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			 After nearly every rally, the billionaire real estate developer 
			hops into one of his planes or helicopters and returns to New York 
			so that he can sleep in his own bed in his marble-and-gold-furnished 
			Trump Tower apartment in Manhattan. 
			 
			In November and December, Trump held six rallies in Iowa, visited a 
			local production plant and held one town hall, flying home each 
			night. His nearest rival for the Republican nomination, Ted Cruz, 
			has zigzagged around the state, holding around a dozen town halls 
			and twice as many "meet-and-greet" sessions, and bedding down 
			between stops in hotels. 
			 
			Trump's determination to sleep at home every night raises eyebrows 
			among election campaign veterans, who say it could cost him. Voters 
			in Iowa and New Hampshire often want more personal attention; they 
			feel they play a special role in choosing presidential nominees 
			because their contests are held first. 
			 
			Trump leads in polls in New Hampshire but he has slipped behind Cruz 
			in Iowa. Cruz has done what U.S. presidential candidates typically 
			do: He has made the state a virtual second home in the run-up to 
			Iowa's first-in-the-nation caucus. 
			  
			
			  
			 
			This week Cruz is crisscrossing the state in a bus, cruising through 
			small hamlets with stops at a pizza place, coffee house and even a 
			water park. 
			 
			Trump's schedule this week, by contrast, illustrates his tendency to 
			get out of town quickly. On Monday evening he addressed a crowd in 
			Lowell, Massachusetts, and was due to address a rally in Claremont, 
			New Hampshire, just a couple of hours north the following day. 
			Instead of overnighting in a hotel, he flew home. On Tuesday Trump 
			flew to Claremont and then returned to New York. 
			 
			In an interview, Trump said he needs time each morning in his 
			Manhattan office to run his businesses, which include a string of 
			high-end hotels and resorts. 
			 
			"It works very well for me," he said, adding that he can quickly get 
			to and from campaign stops thanks to his private aircraft fleet. 
			"For the smaller airports, the (Cessna) Citation X, and for the 
			larger airports, the Boeing 757," which has a big bed. 
			 
			He also has a helicopter, which he used while traveling between his 
			Palm Beach mansion and a rally in Hilton Head, South Carolina, on 
			Dec. 30, where once again he did not stay the night. 
			 
			"HOMEBODY" TRUMP 
			 
			"Trump is a man who likes to be on the couch with a good 
			cheeseburger and likes to watch TV - he's a homebody," said his 
			friend and former adviser Roger Stone, who recently founded a 
			pro-Trump Super PAC, a political group that can raise unlimited 
			funds to advocate for Trump as long as it does not coordinate with 
			his campaign. 
			 
			"He likes being in his own bed, even if it means coming into 
			Teterboro or LaGuardia after midnight," he added, referring to two 
			airports Trump uses in the New York area. 
			  Trump rejected Stone's explanation. 
			 
			While Trump breakfasts in his Manhattan quarters, with sweeping 
			views of Central Park, his opponents are waking up in Holiday Inns 
			or Courtyard Marriotts. 
			 
			Cruz spent Monday night in a motel in Missouri Valley, Iowa, where 
			vending machines sold items with long-past expiry dates. His 
			campaign manager Jeff Roe fired off a series of bemused tweets about 
			the state of the motel, lamenting the presence of "the long hair on 
			the pillow" that he found in his room. 
			 
			Strategists said Trump not only risks alienating potential 
			supporters but also the political operatives in states that can help 
			turn out the vote. 
			 
			
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			"Not everything in a presidential campaign can be accomplished with 
			a speech or a rally," said Matt Schlapp, chairman of the American 
			Conservative Union, a grassroots conservative political group, and a 
			former White House political director for President George W. Bush. 
			The group has not endorsed a candidate. 
			 
			"You attend a family event of a supporter in a key state: weddings, 
			funerals, graduations, Christmas parties - these have an important 
			psychological impact," he said. 
			 
			Trump said he has stayed in Iowa "numerous times," but a campaign 
			source who did not want to be identified said he remembered Trump 
			staying overnight only once in Iowa and once in New Hampshire. 
			 
			ON THE ROAD 
			 
			That's a far cry from candidates like New Jersey Governor Chris 
			Christie, who has logged more hours in New Hampshire than any other 
			Republican still in the race. Christie and others regularly hold 
			meet-and-greets, attend local government meetings and find ways to 
			make themselves approachable to voters ahead of the state's Feb. 9 
			primary election. 
			 
			In Iowa, where state residents will attend caucuses on Feb. 1, Cruz 
			is in the middle of a week-long bus tour that will take him to 36 
			different counties. 
			 
			Former Democratic candidate Chris Dodd took the practice to an 
			extreme in 2008, when he went so far as to move his entire family to 
			Iowa, enrolling his children in school there. He nonetheless lost to 
			Barack Obama. 
			 
			Trump sees it more as a numbers game. His rallies attract between 
			3,000 and 20,000 people each time he appears and are often broadcast 
			on television. 
			
			  
			"I have more people at one event than most candidates see in a 
			month," he said. 
			 
			Even so, Trump said he planned to do smaller events in the future 
			and may even decide on some campaign stops that are veritable 
			pilgrimages for his competitors. One such spot is the Red Arrow 
			Diner in Manchester, New Hampshire, where candidates are expected to 
			stop by and greet customers. 
			 
			"It's a distinct possibility," he said. 
			 
			He also said he would begin making multi-day trips to early primary 
			states like Iowa, South Carolina and Nevada, where he can choose to 
			stay at his own hotel, the Trump International Hotel Las Vegas. 
			 
			(Reporting By Emily Flitter in New York; Additional reporting by 
			Michelle Conlin in Iowa, editing by Ross Colvin) 
			[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
			reserved.] 
			Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
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