The Latest: GOP looks to Utah to detail Trump's lead
Mitt Romney has said he's voting for Cruz in Utah and on Monday Utah Republicans received a pre-recorded call from the GOP's first Mormon presidential nominee.
Lawmakers who attended a meeting with Donald Trump in Washington say that the Republican front-runner fielded dozens of questions and talked strategy in a session that's likely to be followed by several more.
Donald Trump appears to have just offered a job to an onlooker at his press conference at his under-construction Washington hotel.
Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump has convened reporters at the Old Post Office Pavilion in Washington, the site of his newest Trump-branded hotel.
The billionaire businessman, who has often intermingled politics and business on the campaign trail, will be speaking at a podium with a "Trump Hotels" logo, flanked by renderings of the future hotel's ballroom, guest room and other locations.
Warren used her campaign's official Twitter account to unleash eight rapid-fire attacks on the front-running Republican presidential candidate.
Camp Cruz is the name the senator's campaign has given to its headquarters for volunteers who travel into a state to help out.
Herbert announced his decision Monday at the state capitol in Salt Lake City, saying Cruz has the best chance to defeat Donald Trump.
Political observers say Trump's brash demeanor doesn't play well in a culture rooted in the Mormon faith that values on manners and amiability.
The party says 34,570 U.S. citizens living abroad in 38 countries cast votes by Internet, mail and in person from March 1 to 8.
Voters were able to cast ballots in person at local election offices beginning at 8 a.m. Monday.
Hillary Clinton is planning to take some veiled shots at Republican front-runner Donald Trump during an address to a pro-Israel advocacy organization.
In February, Trump said he'd be "sort of a neutral guy" on Israel, sparking criticism from Republican allies of the Jewish state.
While the U.S. is officially neutral in the Middle East conflict, his statement sparked a marked rhetorical departure for typically-strongly pro-Israel U.S. presidential candidates.