HOW WOMEN VOTED IN INDIANA:

The Republican Party returned to a more narrow gender gap, with 53 percent of the primary electorate made up of men and 47 percent made up of women. Both sexes voted for Trump. More men than women voted for Trump, 59 percent to 47 percent. That’s a gender gap of 12 points.

Cruz came in second, but it was a distant second with men (33 percent) and a closer second with women (41 percent voted for the Texas senator).

The Democratic primary electorate faced a much wider gender gap, as has been the norm this election. Fifty-nine percent of Democratic primary voters in Indiana were women, and just 41 percent were men, for a gender gap of 18 points.

Sanders won over 57 percent of men, but women split evenly. . . . Sanders doesn’t usually do this well with women voters in close elections, but it could be a sign that Clinton isn’t going to run away with the female vote as easily as she thought.

The Republican primary has effectively ended, but Democrats will face off next in California, Nebraska and West Virginia.

Stay tuned.