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NEW YORK, NY - MAY 03: Republican presidential front runner Donald Trump speaks to supporters and the media at Trump Tower in Manhattan following his victory in the Indiana primary on May 03, 2016 in New York, New York. Trump beat rival Ted Cruz decisively in a contest that many analysts believe was the last chance for any other Republican candidate to catch Trump in the delegate count. Spencer Platt/Getty Images/AFP == FOR NEWSPAPERS, INTERNET, TELCOS & TELEVISION USE ONLY == Image Credit: AFP

Donald Trump could actually be the next president. Just let that sink in.

This is a man who actively demeans women, has encouraged violence at his campaign rallies, would ban all Muslims from entering the US and recently seemed undisturbed by an endorsement from a leader of the Ku Klux Klan. And yet Trump, a political outsider, is poised to grasp the highest office in the land.

It was never supposed to happen. But here we are. On Tuesday night in Indiana, in the primary that nobody thought would matter, the thing that nobody thought possible a year ago, is really coming to pass. Donald Trump is set to become the Republican party’s presidential nominee. He is really winning, like he always says. Only it’s not a joke or catchy mantra — it’s reality. And even he seems to understand how absurd that is. “It’s been an unbelievable day and evening and year,” Trump said at the beginning of his acceptance speech.

Unbelievable is one word for it. After the race was called from Trump on Tuesday night, Ted Cruz, the only thing standing between him and the nomination, suspended his campaign.

This was never supposed to happen. Early polling had showed a tight race between Trump and Cruz. And Cruz had thrown everything he had at the contest, from money, to a newsy presidential pick and a non-aggression pact with John Kasich. Even up until Tuesday’s election, insiders continued to insist that delegate math protect the party from Trump’s nomination.

But suddenly with Cruz’s announcement (and later John Kasich’s too), the spectre of a contested convention fell away and the Republican primary was a one-man show. One big, orange, frightening one-man show.

Beaming at his audience on stage in the Trump Tower, he heaped lavish praise on people he’s disparaged the most, from women — he’s called them “dogs” ... — to Cruz himself, whom he recently declared “everyone hates”.

Political transparency

“He is a tough smart competitor”, Trump said of Cruz, a man he’d earlier said that everyone hates. Nevermind what’s honest, Trump has never been concerned with that. The relationship between the two men has always been politically transparent, and Tuesday night was no exception. After all, Trump will need to win over Cruz’s evangelical base if he’s ever going to beat Hillary Clinton in a general election.

And he does have some support in such shenanigans. No sooner had Cruz stepped aside then Republican chairman Reince Priebus tried to get out ahead of the narrative by calling for the party to unite behind Trump. “@realDonaldTrump will be presumptive @GOP nominee, we all need to unite and focus on defeating @HillaryClinton #NeverClinton”, he tweeted.

Not everyone’s on-board (Cruz, in one of his last acts as a presidential candidate, nuked the billionaire real estate mogul as a “pathological liar”), but it doesn’t matter anymore.

Indiana was the moment when Cruz said that, if Trump wins again, “America will plunge into the abyss”. Maybe he was right — November is still a long way off.

Meanwhile, the new normal in America is a strange reality indeed. Donald Trump is winning and nobody — not Ted Cruz nor the entire Republican party working in concert (remember the #NeverTrump crusade?), can stop him.

— Guardian News & Media Ltd

Lucia Graves is a Guardian US columnist. She was previously a staff correspondent for National Journal magazine and a staff reporter at Huffington Post.