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Last Updated Feb. 11, 2020 NEW HAMPSHIRE PRIMARY: HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE FINAL DAY BEFORE VOTING ImageSenator Elizabeth Warren held a town hall event in Portsmouth on Monday.Credit...Ruth Fremson/The New York Times*
With one day left until the first primary of the Democratic presidential contest — and perhaps the first decisive result — the candidates fanned out across New Hampshire for a final stretch of campaigning on Monday.*
Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont has led recent polling averages of the primary, but former Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Ind., has come close to matching his support in many surveys. Both are trying tocrowd out rivals
.
And they’re still fighting over the close Iowa outcome, with both campaigns requesting a recanvass of certain precincts.*
The candidates who finished behind Mr. Buttigieg and Mr. Sanders in Iowa are hoping for a strong finish on Tuesday.
*
Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, who finished third, doubled her post-Iowa fund-raising goal to $4 million. Former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., the fourth-place finisher, is trying to re-energize his campaign. And Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, who came in fifth, has been seeing bigger crowds.*
President Trump came to New Hampshire, too: He held a campaign rally in Manchester on Monday night and will be on the Republican ballot Tuesday. New Hampshire was his first win in the 2016 primary, but he narrowly lost the state to Hillary Clinton in the general election.See New Posts
6 hours ago
By Jonathan Ellis
DIXVILLE NOTCH HAS VOTED, AND THE WINNER IS … BLOOMBERG. ImageLes Otten handing his ballot to the town moderator, Tom Tillotson, shortly after midnight on Tuesday at the Hale House in Dixville Notch, N.H., where some of the first votes in the state are traditionally cast.Credit...Paul Hayes/Caledonian-Record, via Associated Press Michael R. Bloomberg was a surprise winner in a New Hampshire political ritual early Tuesday morning, taking 50 percent of the Democratic votes in Dixville Notch … out of 4 votes cast. The tiny town is traditionally one of the first to vote shortly after midnight in primaries and general elections, under a provision of New Hampshire law that lets some towns close their polls once everyone has voted. Mr. Bloomberg, who is not competing in the early-voting states, was not on the ballot, but won two write-in votes on the Democratic side in Dixville. Pete Buttigieg and Bernie Sanders received one vote each. Read more Dixville Notch has voted, and the winner is … Bloomberg. One voter cast a ballot in the Republican primary, and also wrote inMr. Bloomberg.
Two other small towns that also vote in the wee hours, Hart’s Location and Millsfield, also reported results overnight. Amy Klobuchar won in both places, with six votes and two. While the quadrennial New Hampshire tradition is a favorite of politics fans, it will presumably have zero bearing on the outcome of the primary on Tuesday.7 hours ago
By Alexander Burns
KLOBUCHAR LOOKS TO NEVADA ‘AND BEYOND.’ MANCHESTER — Amy Klobuchar, sounding only slightly hoarse at her fifth rally of the day, at a bar in downtown Manchester, told voters she was in the process of firing up her campaign operation in the coming Nevada caucuses — “and beyond,” she added. More than any other major candidate, Ms. Klobuchar will have to expand her organization in Nevada in a tightly compressed time frame before the Feb. 22 caucuses. She has focused overwhelmingly so far on Iowa and New Hampshire, and for most of the race has faced significant financial constraints. But a Klobuchar aide said on Monday that the campaign was shifting staff members out of Iowa and into Nevada, and Ms. Klobuchar appears to be in a stronger financial position after a post-debate infusion ofonline cash.
