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The Florida senator has vowed to win his state and declared that whoever wins Florida will go on to win the Republican nomination. | AP Photo Florida GOP voters to Rubio: Drop out if you lose on Tuesday

Marco Rubio trails Donald Trump in Florida ahead of the state’s winner-take-all primary Tuesday, and should he lose, he should suspend his campaign, a majority of likely Republican voters indicated in a Washington Post/Univision poll out Thursday.

Trump leads Rubio by single digits, 38 percent to 31 percent, but dominates the rest of the field. Ted Cruz sits at 19 percent and John Kasich is at 4 percent, with 7 percent undecided.

Cruz, however, is the top second choice. Thirty percent list Cruz as their backup candidate, while 24 percent say Rubio is their alternative.

The Florida senator has vowed to win his state and declared that whoever wins Florida will go on to win the Republican nomination. Should he lose, however, nearly 60 percent of likely Republican primary voters say he should end his campaign, while a third say he should keep going beyond March 15.

Republicans surveyed suggested Rubio is the most honest and trustworthy candidate — 34 percent to Trump’s 30 percent — and has the best personality and temperament to be president.

But those same Republicans believe Trump is best on far more issues, including bringing necessary change to Washington, D.C., handling the economy, immigration, terrorism and health care (Rubio ranks second).

Trump is also overwhelmingly viewed as the best general-election candidate, with 60 percent of likely primary voters saying Trump has the best chance of beating a Democrat in November. Just 17 percent supported Rubio as the best general-election candidate and 15 percent for Cruz.

Rubio has the highest net favorability of +31 points (62 percent favorable, 31 percent unfavorable), followed by Cruz at +22 points (57 percent favorable, 35 percent unfavorable) and Trump at +18 points (57 percent favorable, 39 percent unfavorable).

The survey of 450 likely Republican primary voters was conducted March 2-5 in English and Spanish via landlines and cellphones and has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.6 percentage points.