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Republican U.S. presidential hopeful and Ohio Governor John Kasich speaks as he participates in a discussion with Javier Palomarez, president & CEO of theÃŠUnited StatesÃŠHispanic Chamber of Commerce. | Getty Poll: Trump ties Kasich in Ohio, doubles Rubio in Florida

Donald Trump and John Kasich are tied in Ohio, but the New York billionaire maintains a massive lead over home-state Sen. Marco Rubio in Florida heading into Tuesday’s primaries, according to a Quinnipiac poll published Monday.

Trump and Kasich lead the field in Ohio with 38 percent support each among likely Republican voters, followed by Ted Cruz at 16 percent and Rubio at 3 percent with 4 percent undecided.

The Republican front-runner and Ohio governor split support among white born-again evangelicals. But Republicans who identify as very or somewhat conservative favor Trump, while more moderate and liberal Republicans prefer Kasich.

Kasich holds a narrow lead over Trump in a RealClearPolitics average of state polls. A loss in his home state, which awards all of its 66 delegates to the winner, would bolster Trump’s path to the nomination and likely end his own presidential campaign.

In an effort to stop Trump from winning the 1,237 delegates to secure the Republican nomination outright, Rubio’s campaign has encouraged its Ohio supporters to vote for Kasich, acknowledging his campaign is best positioned to beat Trump there. Kasich’s campaign, however, didn’t return the favor.

The real-estate magnate continues to dominate in Florida, a winner-take-all state that awards 99 delegates. Trump has more than twice the support of Rubio there, 46 percent to 22 percent. Cruz follows at 14 percent while Kasich is at 10 percent. Six percent remain undecided.

The Florida senator has vowed to win his state — though he trails by more than 20 points in a RealClearPolitics average of state polls — and do whatever it takes to stop Trump from getting the nomination.

Trump has commanding support among different blocs of Republican voters, including tea party conservatives, white born-again evangelicals and those who identify as very conservative, somewhat conservative and liberal, too.

On the Democratic side, Hillary Clinton tops Bernie Sanders in both Florida, 60 percent to 34 percent, and Ohio, 51 percent to 46 percent. Clinton’s campaign is hoping to regain momentum Tuesday after a stunning loss to Sanders in Michigan last week.

The surveys were conducted March 8-13 via landline and cellphones. The margin of error in Ohio is plus or minus 3.7 percentage points among Republican voters and 4.2 percentage points among Democratic voters. In Florida, the margin of error is plus or minus 4 percentage points among Republican voters and plus or minus 4.3 percentage points among Democratic voters.