Read more Klobuchar looks to Nevada ‘and beyond.’ “We’re so excited about tomorrow night and then to Nevada, where we’re building a big operation,” Ms. Klobuchar said. She went on to repeat a plea she has offered over the last few days, telling New Hampshire voters “this is a big deal for me here” and crediting the state with having vaulted relatively unknown or underfunded candidates into national contention in the past. Without strong finishes in both New Hampshire and Nevada — and perhaps even with them — it could be exceedingly difficult for Ms. Klobuchar to compete across the enormous Super Tuesday map in early March. But the mere fact that Ms. Klobuchar is confidently turning her attention west represents a real shift from just last week, when her fifth-place finish in Iowa seemed unlikely, on its own, to change the trajectory of her campaign. Without the intervening debate, Ms. Klobuchar could well have been headed for another likely fifth-place finish, leaving her future as a candidate in serious doubt.ADVERTISEMENT
8:52 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020The New York Times
OCASIO-CORTEZ AND THE STROKES TURN OUT FOR BERNIE SANDERS. ImageCredit...Chang W. Lee/The New York Times Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York spoke at a concert by the Strokes in support of Bernie Sanders in Durham. 8:45 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020 By Annie Karni and MaggieHaberman
TRUMP SIZES UP THE 2020 DEMOCRATS AT HIS NEW HAMPSHIRE RALLY: ‘THEY’RE ALL WEAK.’ MANCHESTER — In his first rally since the Senate acquitted him on charges that he abused power and obstructed Congress, a triumphant President Trump returned on Monday to New Hampshire, the state where he won his first primary in 2016 and that he hopes to carry in 2020. At a rally in an arena that top officials billed as something of a homecoming, Mr. Trump’s crowd erupted in vintage chants of “Lock her up!” when he referred to Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s behavior at his State of the Union address last week, when she tore up a copy of his remarks after he finished. “I’m speaking and a woman is mumbling terribly behind me, angry,” he said. “We’re the ones who should be angry.” But Mr. Trump also credited Ms. Pelosi and the impeachment trial for an increase in his poll numbers. “Thank you, Nancy,” he said. Read more Trump sizes up the 2020 Democrats at his New Hampshire rally: ‘They’re all weak.’ Mr. Trump and his top campaign aides made it clear that their immediate goal in coming to Manchester on the eve of the New Hampshire primary was to steal attention from a competitive Democratic primary in which Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Pete Buttigieg, the former mayor of South Bend, Ind., are running almost neck and neck inmany surveys.
Mr. Trump dangled the idea that in the open primary, Republicans could try to influence the outcome. “A lot of Republicans tomorrow will vote for the weakest candidate,” Mr. Trump said. “My only problem is I’m trying to figure out who is the weakest candidate. I think they’re all weak.” Read more coverage of the rally: Trump Travels to New Hampshire to Rally Republicans and DistractDemocrats
On the eve of the state’s presidential primary, he arrived with a team of surrogates who will visit polling places on Tuesday.Feb. 10,2020
8:39 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Thomas Kaplan
IN NEW HAMPSHIRE, JOE BIDEN LOOKS FORWARD TO ‘HEADING SOUTH.’ MANCHESTER — Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s closing message on the eve of the New Hampshire primary looked far beyond the state’s borders. “We’re going to do just fine heading south and across this country,” he told the crowd at a rally in Manchester. “We’re going to win this nomination.” Mr. Biden has sought to play down Tuesday’s primary, describing himself as an “underdog” and predicting that he would “probably take a hit” in the state. But after a fourth-place finish in the Iowa caucuses, another poor performance is likely to raise further doubts about his candidacy, even as Mr. Biden and his team look forward to nominating contests in more diverse later-voting states where Mr. Biden is expected to have more strength. Read more In New Hampshire, Joe Biden looks forward to ‘headingsouth.’
At the rally on Monday night, Mr. Biden and his wife, Jill Biden, entered to Carrie Underwood’s “The Champion.” The song’s lyrics offered perhaps an optimistic take about how Mr. Biden would respond to a poor performance in Tuesday’s primary: _I am invincible, unbreakable_ _Unstoppable, unshakeable_ _They knock me down, I get up again__I am the champion_
Dr. Biden told the crowd that she chose the song. “Did you like it?” she asked. “I am invincible. That’s Joe Biden.”ADVERTISEMENT
8:33 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Alexander Burns
AMY KLOBUCHAR TELLS VOTERS: ‘WE ARE ON A SURGE, AS THEY SAY.’ ROCHESTER — Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota encouraged voters here to believe in the possibility of an upset in the New Hampshire primary on Tuesday, plying them with information about polling and fund-raising and reminding them that she had been counted out before. Opening with the news of two polls that found her climbing into third place in New Hampshire, Ms. Klobuchar told the audience at a Veterans of Foreign Wars post near the Maine border: “We are on a surge, asthey say.”
For Ms. Klobuchar, there is great urgency to the task of convincing voters that she remains viable in the race beyond New Hampshire. She is competing for many of the same voters — moderate Democrats, independents and disaffected Republicans — as former Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Ind., who finished far ahead of Ms. Klobuchar in Iowa. There is a risk to both candidates if they split that vote, and a serious danger to Ms. Klobuchar if moderates break for Mr. Buttigieg because they see him as having a better chance to win. Read more Amy Klobuchar tells voters: ‘We are on a surge, as theysay.’
