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Teh One Who Knocks
02-09-2016, 11:51 AM
FOX News and The Associated Press


http://i.imgur.com/x0I0BdQ.jpg

Residents of three small New Hampshire towns cast their ballots in the Granite State's first-in-the-nation presidential primary just after midnight Tuesday, kicking off a contest‎ where several candidates are eyeing a comeback.

On the Democratic side, Sen. Bernie Sanders of next-door Vermont is looking to rebound from his narrow Iowa loss with a big victory over Hillary Clinton. And on the Republican side, nearly a half-dozen candidates are battling for position behind Donald Trump -- with the race's governors – Christie, Bush and Kasich -- looking for redemption after missing the leaderboard entirely last week.

With votes in from residents of Dixville Notch, Millsfield and Hart's Landing, Trump, Ohio Gov. John Kasich and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz shared the Republican lead with nine votes each. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie followed with three votes, while Florida Sen. Marco Rubio and former Florida governor Jeb Bush each had two. Retired neurosurgeon Dr. Ben Carson and former HP CEO Carly Fiorina each garnered one vote.

On the Democratic side, Sanders led Clinton by 17 votes to nine.

In a statistical oddity, the candidate who receives a plurality of the Republican vote in Dixville Notch (population: 12) has been the GOP nominee in every election cycle since 1968. This year, Kasich won the town's vote, 3-2, over Trump.

With Trump leading the Republican race by double digits in most polls, the big question entering Tuesday's primary was whether the relentless attacks against Rubio during and after Saturday night’s Republican debate would be enough bring the surging freshman Florida senator back to the pack in the race for second place.

In the two-person Democratic race, Sanders has held an advantage over Clinton in New Hampshire for weeks. The state is friendly territory for the Vermont senator and a must-win if he's to have a chance of staying competitive with Clinton as the race moves to more diverse states that are seen as more hospitable to the former secretary of state.

Christie has been unrelenting in questioning Rubio’s readiness and authenticity. At Saturday’s debate, he slammed the senator for repeatedly reciting anti-Obama “talking points”. He repeated the criticism Monday night in an appearance on Fox News' "The Kelly File".

"You can't repeat the same thing over and over again," Christie said. "[Is Rubio] going to do that sitting across from [Russian President] Vladimir Putin? There's no substance there."

"He's a nice guy, he has talent," Christie continued," [But] he's too young, too inexperienced and he has served not one day in a position of management in his entire life."

Rubio, though, has dug in and continued to repeat his criticism of President Obama that drew Christie’s scorn.

"People said, 'Oh, you said the same thing three or four times.' I'm going to say it again," Rubio said Monday in Londonderry.

“As far as that message, I hope they keep running it. And I'm going to keep saying it because it's true," Rubio said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week.” "Barack Obama … said he wanted to change the country. He's doing it in a way that is robbing us of everything that is special.”

Speaking on Fox News, Bush said he’s also going to continue taking on front-runner Trump, as he did during Saturday’s debate.

“He’s not a conservative; he doesn’t have the temperament to be president and whenever I have the chance to describe what I think about him, I’m gonna do it,” Bush said Monday

Bush hammered Trump on Saturday for his broad support of eminent domain – and Trump's past attempt to use it to take a woman’s property for a project in Atlantic City. During that dispute, Trump tried to “shush” Bush, but was booed by the audience.

Bush pointed to that exchange in questioning how Trump would do in a general election race.

“You think he’s gonna shush Hillary Clinton?” Bush said. “He would lose.”

Trump saved his harshest attacks Monday for Bush as well as Cruz, who bested him in Iowa. When an audience member at a rally in Manchester shouted out an insult directed at Cruz — a vulgar term for "coward" — Trump repeated the term and jokingly reprimanded the woman.

Cruz spokesman Rick Tyler responded to the Associated Press via email, saying, "Let's not forget who whipped who in Iowa."

