DONALD TRUMP FEARS, “US REPUBLICANS EXPRESS”.
(US PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION 2016)
Mr Trump has
declared himself a "unifier", but he is strongly opposed by veteran
Republican politicians.
Senator
Lindsey Graham warned on Wednesday that Mr Trump would lose in November's
election.
Meanwhile
retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, who has performed poorly, has signalled he may
drop out of the race.
In a
statement on Wednesday, he said he saw "no path forward" for his
presidential campaign and will not attend Thursday's TV debate.
But he
stopped short of ending his race completely.
Meanwhile,
former nominee Mitt Romney has said he would make a speech on Thursday in which
he is expected to challenge Mr Trump.
He has been
fiercely critical of the businessman, whose hardline stance on issues like
immigration put him at odds with Republican orthodoxy.
His
victories on so-called Super Tuesday consolidated his position as the most
likely Republican candidate to vie for the White House against the Democratic
nomination.
Texas
Senator Ted Cruz walked away with three states, bringing his total to four,
while Florida Senator Marco Rubio won his first state (Minnesota) in the
primary race to date.
Several
party leaders, including House Speaker Paul Ryan and South Carolina Senator
Lindsey Graham, have spoken out against Donald Trump's controversial policies
and positions in recent days.
His latest
controversy centres on his failure to disavow David Duke, a leader of the white
supremacist Ku Klux Klan, who endorsed him. He later said he had on several
occasions in the past disavowed Mr Duke.
Mr Ryan
forcefully denounced the real estate mogul on Tuesday, saying: "They must
reject any group or cause that is built on bigotry. This party does not prey on
people's prejudices."
"Let me
make it perfectly clear, Senate Republicans condemn David Duke and the KKK, and
his racism," Senator and majority leader Mitch McConnell commented.
Influential
congressman Peter King joked he would leave politics if Mr Trump became the
nominee.
And Marco
Rubio indicated in his speech on Tuesday that the Republican establishment was
unlikely to back the former reality TV star.
"If
this was anybody else as a front-runner, there'd be people right now saying
'Let's all rally around the front-runner,'" he said, adding, "that
will never happen with Donald Trump".
According to
the New York Times, some party donors are already trying to raise funds for an
anti-Trump effort.
Meanwhile,
The Center for Public Integrity reports that Republican super PACs ran as many
as 8,500 adverts in the run up to Super Tuesday to try to discredit Donald
Trump's election campaign.
Mr Graham
warned that Republicans would "lose to Hillary Clinton" with Mr Trump
as their party nomination.
"We may
be in a position where we have to rally around Ted Cruz as the only way to stop
Trump," he said. "And I'm not so sure that would work."
Mrs Clinton
also won seven states on Tuesday, consolidating her lead in the Democratic race
over rival Bernie Sanders.
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