But Ms. Klobuchar offered encouragement, and perhaps vented a bit of frustration, by recalling the long months last year when she was treated by the news media as a marginal contender, likelier to drop out before the start of voting than to become one of the finalists. “Then they predict, ‘Oh, is she going to make it through the summer? Is she going to make it to the next debate?’” Ms. Klobuchar said. “And every single time, we made it.” To students of New Hampshire politics, there was an ironic echo in Ms. Klobuchar’s talk of a surge in a V.F.W. post here. A dozen years ago, it was another senator who barnstormed through venues like this one, hammering at the very same word — only it was a Republican, John McCain, and it was a reference to new troop deployments in Iraq. He went on to win the New Hampshire primary. Ms. Klobuchar briefly alluded to Mr. McCain in her remarks and told the crowd that she missed him greatly, particularly over the last few weeks, in what seemed plainly to be a reference to the impeachment trial of President Trump. 8:31 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Mark Miller
WHERE DO THE 2020 CANDIDATES STAND ON SOCIAL SECURITY? Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders have increasingly tangled in recent weeks over Social Security, a dust-up that underscores the recent transformation of political debate on the government program. As recently as 2013, benefit cuts were widely embraced by Mr. Biden and many other centrist Democrats as part of broader bipartisan deals to repair Social Security’s finances or to reduce the federal deficit, which never reached fruition. Progressives fought the benefit-cutting. And that year, they began pushing the idea that benefits should be expanded.
Since then, the Democratic Party has taken a decisive left turn on Social Security: In 2020, none of the 11 Democratic presidential candidates advocate cuts, and most favor expanding benefits. HERE’SA DEEPER LOOK
at where both Democrats and Republicans now stand. 7:45 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020The New York Times
JILL BIDEN HELPED REMOVE A PROTESTER AT HER HUSBAND’S EVENT. ImageCredit...Elizabeth Frantz for The New York Times Dr. Jill Biden stepped in while her husband, Joseph R. Biden Jr., was speaking at St. George Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Manchester. “I’m a good Philly girl,” Dr. Biden later told reporters.ADVERTISEMENT
7:40 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Maggie Haberman
A TRUMP ALLY HAS PRAISE FOR A TRUMP RIVAL: MICHAEL BLOOMBERG. Thomas J. Barrack Jr., a longtime friend of President Trump and the man who ran his inauguration after his 2016 victory, said Monday that former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg of New York would be “an amazingpresident.”
The remark, made to CNBC at a conference in Abu Dhabi, is unlikely to please Mr. Trump, who has been watching Mr. Bloomberg’s spending binge on his presidential campaign top $300 million and has complained about it repeatedly toaides.
“I like Mike Bloomberg, I know him, I think he would be an amazing president, he was an amazing mayor,” Mr. Barrack told the network. “He’s run a first-class business, he’s smart, he’s thoughtful, he’s considerate, he’s done it all before, and he doesn’t needanything.”
Read more A Trump ally has praise for a Trump rival: MichaelBloomberg.
Mr. Barrack also praised former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., who is seeking to reinvigorate his campaign since a dismal showing in the still-unsettled Iowa caucuses last week. But Mr. Barrack made clear at other points in the interview that he is still a strong supporter of Mr. Trump. Mr. Bloomberg is not competing in the New Hampshire primary onTuesday.
7:37 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020The New York Times
SEE HOW PHOTOGRAPHERS CAPTURED THE FINAL HOURS OF THE CAMPAIGN. ImageAmy Klobuchar changed into more comfortable shoes before starting a photo line at her event in Exeter.Credit...Alyssa Schukar for TheNew York Times
A ferocious week of campaigning is coming to a close in New Hampshire on Monday. Since the frenzy in Iowa one week ago, candidates have barnstormed the state ahead of its primary on Tuesday, the nation’sfirst.
See what New York Times photographers captured in the final hours onthe trail.
See more
Surviving the Final Hours in New HampshireFeb. 10, 2020 5:43 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020 By Annie Karni , Maggie Haberman and Katie Rogers TRUMP RETURNS TO NEW HAMPSHIRE, THE FIRST STATE HE WON IN THE 2016PRIMARY.
