Retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson signaled on Wednesday he was quitting the Republican presidential race, leaving three candidates facing Donald Trump as the party establishment struggled to find a way to halt the outspoken businessman.
Carson, a conservative who briefly led opinion polls among Republicans earlier in the campaign, said he did not “see a political path forward” after performing poorly in this week’s Super Tuesday contests. He said he would not participate in a Republican debate on Thursday.
Carson, however, will not formally suspend his campaign. Instead, the Republican said, he has decided to make a speech about his political future on Friday at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Maryland, just outside of Washington. But the announcement will serve as an acknowledgement that Carson’s candidacy is all but over.
As a conservative black Republican, Carson, 64, stood out in the mostly white Republican Party, and his fast start in polls and fundraising last year briefly made him look like a contender.
But his campaign foundered amid staff infighting and questions about Carson’s familiarity with foreign policy.
His departure is unlikely to have a major impact on the fight among Republicans to become the party’s candidate in the Nov. 8 election to succeed Democratic President Barack Obama.
Reuters/Ipsos polling last month showed Carson supporters would mostly likely be split between Trump and U.S. Sens. Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz if he dropped out. Ohio Gov. John Kasich is also still in the race.
Trump consolidated his lead in the Republican race with a string of victories on Tuesday that moved him closer to winning the nomination.
The 69-year-old New York real estate tycoon, proclaimed himself a “unifier” after he won seven states from Massachusetts to the conservative Deep South.
His wins compounded the problem for a party whose leaders are critical of many of Trump’s positions and values and skeptical he can defeat the likely Democratic nominee, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
Trump has showered insults on rivals and is facing strong party disapproval over his ideas to build a wall between the United States and Mexico, deport 11 million illegal immigrants and temporarily bar Muslims from entering the country.
Romney to speak out
The party’s 2012 nominee, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, is seen as likely to criticize Trump in a speech on Thursday.
Romney feels a need to speak but will not make an endorsement, a source familiar with Romney’s plans told Reuters. “I think he’s going to focus on where we are and what we have to do to win in November,” one source said.
Cruz, 45, won his home state of Texas and neighboring Oklahoma, as well as the Alaska caucuses on Tuesday, bolstering the conservative senator’s argument that he has the best chance of stopping Trump.
The Republican establishment’s favored 2016 candidate, Rubio, only won one state on Super Tuesday when he took Minnesota.
The 44-year-old senator from Florida kept up his attacks on Trump on Wednesday.
“If this was anybody else as a front-runner, there’d be people right now saying: ‘Let’s all rally around the front-runner,’” said Rubio.
“That will never happen with Donald Trump,” Rubio told Fox News. “On the contrary.”
Anti-Trump Republicans have yet to coalesce around a single strategy to halt him, but the conservative group Club for Growth claimed credit for slowing Trump in some primary states by running attack ads. It said it would air a new advertisement in Florida as part of a $1.5 million ad buy.
Some party donors — including hedge-fund manager Paul Singer and Meg Whitman, the Hewlett-Packard Enterprise chief executive — organized a phone call on Tuesday to get funding for an anti-Trump effort, The New York Times reported.
But one of Trump’s former rivals in the 2016 race, Mike Huckabee, admonished Republicans for not respecting the will of the voters.
“The establishment Republicans are all bed-wetting over this and they don’t seem to understand that we have an election,” the former Arkansas governor said on Fox News. “Let’s remember that we have an election process, not a selection process.”
Trump responded to the furor against him, saying in a tweet on Wednesday: “The special interests and people who control our politicians (puppets) are spending $25 million on misleading and fraudulent T.V. ads on me.”
Democrats pounced on the chaos.
Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid called Trump a “monster” the Republicans spawned with their years of rancorous opposition to all major Obama administration initiatives.
“Republicans created him by spending seven years appealing to some of the darkest forces in America,” Reid said on the Senate floor.
In the Democratic race, Clinton, 68, took big steps on Tuesday toward securing her party’s nomination, the 2016 campaign’s biggest day of state-by-state nominating contests.
Her victories in seven states were propelled by black voters in Southern states, including Texas, Virginia and Arkansas, where her husband, former President Bill Clinton, was once governor.
Clinton’s rival, U.S Sen. Bernie Sanders, 74, won his home state of Vermont along with Colorado, Minnesota and Oklahoma.


