Sanders just beats Buttigieg in New Hampshire Democratic primary, Biden
in fifth
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[February 12, 2020]
By John Whitesides and Amanda Becker
MANCHESTER, N.H. - Bernie Sanders narrowly
won New Hampshire's Democratic presidential primary on Tuesday,
solidifying his front-runner status in the race to take on Donald Trump
and dealing a setback to moderate rival Joe Biden, who finished a
disappointing fifth.
Pete Buttigieg, the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, who edged out
Sanders in last week's messy Iowa caucuses, came in a close second after
splitting much of the centrist vote with Senator Amy Klobuchar.
Sanders, a progressive senator from neighboring Vermont, prevailed after
fending off attacks from rivals who warned his left-wing views would
lead the party to defeat in the Nov. 3 election against Republican
President Trump.
"This victory here is the beginning of the end for Donald Trump,"
Sanders told supporters in Manchester, New Hampshire.
In a sign of the growing rivalry between Sanders, the 78-year-old
self-professed democratic socialist, and Buttigieg, a 38-year-old
moderate, Sanders' supporters booed and chanted "Wall Street Pete!" when
Buttigieg's post-primary speech was shown on screens.
It was also a good night for Klobuchar, who rode a wave of momentum from
a strong debate on Friday into third-place finish.
Senator Elizabeth Warren, considered a favorite in New Hampshire until a
few months ago, came fourth, casting further doubt over her viability as
the progressive alternative to Sanders.
The two progressive senators have vowed to tax the rich, eliminate
private health insurance in favor of universal state-run healthcare and
take on Wall Street and corporate corruption.
But their moderate rivals argue their sweeping agenda would alienate
swing and independent voters needed to win back the White House.
NO CLEAR ANSWERS
The results provided no clear answers for Democrats trying to decide
whether their best choice to challenge Trump would be a moderate like
Buttigieg, Klobuchar or Biden, or Sanders and Warren, who represents
neighboring Massachusetts.
Turnout in New Hampshire approached the record 287,000 who cast ballots
in the 2008 Democratic primary, when the battle between Barack Obama and
Hillary Clinton energized the party. That could ease Democratic concerns
about smaller-than-expected turnout in Iowa.
Biden, the former vice president who was once the front-runner in the
Democratic race, limped to his second consecutive poor finish after
placing fourth in Iowa.
He is certain to face growing questions about his campaign's staying
power and his ability to consolidate moderate support against a surging
Buttigieg and Klobuchar.
He also faces competition from Michael Bloomberg, the billionaire former
New York mayor who is skipping the four early voting states and pouring
resources into much larger states like California that will vote on
March 3, known as "Super Tuesday".
Sanders had 26% of the vote and Buttigieg had 25% with more than 91% of
precincts reporting. Klobuchar had 20%, Warren 9% and Biden 8%.
Biden fared poorly in two previous runs for president before winning
election in 2008 as President Barack Obama's No. 2. He hopes to stay
afloat this time until the Feb. 29 contest in South Carolina and a
series of contests in other Southern states on Super Tuesday, where his
support among African Americans will be a strength.
Without strong showings there, his race could be over.
"It ain't over, man. It's just getting started," a defiant Biden told
supporters in South Carolina.
"We just heard from the first two of the 50 states," he said. "Where I
come from, that's the opening bell, not the closing bell. And the fight
to end Donald Trump's presidency is just beginning."
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Democratic U.S. presidential candidate Senator Bernie Sanders is
accompanied by his wife Jane O’Meara Sanders and other relatives as
he speaks at his New Hampshire primary night rally in Manchester,
N.H., U.S., February 11, 2020. REUTERS/Rick Wilking
NOT A LANDSLIDE
For Sanders, who won New Hampshire in 2016 with 60% of the vote
against eventual nominee Hillary Clinton, the results offered new
momentum but not the overwhelming win he had hoped for given his
history in the state.
Exit polls showed he only won about two-thirds of his 2016 primary
supporters.
He and Buttigieg each won nine delegates from New Hampshire to the
national nominating convention in July. Klobuchar won six, while
Warren and Biden were shut out.
The results began to thin the field of Democrats seeking the right
to take on Trump, with businessman Andrew Yang and Senator Michael
Bennet dropping out. CBS News reported that Deval Patrick, the
former Massachusetts governor, would withdraw on Wednesday.
After Iowa and New Hampshire, small and rural states with
predominantly white populations, the race will move on to more
diverse battlegrounds that pose new tests.
Up next will be the Feb. 22 caucuses in Nevada, which has a large
Latino population, and the Feb. 29 primary in South Carolina, which
has a large African-American population.
"We have beaten the odds every step of the way," Klobuchar told
supporters in Concord. "Because of you, we are taking this campaign
to Nevada. We are going to South Carolina. And we are taking this
message of unity to the country."
Warren said it would be a long, drawn-out battle for the nomination
and the race was far from over. She decried the party's infighting
and called for unity as the contest moves on.
"These tactics might work if you're willing to burn down the party
to be the last man standing," Warren said in Manchester. "We win
when we come together."
The late attacks on Sanders in recent weeks were a shift in tactics
for his rivals, who had mostly ignored him out of worry about a
backlash from his fervent cadre of supporters and out of doubts that
Sanders could expand his base.
Buttigieg, who would be the first openly gay U.S. president if
elected, still faces questions about what polls show is his weakness
with African-American voters, one of the most loyal and vital
Democratic voting blocs.
He also decried the growing polarization of politics and recent
Democratic infighting.
"In this election season, we've been told by some that you must
either be for revolution or you are for the status quo. But where
does that leave the rest of us?" Buttigieg asked supporters in
Nashua. "A politics of my way or the highway is a road to
re-electing Donald Trump."
On the Republican side, Trump easily won the state's presidential
primary, defeating rival William Weld, the former governor of
neighboring Massachusetts.
(Reporting by John Whitesides, James Oliphant, Simon Lewis, Michael
Martina and Amanda Becker in New Hampshire, and Doina Chiacu and
Ginger Gibson in Washington; Writing by John Whitesides; Editing by
Soyoung Kim, Peter Cooney and Mike Collett-White)
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