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Trump Urged To Be More Serious for Wisconsin Primary

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U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump waves to onlookers and reporters as he departs through a back door after meetings at Republican National Committee (RNC) headquarters in Washington March 31, 2016. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

Donald Trump is facing pressure to adopt a more serious tone in his U.S. presidential campaign from Republicans worried that a string of missteps may do him lasting damage in remaining state-by-state contests needed to clinch the nomination.

Those who have marveled at Trump’s rise are cautioning the front-running New York billionaire as weaknesses have emerged in his shoot-from-the-lip approach to campaigning for the party’s nomination to the Nov. 8 election.

Tuesday could be a turning point in Wisconsin where Trump’s leading rival, U.S. Senator Ted Cruz, leads in opinion polls ahead of the state’s primary.

A Cruz win would make it harder for Trump to reach the magic number of 1,237 delegates needed to secure the nomination before the Republican national convention in July.

“If he continues to fumble the ball, he risks everything,” said David Bossie, who as president of the conservative group Citizens United has helped to introduce Trump to grassroots conservative activists. “These types of ham-handed mistakes give his opponents even greater opportunity.”

A 69-year-old businessman and former reality TV show host, Trump has never held public office but hails his mastery of negotiating business deals as the sort of experience a U.S. president needs to be successful at home and abroad.

In recent days Trump has made declarations that sent ripples through a party accustomed to promoting a muscular U.S. foreign policy, suggesting that NATO is obsolete and that Japan and South Korea might need to develop nuclear weapons to ease the U.S. financial commitment to their security.

His statement that women should be punished for getting abortions if the procedure is banned triggered alarm bells among social conservatives who, even though they oppose abortion, do not support punitive measures against women. Trump backtracked hours later.

During a Thursday meeting at the Republican National Committee in Washington with Trump, chairman Reince Priebus addressed any confusion Trump may have had about delegate allocation rules that will govern the July convention, a source familiar with the meeting told Reuters.

Should Trump fail to win enough delegates to secure the nomination outright in the state-by-state contests ending in June, party delegates will select a nominee at the convention in a complex process of sequential votes.

Online predictions market PredictIt said on Friday that the probability Trump will win his party’s nomination had dropped sharply in the past week while the likelihood of a contested convention to choose another candidate had risen.

CAMPAIGN STYLE A RISK

Those Republicans who see in Trump a chance to generate voter turnout beyond party regulars to blue-collar Democrats and win the White House say his detail-free style of campaigning has come back to haunt him and he needs to gear up for a new phase.

Trump needs to be less sensitive about attacks from opponents and let some go by without responding, said retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, a former Republican presidential candidate who dropped out of the race earlier this year and endorsed Trump.

“He does understand that at a certain level but he has a difficult time not responding. If he can just get beyond that and learn how to bite his tongue and redirect people to something that is important, it will show a level of statesmanship,” Carson said.

During the Wisconsin campaign, Trump has relentlessly attacked Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, who dropped out of the presidential race last year and who has endorsed Cruz.

Former U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Newt Gingrich, who has offered Trump informal advice, said Trump should replicate the type of performance he gave at the American Israel Public Affairs Committee on March 21, when he spoke from a teleprompter and offered a well-thought-out case for strong U.S.-Israeli relations.

Gingrich said Trump should make eight to 10 policy speeches in order to give voters “a sense of stability and seriousness.”

“He has certain habits that may have been appropriate at one time and are not appropriate now,” Gingrich said. “He’s gone from being an insurgent that people laughed at and a front-runner that people were amazed by to the potential nominee. That requires you to change your role as all this comes together.”

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders will compete in Wisconsin on Tuesday on the Democratic Party side. Both have hopscotched between the Upper Midwestern state and New York, which holds an April 19 primary.

Clinton, a former U.S. senator from New York with national campaign headquarters in Brooklyn, is trying to prevent the Brooklyn-born Sanders, who represents Vermont in Congress, from eroding support on her home turf.