Hawaii Republicans helped Donald Trump continue his domination of the Republican presidential field Tuesday night.
UPDATE: The New York real estate magnate won the GOP presidential caucus in the islands. He took 43聽percent of the vote.
Texas Sen. Ted Cruz was second with 32聽percent, followed by Florida Sen. Marco Rubio (13 percent) and聽Ohio Gov. John Kasich (10 percent).
The state鈥檚 19 GOP delegates will be awarded proportionally, but probably not until Friday at the earliest, when results are expected to be certified.
Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson were also on the Hawaii ballot, but they are no longer running.
Hawaii鈥檚 caucus coincided with contests in Michigan and Mississippi, where Trump prevailed, and Idaho, which Cruz won.
It was only the second time the GOP has held a Hawaii vote in the presidential primary process.
Despite blustery weather, turnout was heavy in many places. Some polling locations allowed people who were standing in line after polls closed at 8 p.m. to still vote.
Shyrah Maurer, who works in retail, voted for Trump at Kalani High School in East Oahu.
鈥淚 was a little disappointed by his demeanor lately, but he鈥檚 a businessman,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 an entrepreneur, too, and I think Trump knows what the country needs.鈥
Maurer鈥檚 second choice was Kasich.
Barbara Marumoto, the former GOP state representative for the area, cast her vote for Rubio.
鈥淚 think he鈥檚 a student of history and of foreign relations,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 good for Hawaii 鈥 trade, relations with Asia.鈥
A Tough Choice
Others chose not to disclose their preferences and suggested the choice was difficult.
Attorney Jim Hochberg, who was volunteering at聽the Kalani precinct, said before the polls closed, 鈥淚 haven鈥檛 made up my mind, but I wouldn鈥檛 tell you even if I had.鈥
In 2012, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney won handily, helped by a sizable Mormon population in the islands. Romney鈥檚 recent condemnation of Trump may have swayed some voters here, but clearly not enough.
Despite Hawaii鈥檚 small size, the caucus attracted national attention because the nomination is still up for grabs.
While Trump is the clear frontrunner nationally, Cruz, with the second-largest number of delegates, has positioned himself as the most serious challenger.
Assuming they don’t quit the race soon, Rubio鈥檚 fate is tied to the Florida primary, while Kasich’s fate is tied to Ohio鈥檚. Both elections are March 15.
The Fight For The Caucus
The urgency to win the Hawaii contest was seen locally on a number of fronts.
A robocall to Hawaii phones last week was said to be from Trump supporters in Hawaii but actually attacked Trump. Rubio ran dozens of television ads in support of his campaign.
Trump spoke by phone to several Honolulu Tuesday and caused a bit of a fuss when he said he had created jobs聽at the Trump International Hotel Waikiki, which he has connections to but doesn’t own. And Romney made聽 that aired in four states, including Hawaii, a call that聽came close to聽formally聽endorsing Rubio.
State Sen. Sam Slom, a former Carson supporter, endorsed Cruz over the weekend. Former Lt. Gov. Duke Aiona endorsed Rubio and featured him via phone on his radio program Tuesday afternoon.
Former U.S. Rep. Charles Djou, who backs Kasich, urged island Republicans to reject Trump. Kimo Sutton, a GOP lieutenant governor candidate two years ago, retaliated, arguing that Djou seemed to be favoring Democrat Hillary Clinton.
On Monday, the Ted Cruz Hawaii organization warned that a vote for Rubio was a wasted vote and linked to a CNN report that Rubio was likely to drop out of the race rather than lose in his home state of Florida. On Tuesday morning, the Rubio campaign said the Cruz campaign was spreading false rumors and lies.
In The Spin Room
The聽Cruz campaign, backed by a renegade group who believe that the is not conservative enough, skipped聽a media availability at party headquarters Monday afternoon.
Just after 5 p.m. Ted Cruz Hawaii warned voters that Rubio was losing other races Tuesday 鈥 “Don’t waste your vote on a cooked goose” 鈥 but did not point out that Cruz too had already聽been served up as p芒t茅 in Michigan and Mississippi.
Meanwhile, the Kasich campaign sent out a press release spinning his loss聽in Michigan as a victory and pointed to all the races and delegates still to be decided. It did not mention Hawaii.
One thing seems聽clear from聽Tuesday’s Hawaii GOP caucus, however: Hawaii鈥檚 Republicans are as divided as the party is nationally.
We鈥檒l soon see if that鈥檚 the case with Democrats. A presidential preference poll held by the is set for March 26.
An email that arrived in local inboxes shortly after 8:30 p.m. Tuesday announced that the Bernie Sanders campaign will open a local campaign聽headquarters Wednesday in Honolulu.
On Tuesday, Sen. Sanders scored a huge upset over Hillary Clinton in Michigan.
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About the Author
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Chad Blair is the politics editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at cblair@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at .