
In Florida, home-state Sen. Marco Rubio has been trying to get traction
against Trump, but still trails. Sen. Ted Cruz has overtaken Rubio in
Florida. In Illinois Trump also leads, 38 percent to 34 percent over
Cruz, who is in striking distance, with Kasich back at 16 percent. The
findings across the three states may suggests Cruz is emerging more
generally in the minds of many non-Trump voters as the alternative to
the frontrunner.
Turnout looks to be key for Trump's fortunes, and the polling shows it
is his campaign in particular that may be bringing out more Republicans
than usual. His backers are much more likely than others to say they are
interested in the 2016 contests mainly because Trump is running.
Trump's support has been remarkably durable over this campaign in all
previous states, and these surveys show how his backers are indeed aware
of what they see as positive qualities, and also of the criticisms
leveled against him. Overwhelming numbers of Trump voters describe him
as looking out for them, authentic, and not beholden to big donors. At
the same time many of his own backers describe Trump as being too
extreme at times, and about four in ten feel he sometimes promises more
than he'll be able to deliver. None of that has changed their intention
of voting for him.
The so-called establishment's efforts to stop Trump have not had the
desired impact so far. Now in these states, more voters say the party
should rally behind Trump, should he continue to win primaries.
In Ohio, Kasich does well among voters who feel the economy is in good
shape, but Trump is leading among those who feel the state's economy is
bad. And key for Kasich is that his approval rating as governor is
extremely high -- 80 percent among Republican primary voters -- and he
is seen by voters as prepared to be president, more so than Trump. That
lets Kasich keep his home-state edge, unlike Rubio in Florida, where GOP
primary voters are split on his performance as a U.S. Senator. In
Florida, Rubio also is hampered by comparably low numbers of voters who
see him as prepared to be President.
On the Democratic side, Hillary Clinton has a big lead in Florida, 62
percent to 34 percent, and a smaller lead in Ohio, 52 to 43. But Bernie
Sanders leads narrowly in Illinois, 48 to 46, coming off his surprise
win in Michigan last week.
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