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AP News Guide: Trump drives Rubio from race; 3 Clinton wins

WASHINGTON (AP) - Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton cushioned their delegate leads by each winning Florida, the biggest prize in five state contests Tuesday, while Clinton also won North Carolina and Ohio. On the GOP side, Ohio Gov. John Kasich defeated Trump on his home turf.

Trump's win knocked out Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, boiling the once-overflowing pack of GOP primary contenders down to three. But Kasich, another endangered rival, stayed alive by winning his home state - his first win coming deep in the primary season but offering enough encouragement to press on.

At least for now, Ted Cruz, No. 2 in the GOP race, won't get his wish to be the last man standing against Trump.

Clinton scored expected but significant victories in Florida and North Carolina, then took Ohio to dash one of Sanders' hopes for an upset. Illinois and Missouri remained undecided.

Florida was, Rubio's last chance to turn the race around, and his loss closed the book on a campaign that had held much promise but repeatedly underperformed. In withdrawing from the race, Rubio said the forces of disaffection that have propelled Trump are a "tsunami" and "we should have seen this coming."

TUESDAY CONTESTS

Both parties held contests in Ohio, Florida, Missouri, Illinois and North Carolina; the Ohio and Florida primaries were especially crucial for Republicans because all GOP delegates in those big states go to the winner. Trump triumphed earlier Tuesday in the winner-take-all contest for nine GOP delegates in the Northern Mariana Islands, a U.S. territory.

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SURVEYS SAY...

Republican voters were on board with Trump's call for a temporary ban on non-U.S.-citizen Muslims coming into the country, according to early surveys of voters as they left polling stations. Two in three GOP voters in all five states supported that position. But majorities in all five said people in the U.S. illegally should be given a chance to stay - not all deported as Trump proposes.

Democratic voters in all five states see Clinton as the candidate with the better chance to beat Trump if he is the Republican nominee, the exit polling found.

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VOTERS SAY...

- "I'm hoping Trump, with his big rubber lips, will say 'Look, there's a way around this.'" - Joe Herzog, a 76-year-old retired carpenter from Boonville, Missouri, who hopes Trump will keep the U.S. out of foreign entanglements. Herzog, a two-time voter for President Barack Obama, voted for Trump.

-"Seems the least evil, I think. Maybe." John Flynn, a registered Republican and software developer in Raleigh, North Carolina, on why he voted for Ted Cruz.

-"It was very close between them. I just don't think Bernie has the experience at that top level of government to have as much clout as Hillary. Plus his plan is still a little foggy. He has never really come out and, y'know, his numbers don't seem to add up all the time." - James Barber, 46, a car salesman from Boonville, Missouri, on why he backed Clinton.

-"I pray to God that she beats him because I can't stand him. I will go back to Africa - and I've never been." - Sharon Schaffer, 65, in South Side Chicago, voted for Clinton, hoping she's the Democrat who can defeat Trump.

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FLORIDA (99 GOP delegates, 214 Dem delegates)

It wasn't supposed to be this way. It was supposed to be Rubio and Jeb Bush at the top of the pack in a mighty struggle for their home state's big delegate prize.

Instead both are gone, and the sun just seems to keep shining on Trump, who won all 99 delegates.

In the Democratic campaign, the stars always appeared aligned for Clinton, with Florida's older population a counterweight to the youth vote that has propelled Sanders elsewhere. All 2016 Democratic races are proportional - as all Republican ones have been until now - so each candidate will come away with delegates based generally on how well they do.

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OHIO (66 GOP delegates, 143 Dem delegates)

A governor winning his home state is ordinarily nothing to roil the waters, but what's ordinary in 2016?

This is swing-state Ohio, after all, and a state with another big cache of delegates all going to the winner, Kasich.

Looking strong in Florida, Trump added late events in Ohio to try to fend off Kasich and avoid complications on his path to the nomination - namely, a contested convention. Kasich badly trails in the delegate race and his path to the nomination, absent a protracted fight into the convention, remains improbable if not impossible.

Clinton prevailed despite Sanders' pointed message about the hazards of free trade, which she generally supported in the past.

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NORTH CAROLINA (72 GOP delegates, 107 Dem delegates) , MISSOURI (52 GOP, 71 Dem ) ILLINOIS (69 GOP, 156 Dem)

It's a scramble in both parties, with delegates to be divvied up according to results. In short: more chances for Clinton to pad her already significant delegate lead, more chances for Sanders to keep his feisty "political revolution" from the left alive and an opportunity for Cruz to further solidify his standing as the only Republican within range of Trump in the delegate count.

