Rubio's unexpectedly strong third-place showing in Monday's Iowa
caucuses has made him the target of rival Republican candidates who
focused their campaigns on the New England state's
first-in-the-nation primary.
Christie, the New Jersey governor, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush
and Ohio Governor John Kasich all hope for a strong showing in New
Hampshire to boost their flagging campaigns to become the Republican
nominee in the Nov. 8 election to replace Democratic President
Barack Obama.
While Christie said on Thursday he would not be out of the race if
he lost to Rubio in New Hampshire, Kasich has told audiences he
would go back to Ohio if he got "smoked" there.
U.S. Senator Ted Cruz, who won the Iowa caucuses on strong
evangelical Christian credentials, was expected to have less appeal
for voters in New Hampshire. Real estate mogul Donald Trump's
second-place showing in Iowa raised questions about how well his
popularity can survive the voting booth.
Christie has been one of Rubio's fiercest critics this week, calling
the first-term U.S. senator from Florida "the boy in the bubble" the
day after the Iowa vote. He continued the personal vein of attack on
Thursday.
"This isn't the most controlled candidate we've seen in this race at
all. His handlers handle him all the time," Christie said on Fox
News.
"We need to take him out of that controlled atmosphere because,
believe me, it won't be controlled against Hillary Clinton this
fall," he said.
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Clinton, the former secretary of state, is battling U.S. Senator
Bernie Sanders of Vermont for the Democratic nomination.
Bush, whose establishment Republican credentials have not guaranteed
him public support, has also turned on his former protege.
On Wednesday he took out a full-page ad in a leading New Hampshire
newspaper, the Union-Leader, attacking Rubio as not ready to serve
as commander in chief.
"Nearly every political leader in Florida of stature who knows Marco
and Jeb's records have joined us in endorsing Governor Bush," the ad
read.
Rubio has garnered significant endorsements since Monday, including
U.S. Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina, which holds its primary
this month, and U.S. Representative Matt Salmon of Arizona, a
co-founder of the conservative House Freedom Caucus.
(Additional reporting by Susan Heavey; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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