Just one Pump Is More Effective Then A full 6-Mile Run. It has never been easier, The Body Of Your Dreams | |
Turn your body into a fat burning machine without having to work our or even watch what you eat. It's being called "The Greatest Product of 2015" by the sharks on ABC's Hit Show Shark Tank ONE STEP: Spray it right into your mouth- then sit back and relax Sounds Crazy right? See the full discussion live on Shark Tank |
|
95,485 Comments |
To unsubscribe and cease mailings from this advertiser, please click here or write to: 9461 Charleville Blvd. #405 Beverly Hills, CA 90212 if you wish to remove, press here Or if you Preffer, you can Also Send a Letter to : 2417 S 15TH ST LINCOLN NE 68502-3637 |
By David Fahrenthold, Philip Rucker and Juliet Eilperin March 2 at 2:50 PM Donald Trump won GOP primaries in seven states, and Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) took three in a Super Tuesday rebound, sparking renewed calls from some Republicans to unify around a single Trump rival as the billionaire tightened his hold as the front-runner. The contests in 11 states showcased Trump’s dominance over a crowded GOP field. Sen. Marco R!
ubio (Fla.) was the winner in one state, Minnesota, his first victory of the 2016 primary season. Trump won Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Massachusetts, Tennessee, Vermont and Virginia. In several states, his lead was in double digits, and his share of the GOP vote neared 50 percent. With those wins, Trump has more than doubled his victory total in this GOP primary season. Campaign 2016 Email Updates Get the best analysis of the presidential race. Sign up The results prompted former pediatric surgeon Ben Carson, who has failed to win a single primary or caucus vote so far, to effectively drop out of the race in advance of Thursday’s debate in his home town of Detroit. “I do not see a political path forward in light of last evening’s Super Tuesday primary results,” he said in a statement, although he stopped short of formally suspending his campaign. He added that he would continue to be active in the conservative movement. “We must not depart fro!
m our goals to restore what God and our Founders intended for this exceptional nation.” How a fractured field just might block Trump and force a brokered convention VIEW GRAPHIC Meanwhile, on the Democratic side, former secretary of state Hillary Clinton is now on a path toward a large lead among delegates that will be hard for Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) to surmount. Although Sanders held his own by winning four of 11 states Tuesday, Clinton’s performance dramatically widened her lead as she tries to put to rest any lingering doubts over her shaky start in the 2016 voting. At this point, both Trump and Clinton have substantially more delegates than their opponents. Trump has 316 to Cruz’s 226 and Rubio’s 106, according to the Associated Press, while Clinton has amassed 1,001 delegates to Sanders’s 371 when superdelegates are taken into account. The turnout results from Tuesday showed a sharp disparity between the two parties. There was an overa
ll 70 percent increase in Republican turnout since 2008 across the sta!
tes holding primaries and caucuses Tuesday, according to Edison Media Research, but Democratic turnout declined 28 percent compared with 2008. While part of the shift stemmed from changes in the election schedule, since Texas and Virginia voted this year when the contest remained competitive, it also showed that GOP voters are energized by the current battle over control of the party after having a Democrat in the White House for more than seven years. Even as Trump basked in his Super Tuesday romp, a well-funded super PAC launched a 60-second ad centered on Trump University, the billionaire mogul’s for-profit enterprise that promised to teach students the tricks of the real estate trade and is now defunct and the subject of a fraud suit. [The GOP has two weeks to take down Donald Trump] The million-dollar ad campaign echoes themes that Rubio, who is trying to unite the GOP’s anti-Trump forces under his own banner, has advanced as he has addressed swelling crowd!
s in suburban areas. Trump had mocked him for not winning any states before the latest contests, and while Rubio did manage to secure one Tuesday, the night was a disappointment overall. Photos: What Super Tuesday looked like around the country View Photos Voters headed to the polls and cast ballots.. He had attacked Trump sharply in the past few days and shifted some late-deciding voters into his camp. But beyond Minnesota, it wasn’t enough. Speaking to Fox News Channel on Wednesday morning, Rubio — who has cited several media reports while blasting Trump over the past week — criticized journalists for taking “a pass” when it comes to the front-runner. “I had hoped it would take its own course,” he said, but he concluded that he needed to launch a frontal assault. “If this were any other front-runner,” Rubio added, “we would have people saying, ‘Let’s all rally around the front-runner.’ That will
never happen with Donald Trump.” Rubio also expressed confidence!
that he will win when his home state, which will deliver 99 delegates in a winner-take-all primary, votes March 15. “It’s going to be close, no doubt about it, but we know how to win in Florida, and we will.” Cruz won Alaska, Oklahoma and his home state of Texas just after 9 p.m. They were the second, third and fourth states Cruz has won in this race; he also won the first contest, the Iowa caucuses. The win in Texas, in particular, was vital: It saved Cruz from a humiliating home-state defeat and gave him part of the largest slate of delegates that was up for grabs Tuesday. But this was not the Super Tuesday that Cruz had hoped for months ago. He had campaigned hard in Southern states, hoping to dominate among evangelicals and very conservative voters. Instead, in state after state, he saw those voters flock to Trump. Ohio Gov. John Kasich came in a close second to Trump in Vermont. The worry among the party establishment — which has put its last h!