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POINTED PERCENTAGES

Coming into Tuesday, Trump had been winning 43 percent of delegates, thus needing to up his game to clinch a majority before the convention.

Cruz had been winning 34 percent of delegates. His only path to primary-season victory is to have a strong Tuesday night, see the contest turn into a one-on-one against Trump and score commanding victories against him in a hurry.

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DARK TURNS

The melee between Trump supporters and protesters at his aborted rally in Chicago on Friday night and trouble at some events after that have rung louder alarms among Republicans who already saw him as a divisive figure who could not win in November. Said Rubio on CNN, "I think that all the gates of civility have been blown apart."

Do Trump-leaning voters care?

Time and again they have kept the faith through incendiary turns. Hundreds of thousands have already cast early votes, and the limited amount of opinion polling conducted post-Chicago has not pointed to a mass defection. Still, whether Trump will pay a price remained an open question going into Tuesday night. He didn't in Florida.

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2008 FLASHBACK

In the Democratic primaries of 2008, Barack Obama won Missouri in a squeaker and swamped her in Illinois, which he represented in the Senate. Clinton handily won Florida and Ohio. Obama dashed her diminishing hopes with a solid victory later in the calendar, May, in North Carolina.

Republican presidential candidate Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., hugs his family at a Republican primary night celebration rally at Florida International University in Miami, Fla., Tuesday, March 15, 2016. Rubio is ending his campaign for the Republican nomination for president after a humiliating loss in his home state of Florida. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya) The Associated Press
Republican presidential candidate, Ohio Gov. John Kasich, waves as he departs his polling place after he cast his ballot in the primary election Tuesday, March 15, 2016, in Westerville, Ohio. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke) The Associated Press
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton greets people as she visits a polling place at Southeast Raleigh Magnet High School in Raleigh, N.C., Tuesday, March 15, 2016. Clinton faces Democratic rival Bernie Sanders in primary contests in five states on Tuesday: North Carolina, Florida, Ohio, Missouri and Illinois. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster) The Associated Press
FILE - In this Monday, March 14, 2016 file photo, Republican presidential candidate, Donald Trump holds a plane-side rally in a hanger at Youngstown-Warren Regional Airport in Vienna, Ohio. Fear of a changing America is fueling some of the anger playing out publicly around Trump's bid for the GOP presidential nomination, historians Ken Burns and Henry Louis Gates Jr. said Monday. Trump is "speaking to a need and a deep set of fears within a large segment of the American community," added Gates, a Harvard University scholar and host of a genealogy show on PBS. "Those fears need to be assuaged, and policies formulated to meet the needs of those worried about their future," he said. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File) The Associated Press
Nancy Grogan, right, assistant supervisor of voting at Bernard School in St. Louis, Mo., demonstrates how to use the electronic voting machine to 77-year old Gilbert English. Voters in Missouri, as well as Illinois, Florida, Ohio and North Carolina are casting their ballots in primary elections Tuesday. (Cristina M. Fletes/St. Louis Post-Dispatch via AP) The Associated Press
Nelofer Ahmed votes at the Mahatma Gandhi Cultural Center, Tuesday, March 15, 2016 in Ballwin. Voters in Missouri, as well as Illinois, Florida, Ohio and North Carolina are casting their ballots in primary elections Tuesday.(Huy Mach/St. Louis Post-Dispatch via AP) EDWARDSVILLE INTELLIGENCER OUT; THE ALTON TELEGRAPH OUT; MANDATORY CREDIT The Associated Press
County Judges Andrew S. Hague, left, and Shelley J. Kravitz, right, of the Canvassing Board, check a presumed invalid absentee ballot at the Miami-Dade Election Department in Miami, Tuesday, March 15, 2016. Voters in Florida, as well as Missouri, Illinois, Ohio and North Carolina are casting their ballots in primary elections Tuesday. (AP Photo/Alan Diaz) The Associated Press
Pasquale Manno waits for the arrival of Republican presidential candidate Ohio Gov. John Kasich at his presidential primary election rally in Berea, Ohio, on Tuesday, March 15, 2016. (AP Photo/Tony Dejak) The Associated Press