"The two living Republican past presidents, George H. W. Bush and George W. Bush, have no plans to endorse Trump, according to their spokesmen." So said the lead story in The Washington Post.

"The two living Republican past presidents, George H. W. Bush and George W. Bush, have no plans to endorse Trump, according to their spokesmen." So said the lead story in The Washington Post.
The 2016 presidential election has been one of the most headline-inducing elections in recent memory. A full GOP field and the hotly-contested democratic run off provided endless opportunities and instances where politicians said or did outrageous things on the campaign trail.
Despite all the buzz that he would end up on Donald Trump’s shortlist, Rick Scott said he had no interest in being vice president.
Asked Wednesday night if he would accept a bid to become Donald Trump's vice president, Gov. Rick Scott told millions of CNN viewers, "I like my job, I have two years and eight months to go and I'm going to stay in this job."
Ohio Gov. John Kasich, the anti-Trump Republicans' last hope for a "hail Mary" into the endzone, has signaled he will drop out of the race.
Kasich's surprise change of heart leaves Donald Trump the last Republican standing.
No more debates, no more internal sniping with the RNC brass, nothing left for Trump but preparation to face the Democrats' presumptive nominee, Hillary Clinton, in what promises to be a clash of Titans from now until November.
Liz Mair and Make America Awesome, the anti-Trump SuperPAC among the GOP faithful, penned this note Wednesday morning about the 2016 presidential race, addressing the movement's tens of thousands of supporters:
Toto, I have a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore. Or Ohio. Or Colorado. Or any of the other number of states that have rejected Donald Trump.
We're in 2016, what looks likely to be the most disappointing, insane presidential contest in my lifetime.
UPDATED 4 a.m. Wednesday -- There will be no contested convention. The steam is gone from what might be the hottest Republican primary in history. Donald Trump -- an American original, the only presidential nominee in more than 150 years besides Dwight Eisenhower who never held office -- is the presumptive nominee of the Republican Party in 2016.
Charlie Crist’s chances for a successful political comeback went up on Tuesday as his main rival for the Democratic nomination to replace David Jolly in Congress shifted his focus to running for a state House seat.
Florida will once again be front and center in a presidential election come November as the largest swing state.
More than in any recent presidential campaign, the process of selecting the delegates that are unbound and will vote at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland this summer has moved from a conversation among political strategists to weighing on the average voter's mind.
The spin is on:
Donald Trump:
Donald Trump may have won the Florida primary, but the work isn’t over for presidential hopefuls in the Sunshine State. Florida Republicans are only a few weeks away from selecting the 99 delegates who will represent them at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland in July, but the delegates this year have hardly been set in stone.