Republicans Christie, Fiorina to quit White House bids
“The Sunday morning before the race you’re going to have a flyer on your church window with something negative about one of these guys – all of them”, said Sellers, who is also a CNN contributor.
However, New Hampshire has completely changed this setup.
“You’re so politically correct”, Trump said. Mr. Trump needs to show he can build on the frustration-fuelled win in New Hampshire. Sanders collected 60 percent of the votes in the Democratic primary, swamping former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton with 37.
Sanders, a Vermont senator and self-proclaimed democratic socialist, raised $5 million-plus in less than a day after his New Hampshire triumph. Instead of trying to avoid attacking his GOP rivals on the debate stage, Rubio said hes now prepared to fight back when necessary particularly with his partys front-runner Donald Trump.The hard thing about Donald in the short-term is he doesnt have any policy positions, Rubio said. And Sanders made a pit stop in NY to discuss issues affecting African-Americans over breakfast with the Rev. Al Sharpton. Clinton, meanwhile, announced plans to campaign with the mother of Sandra Bland, whose death while in police custody became a symbol of racial tensions.
“It obviously breathes more life into his campaign, to push him down to South Carolina”, Capito said of Bush. Ted Cruz, the Iowa caucuses victor, and perhaps U.S. Sen.
“What Iowa and New Hampshire demonstrate is that the only person in this field who can beat Donald Trump is me”, Cruz said on “The Mike Gallagher Show”. He drew contrasts with Trump as he told a crowd of 500 in Myrtle Beach that Texans and South Carolinians are more alike than not. We don’t win with the military. “So it is a serious test – there’s no other way of putting it”.
The newly “chosen” front runner for the GOP establishment was constantly berated by Chris Christie in the debate Saturday night, which had a large impact on his numbers in New Hampshire.
Rubio’s campaign has looked forward to the state.
Chris Christie, who prioritized trudging between taverns and meeting halls across New Hampshire ahead of attending to the damage from the historic nor’easter passing over his home state, did poorly, to say the least.
His campaign’s suggestion that the race could veer a contested convention seemed to signal to mainstream Republicans that the party would be ill-served by allowing the Trump phenomenon to last much longer.
And then she handed in a strong enough performance in that debate to rise into the top-polling tier of GOP candidates.
For Gov. John Kasich, whose second-place showing was New Hampshire’s primary stunner, the task was to convert newfound interest into support in a state ideologically distant from his native Ohio. Radio and TV ads featuring George W. Bush have started airing in SC.
Seeking votes at a local business in Charleston, Kasich worked to burnish his reputation as a results-oriented leader.
Or, as Kasich said in his speech Tuesday: If you don’t have a seat belt, buy one. “And if the country doesn’t solve its problems, it gets flabby”.
Rubio had been the target of an intense negative advertising campaign by Bush and Christie.
The crowded Republican field – in which five professional politicians with experience in elected office clawed their way towards second place – on the other hand, offered a master class in the Art of Losing.