winners and losers from the 3rd Republican presidential debate The Washington Post Retrieved November 23 2015 Who Won the Third Republican Presidential Debate The Atlantic October 28 2015 Retrieved November 23 2015 2016 Republican Presidential Nomination Realclearpolitics com Retrieved November 23 2015 2016 Republican Presidential Nomination 270towin com Retrieved December 5 2015 2016 Election Center CNN Ted Cruz s audacious plan to win the GOP nomination The Washington Post Retrieved November 23 2015 Poll Trump Carson Rubio Cruz rising Washington Examiner Archived from the original on November 24 2015 Retrieved November 23 2015 Struyk Ryan November 17 2015 Republican Bobby Jindal Drops Out of Presidential Race ABC News Retrieved November 23 2015 Paris massacre could alter the 2016 presidential race in this country The Washington Post Retrieved November 23 2015 Paris and the U S Presidential Election Bloomberg View November 15 2015 Retrieved November 23 2015 Paris Attacks Could Mark Turning Point in Republican Race Bloomberg com Bloomberg November 16 2015 Retrieved November 23 2015 Poll Carson collapses Rubio surges in N H Washington Examiner November 18 2015 Retrieved November 23 2015 Trump Leads National GOP Horserace Cruz Surges Into 2nd Place NBC News Retrieved December 13 2015 Slack Donovan Report Pataki drops out of presidential race USA Today Lee MJ January 15 2016 GOP debate Trump Cruz bromance is over CNN Newell Jim January 7 2016 Does Ted Cruz Have a Birther Problem Slate Garrett Major January 7 2016 Ted Cruz hits back at Donald Trump over citizenship CBS News Campbell Colin January 12 2016 TED CRUZ Polls show Donald Trump loses to Hillary and loses by a pretty big margin Business Insider NBC WSJ January Poll January 15 2016 Desjardins Lisa January 22 2016 In both parties 2016 front runners go on the attack PBS NewsHour Salant Jonathan January 4 2016 Christie s N H surge improves his presidential chances report says The Star Ledger McLaughlin Seth January 24 2016 John Kasich s Poll Surge in New Hampshire Alarms Social Conservatives The Washington Times Elving Ron January 29 2016 Trump less Debate Sets A New Standard But With A Familiar Outcome NPR Silver Nate January 29 2016 What Would The Republican Race Look Like Without Trump FiveThirtyEight com 2016 Election Center Iowa CNN Retrieved February 1 2016 Rafferty Andrew February 1 2016 Mike Huckabee Suspends Presidential Campaign NBC News Retrieved February 1 2016 Kellman Laurie Kinnard Meg February 3 2016 Kentucky Sen Rand Paul quits 2016 GOP presidential race Associated Press Archived from the original on February 3 2016 Retrieved February 3 2016 Strauss Daniel February 3 2016 Santorum drops out endorses Rubio Politico Retrieved February 3 2016 Kurtzleben Danielle February 6 2016 Republican Debate 5 Things You Missed NPR Carly Fiorina Suspends 2016 Presidential Campaign ABC News Retrieved February 10 2016 Rosenfeld Everett February 10 2016 Carly Fiorina and Chris Christie drop out of race CNBC Retrieved February 10 2016 Montanaro Domenico February 10 2016 Why A Vote For An Establishment Candidate Could Be A Vote For Trump In N H NPR Retrieved February 10 2016 Jim Gilmore suspends campaign Politico February 12 2016 Retrieved February 12 2016 Bash Dana Nikki Haley endorses Marco Rubio CNN Retrieved span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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