MANCHESTER — In his first rally since his Senate impeachment acquittal, President Trump is returning on Monday night to New Hampshire, the state that offered jet fuel to his 2016 presidential campaign with his first primary victory. Four years ago, Mr. Trump benefited from a crowded field of traditional Republican candidates. This time around, the incumbent president has no real primary. A field of three challengers has already been whittled down to one — former Gov. Bill Weld of Massachusetts — who has failed to make any dent in Mr. Trump’s popularity among Republicans. On Monday, Mr. Trump and his top campaign aides made it clear they were focused on stealing attention from a competitive Democratic primary, where Bernie Sanders and Pete Buttigieg are running almost neck and neck in many surveys. Read more Trump returns to New Hampshire, the first state he won inthe 2016 primary.
And they were eager to begin running a general election strategy in a state they lost to Hillary Clinton in 2016 by just 2,700 votes, believing they can expand the map in November. Mr. Trump’s rally at Southern New Hampshire University in Manchester will bring him back to the venue where he shocked voters with a vulgardescription
of his chief rival at the time, Senator Ted Cruz of Texas. The president traveled to New Hampshire surrounded by many of the surrogates who flooded Iowa on his behalf last week. Air Force One was all but converted into a campaign plane for the event: Ronna McDaniel, the Republican National Committee chairwoman, was aboard, along with several Republican House members who had flanked Mr. Trump during impeachment, including Kevin McCarthy of California, the minority leader; Steve Scalise of Louisiana; Mark Meadows of North Carolina; and Matt Gaetz of Florida. As the president deplaned, he was trailed by a long line of campaign surrogates and was met by two more on the ground: Gov. Chris Sununu of New Hampshire and Corey Lewandowski, his former campaign manager. Speaking to reporters aboard the plane, Mr. Scalise said the showing of support was like “getting the band back together.” He said the president was dropping him off so he could join the group fanning out across the state in support of Mr. Trump.ADVERTISEMENT
5:31 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Thomas Kaplan
DESPITE A GLOOMY PREDICTION, BIDEN SAYS HE’S ‘FEELING GOOD.’ ImageJoseph R. Biden Jr. thanked canvassers at his campaign office in Salem, N.H., on Monday.Credit...Elizabeth Frantz for The New YorkTimes
SALEM — Joseph R. Biden Jr. has freely admitted that he is unlikely to do well in the New Hampshire primary, declaring at the Democratic debate on Friday night that he would “probably take a hit here.” But in a brief visit to a field office in Salem on Monday afternoon, he projected an upbeat outlook, despite his earlier assessment of how he would fare in Tuesday’s contest. “I feel good,” he told a small group of volunteers. “It’s feeling good,” he said at another point. “We’re feeling good,” he declared. “It just feels good,” he affirmed. “Keep the faith,” he said as he concluded. 5:27 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Nick Corasaniti
AN OVERFLOW CROWD COMES TO KLOBUCHAR’S AID. ImagePeople stood outside to catch a glimpse of Amy Klobuchar at a campaign stop in Exeter on Monday.Credit...Alyssa Schukar for The NewYork Times
EXETER — Some candidates simply speak to their overflow rooms, where people who couldn’t fit into the main event space congregate. On Monday, Amy Klobuchar turned hers into a stump speech asset. In the middle of her remarks here, Ms. Klobuchar gave a shoutout to the overflow crowd, out of sight from the 550 people packed into the old town hall. It responded with a rapid stomping of feet, and the low rumble was audible from the stage. Ms. Klobuchar broke into a broad smile. Read more An overflow crowd comes to Klobuchar’s aid. Minutes later, as a member of the audience began to shout questions at the candidate in the middle of her stump speech, Ms. Klobuchar turned to her invisible allies. “Overflow crowd, save me!” she shouted from the stage. The rumble, this time closer to rolling thunder, overcame the crowd. (The question was simply whether Ms. Klobuchar thought President Trump would actually debate her. She said she expected him to debate, but if not, she would just “call him a chicken.”) To thank her overflow crowd, Ms. Klobuchar offered to tell a secret story after her speech. Repeating a laugh line about her father’s lack of savings after three marriages, she changed the punchline. The failed marriages, she said, are “another story that I’ll only tell the overflow crowd.” One more rumble rippled through the hall. 5:12 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Matt Stevens
‘IF YOU HAD A CRYSTAL BALL,’ YANG SAYS OF HIS TIME SPENT IN IOWA, ‘YOU PROBABLY WOULD INVEST DIFFERENTLY.’ PORTSMOUTH — Andrew Yang has signaled repeatedly this week that he needs to do well in the New Hampshire primary for his campaign toremain viable.
