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Trump wins Florida, Ill. and N.C.; Kasich wins Ohio, Rubio drops out

By Eric DuVall and Shawn Price
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump concludes a speech to supporters at the Sunset Cove Amphitheater in Boca Raton, Fla. on Monday. Tuesday, he won the state's primary. Photo by Gary I Rothstein/UPI
1 of 2 | Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump concludes a speech to supporters at the Sunset Cove Amphitheater in Boca Raton, Fla. on Monday. Tuesday, he won the state's primary. Photo by Gary I Rothstein/UPI | License Photo

WASHINGTON, March 15 (UPI) -- Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump has won Tuesday's winner-take-all primary in Florida -- apparently dealing a knockout blow to Sen. Marco Rubio, who has suspended his campaign.

But Trump, who was also declared the winner in Illinois and North Carolina, failed to capture the other major prize of the night in Ohio where that state's two-term governor, John Kasich, has scored his first win of the race.

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While Kasich was able to defend his home turf, Rubio could not and it forced him out of the race while giving Trump a major boost. Trump's Florida victory comes in one of two winner-take-all delegate states for the Republicans. He earns all of Florida's 99 delegates to the GOP convention in Cleveland, and all but ensures he will finish the night the delegate winner in five states holding primaries Tuesday, even if Missouri was too close to call by midnight.

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Rubio, who suffered an embarrassing defeat on his political home turf, spoke to supporters at his headquarters in Miami Tuesday night, saying it was not "God's will" he should become president.

His speech also called out the Trump campaign in a veiled shot at his rival, who the Florida senator said is leading a "political tsunami ... we should have seen coming."

Rubio, who at times went insult-for-insult with Trump, said that he tried to run a campaign that was "optimistic" about the country.

"From a political standpoint, the easiest thing to have done on this campaign is jump on all those anxieties, make people angrier, more frustrated," he said. "But I chose a different route and I'm proud of that. In a year like this, that would have been the easiest way to win."

In Florida, Trump secured about 45 percent of the vote while Rubio took less than 30 percent.

Trump acknowledged his felled opponent, saying of Rubio: "He's tough, he's smart and he's got a great future."

Trump delivered a brief speech to supporters at the Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Fla. He thanked voters there, where he owns several properties, for supporting him despite a huge wave of negative ads over the last week.

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"Mostly false, vicious, horrible," Trump said of the attack ads, many from a Super PAC supporting Rubio. "It added up to over $40 million. You explain it to me. I can't. My numbers went up."

Trump, who has previously taken questions from reporters after delivering election night victory speeches, did not do so Tuesday. Instead, he taunted reporters in the press pen, calling them "disgusting people."

Kasich spoke on CNN prior to giving a victory speech at a college campus in Ohio. He pledged to fight on in the campaign, despite the fact he faces long odds in beating Trump in the delegate race given his poor showings in early-voting states.

"We've only been paid attention to for the last two or three weeks. ... People are only starting to hear the message," Kasich said.

During his Ohio victory speech, Kasich sought to position himself as a less bombastic alternative for conservative voters.

"I will not take the low road to the highest office in the land," Kasich said. "Before we're Republicans and Democrats, we're Americans and we have an obligation to our children."

The victory in his home state, which he has served in Congress and as governor for 18 years, is a powerful moment for Kasich, and, more importantly for the stop-Trump movement, it denies him all 66 delegates that were at stake in the winner-take-all contest.

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"What it does is, you said, you want to divide [voters], you came to Ohio and threw everything you had at me and it didn't work," Kasich said in the CNN interview.

In Illinois, a state where Sen. Ted Cruz had campaigned hard, Trump walked away with another plurality win. He was projected to take about 40 percent of the vote to 26 percent for Cruz and 21 percent for Kasich.

The race in Missouri went late into the night with a virtual tie between Trump and Texas Senator Ted Cruz. With 99 percent of districts counted, Trump held a tiny lead of 40.8 percent over Cruz's 40.6 percent.

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