Donald Trump Donald John TrumpHR McMaster says president's policy to withdraw troops from Afghanistan is 'unwise' Cast of 'Parks and Rec' reunite for virtual town hall to address Wisconsin voters Biden says Trump should step down over coronavirus response MORE is poised to grow his delegate lead over the Republican presidential field with a strong showing on Super Tuesday.

The longtime GOP front-runner leads the latest polls in eight of the 11 states that will vote on March 1, and he’s the only candidate who is competitive across the board.





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Even worse for Trump’s rivals is that a candidate must win at least 20 percent of the vote to get any delegates in the four states with the largest prizes.

The latest polls show Marco Rubio Marco Antonio RubioFlorida senators pushing to keep Daylight Savings Time during pandemic Hillicon Valley: DOJ indicts Chinese, Malaysian hackers accused of targeting over 100 organizations | GOP senators raise concerns over Oracle-TikTok deal | QAnon awareness jumps in new poll Intelligence chief says Congress will get some in-person election security briefings MORE, John Kasich and Ben Carson all below the threshold in all four of those states, and Ted Cruz Rafael (Ted) Edward CruzLoeffler calls for hearing in wake of Netflix's 'Cuties' Health care in the crosshairs with new Trump Supreme Court list 'Parks and Rec' cast members hosting special reunion to raise money for Wisconsin Democrats MORE is below the threshold in three of them.



Here’s a look at how things are shaping up on the day when about a quarter of all delegates will be awarded in the GOP nominating contest.



ALABAMA (50)

Trump could potentially sweep all of Alabama’s delegates even though it’s not a winner-take-all state.

A poll released this week from Birmingham-based Republican consulting firm Master Image found Trump at 36 percent, followed by Rubio at 19 percent and Cruz at 12 percent.



If that were the final vote it would be devastating to Trump’s rivals: Alabama requires a candidate to win at least 20 percent of the vote to qualify for the state’s 26 at-large delegates.



Others could still nab a few delegates at the district level, but these will be heavily weighted in the winner’s favor.



Perhaps sensing defeat in a state that once represented a critical block in his Southern firewall, Cruz canceled the lone appearance he had scheduled in Alabama this week.



Rubio has several upcoming stops planned in the state as he seeks to claw above the 20 percent threshold.



ALASKA (28)



None of the candidates is spending any time or resources in Alaska, and the caucuses are notoriously difficult to survey.



An Alaska Dispatch-Ivan Moore poll taken in January found Trump at 28 percent and Cruz at 24 percent. Rubio, Kasich and Carson were each in single digits. The state has a 13 percent statewide threshold for delegates.



ARKANSAS (28)



Arkansas is lining up to be a competitive race and could be an opportunity for Cruz or Rubio to steal a victory and limit Trump's total delegates.



A Talk Business-Hendrix College poll released earlier this month found Cruz leading, at 27 percent, followed closely by Trump and Rubio, each at 23 percent.



Cruz will rally supporters in the state on Saturday and Sunday.



Rubio will also be in the state over that stretch. Arkansas’s largest newspaper endorsed him this week, and he has the backing of popular Gov. Asa Hutchison, who appeared in an ad for him.



Still, Trump drew more than 10,000 people at a rally in the state earlier this month.



He has another rally planned for Saturday and recently hired former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee’s daughter and campaign manager, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, as a senior adviser.



GEORGIA (76)



A Tegna-WXIA survey released Thursday found Trump pulling away, taking 45 percent, with 19 percent for Rubio and 16 percent for Cruz.



If the candidates behind Trump fail to meet the 20 percent threshold statewide, it would automatically give Trump all 31 at-large delegates and set him up to take a strong majority of the district-level delegates.



Trump made Georgia the sight of his first rally after a resounding win in South Carolina, and he’ll make one of his final campaign stops in the Peach State before Super Tuesday at another rally on Monday.



But Rubio, Cruz and Kasich aren’t giving up on the state, which awards the second-most delegates, behind only Texas, on Super Tuesday. All three have stops planned there in the final hours before election day.



MASSACHUSETTS (42)



Only Kasich has a stop planned in Massachusetts before Tuesday.



Kasich, who came in second place in New Hampshire earlier this month, is making a play there. His super-PAC is airing ads in the state narrated by comedian Tim Allen.



But Trump appears headed for a runaway victory.



He drew 10,000 supporters to a rally in Lowell, Mass., last month, and an Emerson College poll released this week shows the front-runner with a 50 percent support and a 34-point lead over the next-closest contender.



MINNESOTA (38)



None of the GOP candidates will stop in Minnesota in the final days before the caucuses, though Rubio swung by last week and pulled an impressive crowd of nearly 2,000.



Rubio counts former Gov. Tim Pawlenty and a couple of members of the House from there as supporters.



The most recent polling in Minnesota is from January and found Rubio in the lead, with 23 percent, followed by Cruz, at 21 percent, and Trump, at 18 percent.



OKLAHOMA (43)



A survey from the state’s largest newspaper released this week found Trump in the lead, with 29 percent, followed by Rubio, at 21 percent, and Cruz, at 20 percent.



All three have stops planned there over the weekend and appear likely to finish above the 15 percent threshold for delegates.



TENNESSEE (58)



A survey from mid-January by Middle Tennessee State University found Trump dominating with 32 percent and a 2-1 advantage over Cruz, who was a distant second.



If no other candidate reaches the 20 percent threshold, Trump would sweep all 31 of the at-large delegates and likely a strong majority of the district delegates.



Some political observers view Tennessee as having the potential to lift an establishment candidate, like Rubio or Kasich, over insurgents like Trump and Cruz.



Rubio made Tennessee his first stop after the South Carolina primary. He also scored a late endorsement from Gov. Bill Haslem, who is appearing in ads for him there.



Kasich is also working to win voters, spending Friday and Saturday in the state.

Cruz slammed Trump in a rally there on Friday and will spend election day in the state.



But a quarter-million people have already cast ballots because of early voting in Tennessee, so Trump is already potentially building a lead.



TEXAS (155)



Texas is home to the largest delegates prize on Super Tuesday.



It’s a must-win for Cruz, the home-state senator, whose Southern strategy is otherwise in pieces.



The current RealClearPolitics average of polls shows Cruz has about a 7-point lead over Trump.



Rubio is flirting with the state’s 20 percent threshold and risks getting shut out for a cut of the 44 at-large delegates. There is no prize for finishing in third place at the district level either.



Cruz and Trump appear poised to split the bulk of the Texas delegates, as allocation rules make it difficult for the winner to pull away or for the third-place finisher to have much of an impact.



VERMONT (16)



Kasich will be in Vermont on Monday, hoping to replicate the strong finish he had in neighboring New Hampshire.



But Trump is running away with the contest, according to a Castleton University poll released earlier this month, taking 32 percent. Rounding out the field are Rubio at 17 percent, Cruz at 11 and Kasich at 10.



Once again there’s a 20 percent threshold, so Trump is threatening to take a strong majority of delegates.



The front-runner saw about 2,000 attendees at a rally in the tiny state last month in Burlington.



VIRGINIA (49)



A Monmouth University survey released Thursday showed Trump topping 40 percent in a state that some believe should cater to more mainstream conservatives, such as Rubio or Kasich.



Rubio is in a distant second place, at 27 percent, and no one else is competitive.



All of the candidates except Carson will stop there before Super Tuesday seeking to cut into Trump’s lead in a state that, with no qualifying threshold, divides its delegates entirely proportionally.



Cruz was there Friday. Rubio is planning four stops across the state on Sunday, coupled with an ad blitz. Kasich will blanket the state on Monday.