Donald Trump added to his Tuesday night victories with Illinois, winning the state in spite of a violent protest that broke out in Chicago last week during one of his rallies.

If anything, it seems the outbursts and canceled rally emboldened his support.

Elsewhere in the Midwest, incumbent Gov. John Kasich won the Republican primary in Ohio, seizing 66 delegates in the winner-take-all state and giving his thus-far weak campaign a shot of adrenaline.

Kasich was banking heavily on winning his home state, which is a crucial swing state and bellwether in the general election. He went as far as saying that he would have dropped out of the race if he lost the state.

However, his path to the nomination is still extremely narrow with the large number of delegates Trump has acquired in previous primary and caucus events.

During a victory speech in Ohio, with the words “As goes Ohio, so goes the nation” draped behind him, Kasich said he refused to acquiesce to negative campaign rhetoric. Presumably, he was targeting Trump’s campaign.

“I want to remind you again tonight that I will not take the low road to the highest office in the land,” he said.

He pledged to continue his campaign.

Hillary Clinton’s victory in Ohio for the Democrats is a blow to her rival, Sen. Bernie Sanders, who was banking on replicating his Michigan victory and arguing that he could win crucial Rust Belt states.

“You voted for our tomorrow to be better than our yesterday,” Clinton said to supporters in West Palm Beach, FL. “Tonight it’s clearer than ever that this may be one of the most consequential campaigns of our lifetimes. If we lift each other up instead of tearing each other down, there’s nothing we can’t accomplish together.”

Clinton used her speech to target Trump, but she did not ignore her rival even after her strong finish. She said that making promises was easy, but acting on them as president was a different task. It was a similar refrain to previous rhetoric she’s used to criticize Sanders’ proposals.

Sanders remained on message and delivered a scathing critique of Wall Street and American democracy.

“The truth is not always pleasant,” he said. “It’s not always what we want to hear, but we cannot go forward unless we deal with the realities of American society today, and that’s what we’re going to do. Truth number one is that today we have a corrupt campaign finance system with Wall Street and billionaires spending unlimited sums of money, which is undermining democracy. To my mind, democracy is not complicated. It’s one person, one vote. You want to for me, great. You don’t, that’s OK. What I do not want to see is billionaires spending unlimited sums of money, buying elections and undermining our democracy.”

On the Republican side, Sen. Marco Rubio suspended his campaign after a devastating primary loss in his home state of Florida to Trump.

The billionaire’s win of the large basket of delegates in the Sunshine State cemented his role as a front-runner.

Unfortunately for the Rubio, Florida’s delegates were rewarded in a winner-take-all system, meaning he received none of the 99 delegates. The distant second place finish undoubtedly forced him out of the campaign.

During a speech after the polls closed, Rubio addressed an enthusiastic crowd, which often erupted into chants of “Marco.”

“I want to congratulate Donald Trump for his big victory in Florida,” he said. “There’s nothing more you could’ve done. You worked hard, and we worked hard.”

He attributed the current political climate to widespread frustration after the 2008 economic collapse and the leadership of President Barack Obama. He said his campaign and life were struggles against “elites” and Washington insiders.

“I’ve battled my whole life against the so-called elites who told me to wait my turn,” he said. “The easiest thing to do in this campaign is to jump on those things that make people angry. The politics of resentment will not just leave us a fractured party, but a fractured nation.”

Rubio blamed some of the lack of movement in Washington on both the tea party and conservatives, as well as the political establishment. However, he also condemned Trump’s angry rhetoric,

Clinton also won Florida’s Democratic primary and North Carolina’s. The victories completed her sweep of the Southeast, a bastion of African-American and Latino voters.