Rubio Lost Big. He Has No Realistic Path To Winning Before The GOP Convention. He Didn’t Win Any Delegates Tuesday Night.

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio did poorly in Tuesday's primaries.
Florida Sen. Marco Rubio did poor­ly in Tuesday’s primaries.

Sen. Marco Rubio (R‑Fla.), who was once called “THE REPUBLICAN SAVIOR” on the cov­er of Time mag­a­zine, lost big Tuesday night.

Rubio’s been los­ing for a while. Even before Tuesday’s results, Rubio had less than half of the del­e­gates that the num­ber-crunch­ers at FiveThirtyEight said he would need to be “on track” for the Republican nom­i­na­tion. But Tuesday night, when he lost bad­ly in Michigan, Mississippi, Idaho and Hawaii, made clear that he’s a dead man walk­ing. Rubio fin­ished fourth in both Michigan and Mississippi, behind Donald Trump, Sen. Ted Cruz (R‑Texas) and Ohio Gov. John Kasich. He was third in Idaho and Hawaii but did­n’t secure any del­e­gates from those states either.

After Tuesday, Trump has more than a third of the del­e­gates he needs to secure the nom­i­na­tion. Unless Trump or Cruz ascends direct­ly into heav­en in the next week or so, Rubio, who received more endorse­ments from more impor­tant par­ty lead­ers than any­one remain­ing in the GOP pres­i­den­tial pri­ma­ry, has no real­is­tic path to win­ning a major­i­ty of the del­e­gates before the Republican nation­al con­ven­tion in July. At this point, his best hope for the pres­i­den­cy is a bro­kered con­ven­tion, in which he and anoth­er los­er — prob­a­bly Cruz — have enough del­e­gates com­bined to sur­pass Trump. Even then, Rubio would like­ly have few­er del­e­gates than who­ev­er he made the deal with, and would prob­a­bly have to accept the vice-pres­i­den­tial spot on the ticket.

Rubio’s defeat was total in Tuesday’s Republican con­tests in Mississippi, Michigan, Idaho and Hawaii. Donald Trump won Mississippi ear­ly in the night, fin­ish­ing ahead of Rubio for the 19th time in 21 tries this pri­ma­ry sea­son. Trump also won Michigan and Hawaii. Cruz won Idaho. But it was the nature of Tuesday night’s loss­es that real­ly hurt Rubio. He won less than 10 per­cent of the vote in both Mississippi and Michigan, sig­nif­i­cant­ly less than he was show­ing in pub­lic polls just a few weeks ago. That sug­gests a col­lapse in his sup­port. And in the cru­cial con­test for del­e­gates, he got shut out in the two biggest states: He end­ed up with zero of Mississippi’s 40 del­e­gates and Michigan’s 59. Rubio has long been count­ing on a win in his home state pri­ma­ry in Florida next Tuesday. But even if he wins Florida, which awards all of its del­e­gates to the win­ner in the state, he’ll only pick up as many del­e­gates as he was shut out of in Mississippi and Michigan: 99. “I believe with all my heart that the win­ner of the Florida pri­ma­ry next Tuesday will be the nom­i­nee of the Republican Party,” Rubio said Tuesday night.

He may think it’ll be him. But Rubio’s not lead­ing in polls of the Sunshine State. Trump is. Read more here: Rubio Lost Big. He Has No Realistic Path To Winning Before The GOP Convention.