Trump aims to win New Hampshire, rivals aim to survive
Don’t trust the polls.
“I’ve got a story to tell and he doesn’t and that’s the difference”.
Cruz, a senator from Texas, won in Iowa, but is considered an underdog in New Hampshire. I have Marco, honestly Marco was having a hard time. But his campaign did take issue with Clinton’s claim that Sanders benefited from Wall Street money donated to Senate Democrats’ campaign arm, with campaign manager Jeff Weaver arguing it “suggests the kind of disarray that the Clinton campaign finds itself in today”. Old fashioned politicking and candidate shopping will be rendered irrelevant by diversity. “And, you know, you kinda let ’em vote, and you figure out how you did”.
In the Democratic race, Sanders tops Clinton 61 percent to 35 percent, an uptick for Sanders since the last update to the tracking poll, while Clinton holds steady. He underperformed expectations in Iowa, and he can’t afford to do it again in New Hampshire.
Trump, while continuing to lead, continues to be the candidate most likely of those polled said they would not vote for under any circumstances, named by 32 percent.
Republicans Jeb Bush, Mr Christie and John Kasich have all spent significantly more time in New Hampshire than their rivals, trying to drum up support in the state in recent months. The media Narrative also seems to have shifted.
In the last few years, Donald Trump has expressed views on taxes, health care, immigration and eminent domain that are all much more liberal than collective GOP base. The worst possible outcome for Rubio in New Hampshire is to finish behind Jeb, and the further behind he is the more damaging the result will be.
However, Trump has one critical structural advantage.
But for other candidates, like Republican Govs. That means that Cruz, though trailing in final 2016 New Hampshire primary polls, still has a good chance to beat Trump on the strength of his larger network of field offices and supporters. Cruz may well place in second because of his superior organization (the best of any of the candidates nationwide) but a victory would be nearly unfathomable. Suddenly, despite the hype about Kasich’s strength, they’re moving to attack Jeb Bush. “We’re going to do something really, really special”. Assume NONE of the undecideds break for Trump.
Florida Sen. Marco Rubio is looking to continue his momentum from a stronger-than-expected third-place finish in Iowa – and to recover from a poorly reviewed debate performance on Saturday night. Like a shotgun fired from a distance, the anti-Trump vote will be petered out. Trump hasn’t said exactly what techniques he’d support, but he told a town hall in Salem that waterboarding is “peanuts” compared to what Islamic State militants are doing. They’re a handshake between voter and candidate. But for now, Trump should feel optimistic.
That reality is thickening the blizzard of attacks blanketing the Granite State because some candidates know that the primary could set the contours of the race for those who move on and snuff out the White House dreams of some Republicans who falter on Tuesday. No public polling has found Clinton in the lead in New Hampshire since November. What hope does Rubio have in SC if he ends up fighting there just to split the center-right vote with Bush?
It’s less than two days until New Hampshire voters go to the polls. “I want to win”. He wants Bush in 3rd and Cruz in 4th (or even 5th). He blasted what he said was Trump’s proclivity for “insulting women, castigating Hispanics, ridiculing the disabled and calling American POWs losers”.
However, this is Trump’s moment.