After an event in Portsmouth on Monday, Mr. Yang went as far as calling New Hampshire his “best state.” He reiterated that the campaign needed to have a “very positive surprise tomorrow.” Asked about new polls showing a decline in his support among New Hampshire voters and whether he regretted spending so much time in Iowa before the caucuses, he said: “Certainly I think if you had a crystal ball and perfect information, given what happened in Iowa, you probably would invest differently.” Read more ‘If you had a crystal ball,’ Yang says of his time spent in Iowa, ‘you probably would invest differently.’ “But we’re excited about the energy and momentum we’re seeing here,” he said. “We think we’re going to overperform the polls here significantly tomorrow.”ADVERTISEMENT
5:11 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Zach Johnk
IOWA DEMOCRATS SAY THEY’LL RESPOND TO THE CAMPAIGNS’ RECANVASS REQUESTS IN 48 HOURS. ImageTroy Price, the Iowa Democratic Party chairman, at a news conference in Des Moines on Monday.Credit...Charlie Neibergall/Associated Press The chairman of the Iowa Democratic Party said on Monday that it had received requests from Bernie Sanders’s and Pete Buttigieg’scampaigns
for a partial recanvass of the state’s jumbled caucus results and would respond within 48 hours. Results released by the party show Mr. Buttigieg and Mr. Sanders locked in a tight race separated by fractions of percentage points, meaning that adjustments to the tallies could swing the race one wayor the other.
The campaigns urged a re-examination of results in 143 precincts, the party chairman, Troy Price, told reporters in Des Moines. Mr. Sanders’s campaign formally asked for a recanvass of 28 precincts earlier on Monday, and Mr. Buttigieg’s campaign responded by filing requests for a recanvass in 66 precincts and all in-state satellite precincts — “a total of 143 precincts, removing duplicities,” the party said in a news release. Read more Iowa Democrats say they’ll respond to the campaigns’ recanvass requests in 48 hours. A recanvass means checking handwritten worksheets from each precinct in question against the official data reported by the party. But Mr. Price confirmed on Monday that the party will not change even obvious miscalculations on the worksheets themselves. “We do not believe we should be altering the official record of what happened in the room,” he said. The New York Times reported on Monday that a lawyer for the party had advised the worksheets could not be fixed because they are a legal record and altering them wouldbe a crime.
Mr. Price noted that a recount could still be requested, which would require the hand-counting of about 180,000 preference cards fromcaucusgoers.
The party chairman again expressed regret for the botched handling of the nominating contest. “It is safe to say this was not the caucus that the hundreds of thousands of Iowa Democrats deserved,” he said. Asked about Tom Perez, the chairman of the Democratic National Committee, “throwing you under the bus” in his public statements about the Iowa confusion, Mr. Price smiled slightly and paused. “Obviously I was very disappointed by the chairman’s comments,” he said, adding, “There’s going to be a time to assign blame, but I will tell you the D.N.C. has been a partner in this process up to, including and after caucus night.” 5:08 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020 By Astead W. Herndon WARREN DISMISSES SKEPTICS: ‘WHO WAS SUPPOSED TO STILL BE IN THIS RACE TODAY? AND WHO WASN’T?’ ImageElizabeth Warren spoke to reporters on her press bus after a “Get Out the Vote” event in Rochester.Credit...Ruth Fremson/TheNew York Times
ROCHESTER — Speaking to reporters on her press bus Monday, Elizabeth Warren dismissed the notion that New Hampshire was a must-win state for her after her third-place finish in Iowa. “Who was supposed to still be in this race today? And who wasn’t?” she fired back. “I think I wasn’t. And a lot of people who were supposed to have wrapped this up aren’t here. I think the prediction business, right now, is not something I’d be investing heavily in.” Ms. Warren also made a pointed remark about the prospect of her dropping out the race. In response to a question about what message it would send, she said, “I cannot say to all those little girls, ‘This got hard and I quit.’ My job is to persist.” Read more Warren dismisses skeptics: ‘Who was supposed to still be in this race today? And who wasn’t?’ Ms. Warren has another event this evening, in Portsmouth, before a slew of campaign stops on Tuesday. She has stagnated in polls in the state and is thought to be firmly behind the leaders in the state — Bernie Sanders and Pete Buttigieg. Asked by The Times why her message of uniting the Democratic Party would work, given that several candidates have already failed with that message, Ms. Warren said, “we’re at a different point intime.”
