Ben Carson endorses Donald Trump as GOP nominee

The retired neurosurgeon recently dropped out of the Republican presidential race.

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Lynne Sladky/AP
Former Republican presidential candidate Ben Carson shakes hands with Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, after announcing he will endorse Trump during a news conference at the Mar-A-Lago Club, Friday, March 11, 2016, in Palm Beach, Fla.

Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump won another high-profile endorsement on Friday when retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson became the second former Republican candidate to back him in the race for the White House.

"We buried the hatchet. That was political stuff," Carson said during a joint appearance with the billionaire businessman at a news conference at Trump's Mar-a-Lago Club resort in Palm Beach, Florida.

"I have found in talking with him, that there's a lot more alignment, philosophically and spiritually, than I ever thought that there was," added Carson, warmly praising his former rival and seeking to present him as more thoughtful than his public image often suggests.

The latest endorsement for Trump followed a CNN-hosted Republican debate in Miami on Thursday night at which Trump and the remaining three candidates in the Republican race struck a markedly more civil tone. Carson's backing also gives the New York real estate magnate a boost just days before crucial nominating contests in the battle to be the party's presidential candidate for the Nov. 8 election.

Republican primaries in five states - including Florida and Ohio - on March 15 will be critical for Trump to cement his lead, and to determine whether Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida and Ohio Gov. John Kasich will be able to continue with their increasingly long-shot candidacies. Trump's nearest rival in the race is Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas.

During Friday's news conference, both Trump and Carson talked of "two" Donald Trumps - the public and the personal - apparently seeking to highlight a more measured side in contrast to his combative and sometimes crude tone on the campaign trail.

"There are two different Donald Trumps: there's the one you see on the stage and there's the one who's very cerebral, sits there and considers things very carefully. You can have a very good conversation with him. And that's the Donald Trump that you're going to start seeing more and more of right now," Carson said.

Trump said Carson had not asked for any formal role, but praised his former rival's ideas on education. "Ben's going to have a big, big part," he said.

Carson, who gathered some support last year in opinion polls but whose campaign failed to garner backing in the early nominating contests, dropped out of the race last week.

Trump began his presidential run as a long shot but has won a string of early primary contests to become clear front-runner.

In the process, he has alarmed many in the Republican establishment with his brash style and statements about immigrants, Muslims and free trade. That has prompted some party leaders to push for anyone but Trump.

Carson, asked why he did not back Cruz, said he could not support political operatives who want to stop Trump and that blocking him would fracture the Republican Party and hand Democrats a victory in November.

His endorsement on Friday followed that of another former candidate, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, who announced last month he was getting behind Trump.

DEFENDING COMMENTS ON MUSLIMS

Next Tuesday's voting will be a pivotal point as candidates chase the 1,237 delegates from primary contests needed to win the nomination. Trump has 459 delegates, followed by Cruz at 360, Rubio at 152, and Kasich at 54, according to the Associated Press.

Earlier on Friday, Trump continued to defend comments he made in recent television interviews stating that Muslims hate the United States.

Trump, who has proposed a temporary ban on Muslims entering the United States, told Fox News in an interview, "I don't have to be politically correct."

"I didn't say 'all' (Muslims) but boy, there is tremendous hatred there, there's no question about it, and we might as well recognize it folks," he added.

For his part, Rubio said in a round of television interviews Friday morning he was still in position to win Florida's winner-take-all contest next week. Voters in his home state who do not want Trump as the Republican nominee should support him, he said.

"If they don't want Donald Trump to be our nominee, then voting for John Kasich or Ted Cruz in Florida is a vote for Donald Trump," Rubio said on ABC's "Good Morning America."

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