Biden's age pushes some New Hampshire voters to Phillips, Williamson
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[January 11, 2024]
By Jarrett Renshaw
MANCHESTER, New Hampshire (Reuters) - Polling shows President Joe Biden
is unlikely to suffer a setback in New Hampshire's Democratic primary
this month - but if he does, it will be because of voters like Tim
Fitzpatrick.
A supporter of Biden in 2020, Fitzpatrick, a 24-year old college
student, is not energized by Democratic candidate Dean Phillips'
centrist politics.
But he is fed up with Biden's backing of fossil fuel projects and
failure to secure promised student loan relief, and has deep concerns
about whether the 81-year-old president has the vigor for a second term.
"I wouldn't say Phillips and I are politically aligned, but it's better
than Biden," Fitzpatrick said about his decision to back Phillips, a
little-known three-term congressman from Minnesota.
New Hampshire's unsanctioned Jan. 23 Democratic primary offers the first
test of Biden's political strength since his win in 2020.
Polls show deep concerns among voters about his age, and that Biden
would struggle to beat top Republican rival Donald Trump in a rematch of
2020. A stronger-than-expected New Hampshire showing by Democratic long
shots, who include Phillips and self-help guru Marianne Williamson,
would fuel those doubts.
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It is an unusual contest. Biden is officially skipping the New Hampshire
primary after the state refused his demand to cede its
first-in-the-nation primary status to more-diverse South Carolina, but
top Democrats are mounting a well-funded write-in campaign.
Political pundits predict Biden to win New Hampshire easily with the
write-in campaign. Voter interviews suggest a wide margin of victory is
not guaranteed.
Reuters interviewed more than two dozen New Hampshire Democrats and
independents this week who said they planned to vote in the January
primary. A large majority said they were undecided or voting for
Phillips or Williamson.
A University of New Hampshire poll this week showed Biden with a
dominating lead of 69% among likely primary voters in the state, with
Phillips at 7% and Williamson at 6%.
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"Biden's age is a real problem for me because 80-year olds start having
real mental energy problems," said Dale Coy, 70, a local blogger who
teaches on online course at a New Jersey college. He expects to back
Phillips.
Williamson, 71, launched her second bid for the White House on a
platform of "justice and love" last year. She won admirers in a short
2020 bid with a spirituality-focused campaign that promoted a politics
of conscience.
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Democratic presidential candidate U.S. Representative Dean Phillips
(D-MN) answers a question during an interview with Reuters at his
campaign office in Manchester, New Hampshire, U.S., January 8, 2024.
REUTERS/Brian Snyder
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Her platform includes a Department of Peace and economic justice
agenda to repair damage done by "trickle-down economics."
NOT CATCHING FIRE
There was little sign this week that Phillips is catching fire in
the Granite State. His campaign events did not draw large crowds; a
van hired to bring journalists along as the candidate dashed between
Manchester and Nashua was largely empty.
The biggest crowd he drew was at a debate with Williamson in
ballroom of a Manchester hotel. A large portion of the attendees
were high school students on a field trip who are younger than 18,
the U.S. voting age.
On Tuesday in Manchester, Phillips parked his “Government Repair
Truck” outside, planning to talk to voters while handing out coffee.
Not one voter showed up.
“Sometimes, if you build it, they don’t come," Phillips said, a
reference to 1989 baseball movie Field of Dreams.
Phillips, 54, plans to hold New Hampshire town halls, house parties
and blitz the airwaves with ads questioning Biden's viability in
coming weeks.
His platform includes giving newborns $1,000 to invest, balanced
federal budgets and taxing endowments at wealthy universities to
help middle-class Americans afford an education.
So far, he has made Biden's poll numbers a central theme, arguing
the party uses strong-arm tactics to block viable competitors, which
will only benefit Trump - whom he calls the most dangerous
politician in U.S.
"I believe you're complicit if you knowingly go into a race where
you're likely to lose and you suppress the potential of other
candidates," Phillips said during a Reuters interview at his
campaign headquarters in Manchester.
The Biden campaign says polls showing a lack of enthusiasm will
shift when the race becomes a one-on-one matchup with Trump, pushing
jittery Democrats home to Biden in November.
Dissatisfied Democrats in New Hampshire concede that is likely.
"It's probably more true than I would like it to be, unfortunately.
It's obvious he's better than Trump, so it's kind of like hold your
nose," Fitzpatrick said.
(Reporting By Jarrett Renshaw; Editing by Heather Timmons)
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