“We’re at a point in time where there’s great fluidity in this campaign, and there’s a lot of folks shooting at other folks,” she said. “Democrats cannot do a repeat of 2016.” 4:28 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Katie Glueck
JOE BIDEN TO SOUTH CAROLINA: SEE YOU SOON. MANCHESTER — Fresh off a fourth-place finish in Iowa and staring down bleak prospects in New Hampshire, Joseph R. Biden Jr. looked ahead on Monday to the state he’s still hoping will be his firewall: South Carolina, with its majority black Democratic electorate. In a phone call with top supporters in that state on Monday afternoon, Mr. Biden expressed enthusiasm about South Carolina’s primary and promised to visit soon, according to sources on the call. He also touted the endorsements he has received in South Carolina and from the Michigan Democratic Party Black Caucus. The call was moderated by Symone D. Sanders, a senior adviser to Mr. Biden, and both she and Mr. Biden suggested that South Carolina was where the nomination will be decided, because it’s a better microcosm of the Democratic Party than Iowa and New Hampshire, both predominantly white states. Read more Joe Biden to South Carolina: See you soon. Mr. Biden, who polls show is currently strong with black voters, has long banked on a strong showing in South Carolina, and hoped that such a dynamic would catapult him into Super Tuesday, when 14 large and more diverse states vote. But after his weak Iowa finish and the challenges he appears to face in New Hampshire, he may confront substantial political and financial challenges before he reaches South Carolina, which votes later thismonth.
Mr. Biden spent Monday campaigning in New Hampshire.ADVERTISEMENT
3:56 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Maggie Astor
ONLY 17% OF DEMOCRATS THINK IOWA SHOULD REMAIN FIRST. Democrats are still deeply divided on who should represent them. But they’re united on one thing: They don’t want Iowa to choose. In a national Quinnipiac poll released today — the same one that showed Bernie Sanders in the lead — 64 percent of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents said Iowa should _not _be the first state to vote. Only 17 percent said it should, and 19 percent were unsure. The margin of error was plus or minus 3.8 percentage points. Read more Only 17% of Democrats think Iowa should remain first. These opinions were remarkably consistent across demographic lines. There was not a single demographic category — gender, race, age, education, income, ideology — in which more than 30 percent thought Iowa should retain its first-in-the-nation status. Criticizing Iowa’s place of honor in the nominating calendar is a longstanding tradition, but the criticism has been particularly strong this cycle among Democrats, largely because Iowa — heavily white and older — is not at all representative of the Democratic Party. (Neither is New Hampshire, which votes second.) Several presidential candidates made that argument in recent months, and the bungled caucuses poured fuel on the fire.
Caucuses themselves are also inherently exclusionary,
and several states — including Kansas, Maine and Hawaii — have recently switched to primaries.
But Iowa can’t do that without risking its first-in-the-nation status, because New Hampshire owns the first primary. 3:12 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020 By Astead W. Herndon WARREN CALLS BACK TO AN OLD MESSAGE: ‘NEVERTHELESS, SHEPERSISTED.’
ImageElizabeth Warren held an event at the Rochester Opera House on Monday. Credit...Ruth Fremson/The New York Times ROCHESTER — Faced with an all-important New Hampshire primary and stalling poll numbers, Elizabeth Warren went back to a message that became a rallying cry during her Senate tenure: “Nevertheless, shepersisted.”
Ms. Warren has recounted the episode that produced the quotation during campaign stops this weekend, including Monday’s event at the Rochester Opera House. She described how, after she had tried to block the nomination of Jeff Sessions for attorney general, Mitch McConnell uttered the phrase to admonish Ms. Warren — which immediately backfired and went viral. Ms. Warren is seeking to relate that episode to this primary race, in which her campaign is seeking a jolt after a third-place finish in Iowa. She called it another example of the “unwinnable fights” she has won her whole life, including her working class upbringing, her rise to becoming a Harvard professor, and her Senate race victory in2012.
Read more Warren calls back to an old message: ‘Nevertheless, shepersisted.’
“It’s the folks with persistence that are going to win,” Ms.Warren said.
Ms. Warren’s campaign has tried to manage expectations before Tuesday’s vote. Another third-place finish would allow the campaign to head into this month’s contests in Nevada and South Carolina with a clear story about the first two states. A fourth- or fifth-place finish would project a campaign in decline. She framed the general election as existential. “We have one job come November and that is beat Donald Trump,” Ms. Warren told the crowd. “We have a second job and that is take backthe Senate.”
