Trump, Clinton win Mississippi in 4-state night
WASHINGTON (AP) - Hillary Clinton breezed to victory in Mississippi on Tuesday in part of a four-state round of voting that tested Donald Trump's staying power at the top of the Republican pack and Bernie Sanders' dwindling chances to upset the Democratic front-runner.
Passing the first test, Trump also won Mississippi.
The night's top prize was Michigan, the big industrial state that will speak loudest on the contours of the race in both parties.
Mississippi delivered for Clinton as expected, as have other Southern states with substantial black populations. Trump beat a challenge from Ted Cruz in the state.
Republicans also held contests in Idaho and Hawaii.
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VOTERS SAY...
- "I think she's the most qualified for the job. That's really what we need - not some clown." - Carter Brown, 69, an appliance store assistant manager in Dearborn, Michigan, on why he voted for Clinton. He considers Trump a clown.
- "He doesn't say wrong things. He says them incorrectly." - Jim Owen, 74, outside Bay St. Louis church where he voted for Trump. A writer of the country song "Louisiana Woman, Mississippi Man," he says Trump "has the best interest of America at heart."
-"I found him to be the least annoying candidate." - Nancy Singleton, one of only a few voters at a Boise, Idaho, polling place, on why she cast her ballot for Marco Rubio.
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ILL TRADE WINDS
Most voters in Michigan and Mississippi, regardless of party, are worried about the direction of the economy, and many consider trade to be a negative influence on jobs.
According to early results of exit polls conducted by Edison Research for The Associated Press and television networks Tuesday, at least 8 in 10 voters in each primary said they are very or somewhat worried about where the economy is headed.
More than half of Democratic and Republican voters in Michigan, along with Republicans in Mississippi, say trade takes jobs. In Mississippi, Democratic primary voters are more closely divided on the subject, with 4 in 10 saying it takes away jobs and nearly as many thinking it has a positive impact.
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COUNTDOWN TO THE HALF
Going into Tuesday's contests, Clinton was 58 delegates short of halfway to the 2,383 delegates needed to claim the Democratic prize. At stake Tuesday: 179 Democratic delegates.
Of more consequence is her more than 2-to-1 delegate lead over Sanders: 1,134 to 502.
Trump's got a longer climb in the splintered GOP affair. He went into Tuesday with 384 delegates to 300 for Texas Sen. Cruz, 151 for Florida Sen. Rubio and 37 for Ohio Gov. John Kasich.
Trump or any resurgent rival needs a total of 619 to slip past the halfway mark, and 1,237 to clinch the nomination.
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2 TWISTS
Clinton's lead in delegates is cushioned by her lopsided advantage with the party insiders known as superdelegates, who can support anyone. They can change their mind before the convention, though that is unlikely to happen short of a meltdown of the Clinton campaign.
(Minus the superdelegates, she had a smaller lead over Sanders, 673-477, in delegates won through primaries and caucuses, before Tuesday night.)
Republicans will soon turn to a series of winner-take-all contests, and that's where the numbers can change in a hurry. Two big states, Florida and Ohio, vote next week, and each will give all their delegates to the winner.
All GOP contests so far have been proportional, divvying up delegates among the contenders (with some extra allocation rules added to make it really complicated). All Democratic contests through the nomination race are proportional.
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THE ANTI-TRUMPS
Cruz, the conservative firebrand, has put up the toughest fight against Trump, staying within range in the delegate hunt and aiming to become the last challenger standing against the billionaire if Rubio and Kasich can't win their home states March 15.
With the Michigan primary, the race came to Kasich's region. Rubio also campaigned in the state and hoped to show enough strength to give him something to brag about headed into Florida. He's been the mainstream Republican hope in recent weeks, but has only won two contests in 20: Minnesota and Puerto Rico.
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MICHIGAN (59 GOP delegates, 130 Democratic delegates)
Michigan, as well as Missouri next week, should offer clues about whether Sanders is making any progress in expanding his base of support beyond his devoted followers in the under-30 crowd, and making any progress with black voters, who have overwhelmingly favored Clinton. His time is getting short to catch Clinton in the delegate chase and he must broaden his appeal to do so.
In the last Democratic debate, in Flint, Michigan, Clinton hit Sanders hard for opposing a 2009 bill that provided billions to rescue the auto industry. The Vermont senator is stressing that he opposed the provision because it was part of a large bailout package for Wall Street. He said he supported an earlier, separate bill to aid the carmakers.
Should Trump win the GOP nomination, his path to the presidency could be through the Rust Belt. Michigan offers a window into the industrial Midwest as Trump reaches out for the economically disaffected and the angry with a message that has engaged Republican voters more broadly than the party and his rivals expected.
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MISSISSIPPI (40 GOP delegates, 36 Democratic delegates)
Rubio didn't campaign in the state; the other Republicans did. Neither Clinton nor Sanders made it there.
In achieving victory, Clinton again benefited from a heavy lift from black voters, exit polls found.
Trump has scored well in Southern states despite the appeal of Cruz's conservatism and Mississippi was another notch on that belt.
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IDAHO (32 GOP delegates)
Rubio and Cruz made quick campaign stops over the weekend and both have received notable endorsements, as has Kasich. Billionaire Frank VanderSloot, a GOP mega-donor, backs Rubio. Rep. Raul Labrador endorsed Cruz. Gov. C.L. "Butch" Otter said he'd only support a governor, so Kasich is his man.
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HAWAII (19 GOP delegates)
None of the Republican candidates made the long trip to campaign for the small delegate prize in Hawaii's GOP caucuses. But the Trump-centered debate raging on the mainland played out on the islands, too.
"If candidates are looking to win over the state, then I think they need to be a little bit more open to diversity and a little more centrist about their approach," Beth Fukumoto-Chang, Republican leader in the state House, said recently.
Nathan Paikai, a minister who led Trump's campaign efforts in Hawaii, differed with that opinion. "There's many people out there who say, 'I don't like the way he talks," Paikai said. "My response is, if it's a soft tone and it's a lie, do you believe it? What does it matter about tone?"
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Associated Press writers Emily Wagster Pettus and Kevin McGill in Mississippi, Kimberlee Kruesi in Idaho, David Eggert and Jeff Karoub in Michigan, and Cathy Bussewitz in Honolulu contributed to this report.