"Jeb is having some kind of a breakdown, I think," Trump told CNN Monday, calling Bush, the son and brother of presidents, a spoiled child and an embarrassment to his family. "I think it's a very sad situation that's taking place."

Kasich, meanwhile, has taken a less confrontational approach in the race, casting himself as a uniting force and touting his economic record as governor. The Ohio governor has seemingly pinned his hopes on New Hampshire and said Sunday he’s going in strong – while stressing he also has substantial resources on the ground in states like South Carolina and Nevada.

Kasich also criticized Bush over an online video that hit Kasich for expanding Medicaid and what the Bush campaign called his "liberal record" in Ohio compared to Bush's two terms as Florida governor.

"I'm really disappointed in Jeb," Kasich told "The Kelly File". "Look, I mean, he's taken the very low road to the highest office in the land, and he's been negative all along, but that's okay."

Carson and Fiorina also are looking to do better than they did in Iowa, but have struggled to even break into the middle tier in Granite State polling.

PorkChopSandwiches
02-09-2016, 05:05 PM
Hitlery :haha:

RBP
02-10-2016, 05:28 AM
Huffington Post

http://i.imgur.com/vOnXu1R.png?1

DemonGeminiX
02-10-2016, 05:45 AM
Something tells me that they don't like Trump very much.

Teh One Who Knocks
02-10-2016, 11:34 AM
FOX News


http://i.imgur.com/nrTehxe.png

Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Bernie Sanders scored decisive victories in Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary – as Ohio Gov. John Kasich surged into a second-place finish and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio was fighting to stay in the race with Ted Cruz and Jeb Bush for third.

After months of campaigning in the snow, the battle for the South now begins -- and the runners-up will be looking for new life, and in some cases survival, as the winners celebrate.

“We are going to make America great again,” the victorious Trump told cheering supporters Tuesday night. “We are going now to South Carolina. We are gonna win in South Carolina!”

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, though, is staying behind -- returning to his home state after a disappointing sixth-place finish with a mere 8 percent of the vote. He told supporters he planned to make a decision Wednesday on the way forward with the viability of his campaign now in serious doubt.

The rest head to the Palmetto State, each facing a unique challenge: Trump aims to hold his front-runner status after cementing it in New Hampshire on the heels of his Iowa loss. Kasich, while getting a big boost out of Tuesday’s contest, will look to demonstrate he can play beyond New Hampshire. And as Cruz and Bush look to build on their performance, Rubio is vowing to improve after a rocky debate seemingly disrupted his momentum.

"That will never happen again," Rubio told supporters Tuesday, referring to his Saturday debate performance.

On the Democratic side, meanwhile, Hillary Clinton is facing the prospect of losing her front-runner status if Sanders can close his polling gap in South Carolina and beyond.

The Vermont senator voiced confidence at his victory rally Tuesday night.

“Tonight we serve notice to the political and economic establishment of this country,” Sanders said. “Now it’s on to Nevada, South Carolina and beyond.”

The Clinton campaign tried to cast the candidate’s primary loss in the best light, saying in a memo that the outcome was “long expected” and prospects for future victories remain “very good.”

“I want to say I still love New Hampshire and I always will,” Clinton told supporters at a Tuesday night rally. “Now we take this campaign to the entire country. We are going to fight for every vote in every state.”

For the winners of both contests Tuesday night, New Hampshire was a comeback after each came in second last week in Iowa.

Trump won decisively, towering over the Republican field with 35 percent of the vote after 92 percent of precincts had reported results early Wednesday. Sanders was crushing Clinton 60-38 percent with 93 percent of precincts reporting in the Democratic race.

Kasich clocked in second with about 16 percent, while the battle for third remained a fierce contest.

With 12 percent of the vote, Texas Sen. Cruz had nudged ahead of former Florida Gov. Bush and Florida Sen. Rubio, who both had 11 percent. However, the margin between the three was still too narrow to project who would finish third, fourth and fifth in the Republican race.