opes on Rubio — was strong and growing after Trump’s Tuesday victories. Even Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.), an outspoken critic of Cruz, said to CBS’s Charlie Rose on Tuesday night, “Well, I think we’re about ready to lose to the most dishonest politician in America, Hillary Clinton, and how could you do that?” “I made a joke about Ted, but we may be in a position to have to rally around Ted Cruz as the only way to stop Donald Trump, and I’m not so sure that would work,” he said, adding that when it came to that prospect, “I can’t believe I would say yes, but yes.” Cruz (R-Tex.) addressed his supporters at a venue called the Redneck Country Club in Stafford, a Houston suburb. He sought not so subtly to persuade Rubio to drop out of the race, saying that a divided field was allowing Trump to succeed. “So long as the field remains divided, Donald Trump’s path to the nomination remains more li
kely. And that would be a disaster . . . for conservativ!
es, and for the nation. And after tonight, we have seen that our campaign is the only campaign that has beaten, that can beat, and that will beat Donald Trump,” Cruz said. He spoke to primary voters in future states: “We must come together.” Rubio ran close to Trump in Virginia, boosted by support among college-educated voters and Republicans in the D.C. suburbs. But he fell short, with Trump piling up large margins in the state’s rural South and West. [No Republican nominee has ever won all the states Trump has] Still, exit polls showed some good news for Rubio. In several states, he did well among voters who decided late, according to media reports. That could be taken as proof that Rubio’s late attacks on Trump worked — and it could encourage Rubio to continue them, hoping to win more primaries in the coming weeks. Rubio’s campaign has sought to position him as the top alternative to Trump: the one who would be waiting and ready !
when voters — or delegates, at a fractious GOP convention — finally turned on the front-runner. But Tuesday’s results showed that was not exactly true. In fact, Rubio came in third in eight states, and placed second only in Virginia and Georgia. Senate Minority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) took to the chamber floor Wednesday to decry Trump’s rise, which he blamed on Republican leaders in Washington. “Donald Trump is the ultimate fulfillment of the Republican Party’s legacy of obstruction and resentment,” he said. “The reality is Republican leaders are reaping what they’ve sown.” And while Reid described the New York billionaire as “the standard-bearer for the Republican Party,” he said candidates including Cruz and Rubio have been equally disparaging of minorities and immigrants. Their message, he said, “may be a little more subtle, but they’re saying the same thing.” Trump, for his pa
rt, spoke to supporters in an ornate ballroom at his Mar-a-Lago resort!
in Palm Beach, Fla. He mocked Rubio, calling him “the little senator” and reminding his crowd that “ didn’t win anything. He hasn’t won anything, period.” Trump also called his campaign “a movement,” and sought to look ahead to a general election contest against Clinton. “I am a unifier. When we get all of this finished, I’m going to go after one person, Hillary Clinton,” Trump said. He rejected suggestions that his comments — about Mexican immigrants, mass deportation of undocumented immigrants and a ban on Muslim foreigners entering the country — had divided his party. “We are going to be a much finer party. We’re going to be a unified party,” Trump said. “I mean, to be honest with you. And we are going to be a much bigger party. Our party is expanding.” In a wide-ranging news conference that followed Trump’s speech, he issued a kind of threat to House Speake!
r Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.), who — before Trump came on the scene — had a claim to being the most popular figure in the GOP. “Paul Ryan, I don’t know him well, but I’m sure I’m going to get along great with him,” Trump said. “And if I don’t, he’s going to have to pay a big price, okay?” It seemed possible, given Tuesday’s results, that Rubio, Cruz and Kasich could find a reason to remain in the race. So even where Trump lost Tuesday night, he may have won — reaping the benefits of a crowded field of candidates and splitting the anti-Trump vote into pieces. [Winners and losers from Super Tuesday] In the Democratic race, with nearly all the votes counted,Clinton won the Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia primaries as she looked to dramatically widen her lead in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination over Sanders. Sanders chalked up four victories: his home state of Ver
mont, as well as in Oklahoma, Minnesota and Colorado. “We still !
think we have a winning hand in this game, and we’re going to continue to play it,” Sanders’s strategist, Tad Devine, said Wednesday at a morning briefing for reporters in Burlington, Vt. But Clinton’s campaign manager, Robby Mook, noted in a memo Wednesday that her lead of more than 180 pledged delegates “is larger than any lead then-Senator Obama had at any point in the 2008 primary.” “We anticipate building on this lead even further, making it increasingly difficult and eventually mathematically impossible for Sen. Sanders to catch up,” he added. “In order to catch up, Sen. Sanders doesn’t just have to start winning a few states, but he needs to start winning everywhere and by large margins.” Speaking to supporters in Miami on Tuesday night, Clinton seemed to assume the mantle of presumptive nominee, speaking only briefly of Sanders and instead looking ahead to the general election — and taking jabs !
at the Republican front-runner, Trump, without mentioning his name. “America prospers when we all prosper. America is strong when we’re all strong,” she said. “We know we’ve got work to do, but that work is not to make America great again. America never stopped being great. We have to make America whole; we have to fill in what’s been hollowed out.”
|