5 Ways the Republican Debate Did (And Didn’t) Change the Presidential Race

The GOP hopefuls faced off in Des Moines without Trump.

Meanwhile, in an unprecedented move, Trump skipped the debate to hold his own event across town.

Here are five ways last night's debate did (and didn’t) change in the race to the White House:

1. The Donald Was There – Even Though He Wasn’t

Ted Cruz opened the debate by insulting his competition as "stupid and ugly," and then joking: “We've gotten the Donald Trump portion out of the way.” But Trump’s influence on the night was far from over.

Even though the real estate mogul wasn’t on the debate stage, he was still the most-searched for candidate in the race on Thursday night, according to Google.

Trump held an anti-debate event in Iowa that honored veterans, saying that he would donate millions of dollars to organizations that support them. We’ll find out on Monday whether the risky gamble paid off.

2. Ted Cruz Becomes The New Target

With Trump down the street, the debate stage was clear for other candidates to aim their fire at the next best thing: Cruz.

He tried to frame himself as the front-runner during the debate, complaining about the attacks at one point. "I would note that the last four questions had been please attack Ted, Jeb, please attack Ted," he said.

When Iowans woke up this morning, the Des Moines Register headline read: “Rough night for Ted Cruz.” Cruz is locked in a tight battle with Trump in Iowa, and some top Republicans speculate that a Trump win there could pave his way to the nomination.

3. Could Immigration Be Rubio’s Achilles Heel?

But his support for “Gang of 8” immigration reform legislation in the senate has opened up a line of attack from fellow Republicans.

4. New Hampshire Moderate Bloc Splintered - Still

All three had solid performances during Thursday night’s debate.

But with the three candidates stagnant around 10 percent in most New Hampshire polls, no one has emerged from the pack to threaten Trump, who has led every New Hampshire poll by double-digits since October.

5. Past Iowa Darlings In Trouble

For some candidates, their time in the Iowa sun has already come to an end.