Former HP CEO Carly Fiorina finished seventh with 4 percent of the vote, while retired neurosurgeon Dr. Ben Carson finished eighth with 2 percent.

For Kasich, his time in the state appeared to pay off and the second-place finish gives a major boost to his campaign, especially after he finished a distant eighth in Iowa last week.

It also dealt a blow to Rubio, whose strong, third-place finish in Iowa eight days ago gave him momentum that lasted until Saturday, when Rubio stumbled in the debate amid withering attacks from Christie.

The closeness of the race for third, fourth and fifth places still might end up prolonging the Republican nominating contest because it complicates the establishment’s efforts to coalesce around a single consensus candidate.

Yet the person who tripped up Rubio in Saturday’s debate, Christie, was mired in single digits in Tuesday's race, leaving him to weigh his options back home.

Exit polls suggest Trump was aided in large part in the state by independents. They showed 36 percent of the state’s influential independents were backing Trump, leading the field among that bloc.

On the Republican side, Trump led virtually every poll in the state in the run-up to the contest.

And on the Democratic side, Clinton consistently trailed Sanders going into Tuesday’s contest. But the margin of victory for both Sanders and Trump was substantial.

Clinton herself has pushed back on reports that the campaign may be looking at a shake-up in the near future – but the speculation is sure to mount following her Granite State loss.

From here, the campaigns head next to Nevada and South Carolina, which hold the next two contests before Super Tuesday at the beginning of March.

PorkChopSandwiches
02-10-2016, 03:36 PM
HaHaHillary

Teh One Who Knocks
02-10-2016, 05:53 PM
By JOSH MARGOLIN and JORDYN PHELPS - ABC News


New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is expected to formally suspend his presidential campaign as early as today after he huddles with his closest advisers, ABC News has learned.

A statement announcing the suspension could come as soon as early this afternoon, according to a source briefed on Christie's plans.

“We bet the ranch on New Hampshire, and no one ever anticipated the Trump phenomenon,” the source told ABC News. “He’s a realist.”

Christie's New Hampshire campaign Chairman Wayne MacDonald, who is not involved in today’s deliberations but is familiar with the campaign's strategy, said that qualifying for the next debate is likely a major factor in the deliberations.

And with the governor’s 6th place finish in New Hampshire, he does not qualify to make the stage.

“It’s just a logical next step,” MacDonald said of the likelihood that the governor will formally drop out of the race.

The news that Christie would likely suspend his campaign following a meeting with advisers today was first reported by CNN.

Teh One Who Knocks
02-10-2016, 09:21 PM
Cooper Allen, USA TODAY


Former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina is dropping out of the Republican presidential race following a disappointing finish in the New Hampshire primary.

"While I suspend my candidacy today, I will continue to travel this country and fight for those Americans who refuse to settle for the way things are and a status quo that no longer works for them," Fiorina said in a statement.

Fiorina's long-shot hopes of breaking through in the Granite State weren't helped when she failed to qualify for Saturday night's debate in Manchester. She protested the criteria used by ABC News in a letter to the Republican National Committee after the network announced its decision, saying "our debate process is broken."

The only woman in the GOP field, Fiorina addressed feminism and politics in the statement announcing her withdrawal from the race.

"To young girls and women across the country, I say: do not let others define you," she said. "Do not listen to anyone who says you have to vote a certain way or for a certain candidate because you're a woman. That is not feminism."

The businesswoman finished a distant seventh in Tuesday's primary, getting just 4% of the vote.

Her exclusion from the most recent debate marked an unwelcome bookend for Fiorina, who briefly surged to the top of the GOP field in September following strong early debate performances.

She was widely praised for her performance in the prime-time debate on Sept. 16, 2015, at the Reagan Library in Simi Valley, Calif., particularly when she took on Republican front-runner Donald Trump, who had recently made disparaging remarks about her looks in a magazine interview.

