New Hampshire goes to the polls in crucial US vote
“She just said a bad thing”, Trump said. No public polling has found Clinton in the lead in New Hampshire since November. But the storm did not stop the candidates from holding campaign events. “I wouldn’t know, you never know what’s going to happen”.
Sanders, a Democratic socialist who proposes drastically larger government welfare programs, also campaigned in Manchester, where he continued to rail against economic inequality. “It is not right that 29 million Americans have no health insurance and more are underinsured”, Sanders said.
The CNN/WMUR poll was conducted by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center by telephone from February 4-8.
And now, fully 60% of likely Democratic primary voters say that either Sanders or Clinton would be OK, up from 52% at the start of the tracking poll. Kasich and Bush need the boost most.
“Trump has always been ahead in New Hampshire (polls) and is expected to win”, Sanderoff said.
Even if you’re sixth? “He’s like a child, a spoiled child”.
Trump, who had been watching Bush’s interview, fired back immediately, launching a series of aggressive attacks and insults at the former Florida governor. After Iowa caucuses last week, the primary election in New Hampshire tomorrow is only the second one, and thereafter it would gradually move to other states in then next few months.
GOVERNORS: Jeb Bush – the former Florida governor and son and brother of presidents – Ohio Governor Kasich and New Jersey Governor Chris Christie are fighting to maintain their credibility and in Christie’s case, his survival in the race.
John Kasich seems to be getting some late-stage momentum, and he has been campaigning as hard as anyone in the Granite State. “I’m looking forward to actual people actually voting rather than polls and pundits and all the talking”, Christie said. Bush, who has blasted Trump for using eminent domain in business deals, called Trump a “loser”, while the billionaire businessman called Bush an “embarrassment to his family”. Some Clinton supporters also fear she isn’t doing as well with female voters as she should be, a concern that was magnified after high-profile women backing her campaign made eyebrow-raising comments that appeared to disparage young women supporting Sanders.
On the Republican side, frontrunner Donald Trump is hoping for a better performance than in last week’s Iowa caucuses, won by Senator Ted Cruz.