Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Bernie Sanders coasted to
victory on a wave of voter anger in the New Hampshire presidential
nominating contest, thrashing traditional US politicians in a display of
anti-establishment power.
Sweeping wins by Trump, a New York billionaire, and Sanders, a
democratic socialist, on Tuesday testified to the sizable share of
American voters upset at US economic conditions and willing to send a
shockwave to Washington in the November 8 presidential election.
New Hampshire's verdict sets up a tough fight for Republicans in
South Carolina on February 20 and for Democrats there on February 27.
Some of the most monumental campaign battles in elections past have been
fought in the state that holds the first primary election of the
American South.
For Trump, New Hampshire showed he has staying power and can take a
punch after losing on February 1 to Texas Senator Ted Cruz in the first
contest, the Iowa caucuses. His win showed pundits were wrong to think
he would ultimately self-destruct based on his penchant for insults and
imprecise plans for the presidency.
Democrat Hillary Clinton, the former US secretary of state and former
US senator, now looks wounded, trailing Sanders by 60 to 39 per cent
based on 86 per cent of the returns.
The wife of former President Bill
Clinton, Clinton barely won Iowa and now has been trounced in New
Hampshire, where young voters liked Sanders' populist proposals to break
up big banks and have the government pay for free college tuition.
"People have every right to be angry but they're also hungry, they're
hungry for solutions," Clinton, 68, said after congratulating the
74-year-old Sanders. "I will work harder than anyone to actually make
the changes that make your lives better."
Clinton was headed to New York, home to her campaign headquarters, to
regroup with top aides and prepare for Thursday's Democratic debate.
Her campaign has denied reports it is considering a shakeup but
acknowledged it would be natural to add members to their team as the
campaign progresses.
Sanders said his victory showed "we have sent the message that will
echo from Wall Street to Washington, from Maine to California, and that
is that the government of our great country belongs to all of the people
and not just a handful of wealthy campaign contributors".
Some 73 per cent of voters say they think the United States is on the
wrong track, and these disaffected people make up a majority of the
support bases for Trump and Sanders, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll.
They are worried about the economy and distrust establishment politicians they perceive as being part of the problem.
Shadow-boxing Trump
Trump, 69, who has campaigned to deport illegal immigrants and
temporarily ban Muslims from entering the United States, was in first
place with 35 per cent of the vote on the Republican side based on 88
per cent of returns.
At his victory rally, Trump dispensed with niceties. He congratulated
other candidates in the race but promised to soon return to his
pugnacious approach.
"Tomorrow: boom, boom," he said, shadow boxing while his supporters cheered.
The New Hampshire Republican race did little to clear up confusion
about who would emerge as the establishment contender to Trump on the
Republican side.
Ohio's Republican governor, John Kasich, won a spirited fight for
second place in New Hampshire, with Cruz, former Florida Governor Jeb
Bush and US Senator Marco Rubio of Florida fighting for third place. All
four were headed to South Carolina.
Bush, the son and brother of former presidents, lived to fight
another day, making something of a comeback after a strong debate
performance and solid weekend of campaigning.
"While the reality TV star is doing well, it looks like you all have
reset the race," Bush told supporters. "This campaign is not dead. We're
going on to South Carolina."
Rubio failed to dispatch Bush, seeing a drop in his support after a
debate on Saturday in which he drew criticism for repeating rehearsed
lines from his stump speech.
"I did not do well on Saturday night – listen to this: that will never happen again," Rubio told supporters.
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, who called out Rubio for his
robotic debate, fell behind the others in the voting and canceled plans
to go to South Carolina, a sign he could drop out soon.
Disenchanted voters
Independent voters wield special clout in New Hampshire, second in
the series of state-by-state contests that lead to the parties' formal
presidential nominating conventions in July, because they can vote in
either party's primary.
At a polling station in Manchester, Joan and Roland Martineau said
they voted for the two candidates they believed they could trust to
shake things up.
Joan, 68, went for Sanders. "I like this views, I like the way he speaks, I think I can trust him," she said.
Roland, 73, a registered Republican, went for Trump, a man he said
was "more honest" than other candidates. But he said he would back
Sanders over Trump in the general election in November.
Clinton had for months been the front-runner nationally. But a
Reuters/Ipsos poll done February 2-5 showed Clinton and Sanders now in a
dead heat.
Clinton campaign manager Robby Mook said in a memo that the
Democratic nomination would "very likely" be decided in March, with the
support of black and Hispanic voters key to victory. The next primary
races are in Nevada and South Carolina later this month.
"It will be very difficult, if not impossible, for a Democrat to win
the nomination without strong levels of support among African-American
and Hispanic voters," Mook wrote.
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