TPM:

Republican presidential candidate and real estate mogul Donald Trump gave out his rival candidate Sen. Lindsey Graham's (R-SC) cell phone number on Tuesday during a speech in Bluffton, South Carolina. Trump told the crowd that Graham had previously been "begging" for a mention on the Fox News show "Fox & Friends" when the real estate mogul still made regular weekly appearances. "I wrote the number down! I don't know if it's the right number, but let's try it," Trump said, proceeding to read the 10-digit phone number. Trump said it was an old number so it might not be work. He then repeated the number. Politico reported that it called Graham at that number after Trump gave it out and the senator picked up.

Donald Trump has opened a double-digit lead in the race for the Republican nomination. And, yes, Latino voters have noticed that the rest of GOP field was quick to attack Trump for saying John McCain isn't a war hero, for calling Rick Perry stupid, for giving his supporters Lindsey Graham's cell number... but they were soooooooo slow to attack Trump for calling all Mexican immigrants rapists and thieves. Latino voters also noticed that Jeb! Bush, who is married to a Mexican immigrant, didn't get around to criticizing Trump's comments about Mexican immigrants until after Macy's, NBC, Serta Mattress Company, and Univision had all slammed (and dumped) Donald Trump. Jeb! should've been the first GOP candidate to slam Trump—he should've been the first American to slam Trump—but Jeb! let the department stores and mattress guys go first. (How do you say "leading from behind" in Spanish?)

In related news...

New research out Friday shows that Republicans will need a larger slice of Latino voters than previously thought if they hope to win the White House in 2016, creating an even tougher hurdle for the eventual nominee. Thanks to changing demographics, the conventional math that once said the GOP would need to win a minimum of 40% of the Latino electorate no longer holds. Now, data suggests that Republicans will need as much as 47% of Latino voters—nearly twice the share that Mitt Romney is believed to have captured in 2012.

That number—47—isn't a lucky one for Republican candidates.