"I think women all over this country heard very clearly what Mr. Trump said," she said.

Fiorina rocketed up GOP polls, pulling in the support of 15% of Republican voters nationally in a CNN poll taken shortly after the Reagan LIbrary debate, good for second place behind Trump.

But that was in many ways the high-water mark for her campaign. In the same CNN poll a month later, her support had dipped to 4%. By the Jan. 14, 2016, debate in South Carolina, she was back in the undercard debate where she'd started in August, and by Saturday, she was without a debate stage at all.

In last Monday's Iowa caucuses, Fiorina finished in seventh place with less than 2% support, though, as she noted in protesting her exclusion from Saturday's debate, she finished slightly ahead of Ohio Gov. John Kasich and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who both qualified.

Kasich praised Fiorina following her announcement Wednesday. "Thanks for being an inspiration to all Americans who want to make a difference. I wish you the best," he tweeted.

RBP
02-11-2016, 01:43 AM
HaHaHillary

She's laughing all the way to the corruption... fine, reject her big donors, doesn't matter, they still own the government.

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Hillary Clinton is expected to leave New Hampshire with just as many delegates as Bernie Sanders, even after he crushed her in Tuesday’s primary.

Sanders had won 13 delegates with his 20-point victory on Monday, and is expected to raise that total to 15 by the time all of the votes are counted.
Two of the state’s 24 delegates are currently unpledged, but will likely be awarded to Sanders once the results are finalized. That will raise the Sanders total to 15 delegates.

Clinton won 9 delegates in the primary, but came into the contest with the support of six superdelegates — state party insiders who are given the freedom to support which ever candidate they choose.

Superdelegate support is fluid, so it is possible that one of those delegates now committed to Clinton could switch before the national convention.

But as it stands, the superdelegate support gives Clinton a total of 15 New Hampshire delegates — the same as Sanders.

The Clinton campaign has mounted an aggressive effort to secure about 360 superdelegates across the country, according to the Associated Press. Sanders has a total of eight superdelegates.

Two of New Hampshire’s eight superdelegates are uncommitted: state party chairman Ray Buckley and state Sen. Martha Fuller Clark, according to the Associated Press.

Buckley was barred from picking a side until after the primary, while Fuller Clark told The Hill that she remains uncommitted.

“I wanted to ensure that we had a very open and fair process in New Hampshire and I don't t believe as an elected officer of the party that I should be choosing between two very fine Democrats who are running for office,” she said.

“For the time being, I continue to hold that position and will wait until closer to the convention to decide.”

Clinton's superdelegate supporters includes Gov. Maggie Hassan, Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, and Rep. Annie Kuster.

She's also backed by Democratic National Committeemembers Joanne Dodwell, Billy Shaheen and Kathy Sullivan.

http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/presidential-races/268935-clinton-likely-to-leave-nh-with-same-number-of-delegates

Godfather
02-11-2016, 02:15 AM
Was watching CTV Nation news (Canadian news, fairly unbiased on International issues). Their 'Democratic Party Expert' said it was a happy day for Bernie but would be all downhill from here and Hilary would wipe up on Super Tuesday. Quite a departure from the articles I see on Reddit (which has a huge Bernie subreddit following) showing he's full steam ahead now. Should be interesting to see how it goes from here. Not sure what to make of his chances.

RBP
02-11-2016, 04:37 AM
Was watching CTV Nation news (Canadian news, fairly unbiased on International issues). Their 'Democratic Party Expert' said it was a happy day for Bernie but would be all downhill from here and Hilary would wipe up on Super Tuesday. Quite a departure from the articles I see on Reddit (which has a huge Bernie subreddit following) showing he's full steam ahead now. Should be interesting to see how it goes from here. Not sure what to make of his chances.

You thinking out nomination processes are legitimate is cute.

Godfather
02-12-2016, 04:04 AM
Damn

deebakes
02-12-2016, 04:07 AM
:rip: