House Speaker Robert A. DeLeo says Republican front-runner Donald Trump — who scored a solid win in the GOP primary in Massachusetts on Super Tuesday — could take the normally blue Bay State in the general election if he’s the party’s nominee.

“I think that’s a possibility,” DeLeo said on Boston Herald Radio’s “Morning Meeting” program. “If you were to talk to me a month or so ago … we would have had a good laugh and moved on to the next question, but I don’t see how anyone can count him out. I mean, ?he almost got 50 percent of the vote.”

Trump captured 49 percent of the Republican electorate in Massachusetts on Super Tuesday, winning the state with the largest plurality among any of his 10 primary victories so far. The New York billionaire captured more than 50 percent of the vote in DeLeo’s district, which includes Winthrop and parts of Revere.

“When this whole campaign started, I think many folks, including myself, looked at this as somewhat of a lark,” DeLeo said.

“Maybe Mr. Trump might win a couple of caucuses or primaries and then maybe ride off into the sunset … When you try to look at what’s going on here — in Massachusetts, 49 percent, in my district he won overwhelmingly — what does that say?”

The overall state electorate still split heavily in favor of the Democrats, with Hillary Clinton taking more than 600,000 votes, nearly twice as many as the 311,000 Trump pulled in. And Massachusetts has not backed a Republican in a presidential election since Ronald Reagan in 1984.

Then again, Vermont U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders — who, like Trump, is riding a wave of anti-establishment anger and angst — grabbed nearly 580,000 votes, a huge reservoir of frustration with business as usual that ?could abandon the Democrats if Clinton wins the nomination.

“When I looked at those results, I couldn’t wait to see what happened in my district and you saw that and it has to give you pause,” DeLeo said. “That anger, it is starting to come down to the state level as well.”

But U.S. Rep Michael Capuano, in a separate Herald Radio interview, didn’t seem so worried ?The Donald would trump Clinton in Massachusetts come November.

“I don’t think that’s the case,” Capuano said when asked whether the real-estate mogul would have a chance. “Trump is going to do better than some; he has already done better. But the people who are simply angry, I think they had their time this Tuesday.

“There will always be people who are just angry,” Capuano continued. “I think that’s why Trump is playing so well. But I don’t know anything of substance other than this beautiful wall that somehow the Mexicans are going to pay for. … Mr. Trump, to my knowledge, from what I’ve heard, has not gotten to the next step of, OK, what are you going to do about it other than, ‘Don’t worry, trust me, it’s going to be great.’ That sounds great, but that’s not real life where I live,” Capuano said.