Carly Fiorina drops out of race for president
Republican presidential candidate Carly Fiorina waits to be introduced at a campaign event at Maple Avenue Elementary School on Saturday in Goffstown, N.H.
According to a recent Monmouth University poll, Fiorina now has 5 percent support in New Hampshire.
Should Fiorina drop out of the race, Bowmaster said his No. 2 choice would be Donald Trump.
Presidential candidate Carly Fiorina, former CEO of Hewlett-Packard, hosted a Super Bowl pre-Game Party at The Yard Seafood & Steakhouse restaurant in Manchester, New Hampshire. She bested only Ben Carson and failed to add to the number of delegates pledged to support her at the GOP convention this summer. “We have a long way to go in terms of knowing how things are going to settle out”.
Still, Fiorina struck a chord with many Republican voters, many of whom were especially drawn to her fierce anti-abortion viewpoints and spirited appearances on the campaign trail and in debates. “Can you imagine that, the face of our next president?”
Fiorina stood out in the initial “undercard” debate in August and rode a wave of attention and improved poll numbers to participate in several of the main debates. While the woman is unidentified, she managed to capture the election apathy that some voters are feeling in 2016.
Fiorina, who also finished seventh in last week’s Iowa caucuses, is struggling to break through and risks being left out of the upcoming GOP debate in SC.
Asked about what she would have brought to the debate stage, Fiorina emphasised her problem-solving over her conservatism.
Although Fiorina isn’t behind his legal right to marry, Bowmaster said he believes marriage is a state issue and, even if she were to somehow reverse the Supreme Court decision, the candidate would leave to states the ability to legalize same-sex marriage. Carly says she is still in it, and she’s not asking for conservative women’s vote just because she’s a woman.
“I think they will bear responsibility in voting really seriously”, Epstein said, noting that attendance at campaign stops in the week leading up to the primary was up.