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"When he was in Iowa, it was all about social conservatism, and then when he came to New Hampshire, that almost completely vanished," he said. "So I don't think that it's going to have a huge impact on how people campaign here because I think to some extent, the state already had the reputation for being more libertarian, if not more moderate." New Hampshire's primaries are open to independents, who outnumber those registered with either party and hold significant sway. Many are likely to vote Republican in 2012 if President Barack Obama seeks re-election and faces no primary opposition. In Iowa, there's very little party switching or involvement by independents, and history shows that a relatively small number of the parties' hard-core activists determine the outcome. Giving an easy victory to Huckabee, an ordained Baptist minister, speaks volumes of the mindset of the Republican activists who dominate the party and the precinct caucuses. "We've gone so far to the social right, particularly in caucus attendees, that unless you meet certain litmus tests, you have a very difficult time competing in Iowa," said Doug Gross, the party's 2002 gubernatorial nominee. Gay marriage might pose a different kind of litmus test in New Hampshire, said Jennifer Donahue, political director of the New Hampshire Institute of Politics. "The way people interpret this issue tells more about their feelings about government's role in their personal lives than it does about gay marriage," she said. "It becomes almost a litmus test for the candidates as to how libertarian they are."
[Associated
Press;
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