2:44 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Maggie Astor
BERNIE SANDERS SURGES IN A NATIONAL POLL. ImageBernie Sanders made a campaign stop in Rindge on Monday. A new poll shows him at 25 percent support among registered Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents nationally.Credit...Chang W. Lee/TheNew York Times
Bernie Sanders surged to the top of a new Quinnipiac poll, logging
by far his best result in a national debate-qualifying survey thisyear.
The poll shows Mr. Sanders at 25 percent among registered Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents, and Joseph R. Biden Jr. at 17 percent. While Mr. Sanders has occasionally polled a couple of points higher nationally, this is the first time he has had a lead outside the margin of error (plus or minus 3.8 percentage points). Michael R. Bloomberg is at 15 percent and Elizabeth Warren is at 14 percent — both within the margin of error in relation to Mr. Biden. Read more Bernie Sanders surges in a national poll. These numbers show that Ms. Warren, who finished third in Iowa, isstill competitive.
They are also by far the best numbers yet for Mr. Bloomberg, who is not competing in the first four contests but is spending staggering amounts of money in the states that will vote on Super Tuesday. Pete Buttigieg is up slightly since the Iowa caucuses: 10 percent, compared with 6 percent in Quinnipiac’s last national poll, released Jan. 28. But that still puts him in fifth place, underscoring the challenges he faces among the broader Democratic electorate despite his first- or very close second-place finish in Iowa and his strong polling numbers in New Hampshire.ADVERTISEMENT
2:36 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Thomas Kaplan
BIDEN HITS TRUMP ON THE ECONOMY: ‘DO YOU THINK HE CARES ABOUT MOSTOF US?’
ImageJoseph R. Biden Jr. during a campaign event in Gilford on Monday. Credit...Elizabeth Frantz for The New York Times GILFORD — Joseph R. Biden Jr., despite his unsteady position in the primary race, placed his focus squarely on President Trump on Monday, arguing that the economy was no reason to give Mr. Trump a secondterm.
“Sure, the stock market’s going well,” Mr. Biden said at an event in Gilford. “Trump’s billionaire Wall Street friends who like to rub elbows with him at Mar-a-Lago, they’re doing just great. But what about the folks that we know, the places where we were raised? Do you think he cares about most of us?” Mr. Biden, speaking hours before Mr. Trump was scheduled to hold a rally in Manchester, said that the economy was benefiting wealthy people, but that middle-class people were under great financialstrain.
Read more Biden hits Trump on the economy: ‘Do you think he cares about most of us?’ “Trump’s going to tell us over and over again that the economy is on the ballot this year,” Mr. Biden said. “It sure is. And I’m going to make sure he understands it’s on the ballot. Because working-class and middle-class people are getting clobbered.” 2:28 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Matt Stevens
NO TIME FOR A FULL SELFIE LINE AS YANG RACES ACROSS NEW HAMPSHIRE. CONCORD — With just one day left to campaign before the New Hampshire primary, Andrew Yang did not have time to make it through an entire selfie line. A selfie-filled walk up the stairs would have todo.
“Be aggressive!” a press aide yelled as he reached the top of the staircase and closed in on the door. Indeed, Mr. Yang’s stop at a movie theater in Concord was his second of the day and one of at least six events scheduled for Monday. As it turned out, the movie theater the campaign had reserved for his town hall event was not big enough to house the hundreds of people who showed up, so Mr. Yang also gave a brief talk to people in the overflow theater next door. Read more No time for a full selfie line as Yang races across NewHampshire.
Mr. Yang has packed his schedule as he seeks to expand his support on the eve of the primary here. He has repeatedly signaled in recent days that his campaign will need a strong finish — perhaps in the top four — to get the media attention and donations it will need toremain viable.
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He has played up his fluency with numbers, math and tech in the days after the results-counting debacle in Iowa, where he finished with about 1 percent of state delegate equivalents. But on Monday, as he made his way up the stairs, the analog retail politicking was on fulldisplay.
One woman said she had been forced to leave the work force and told Mr. Yang of how she had then had to wait years for income from Social Security checks. She thanked him for advocating a universal basicincome.
“Thank you,” he told her. “You’re a superhero.” 2:27 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Marc Tracy
THE MAN WHO MAKES THE NEW HAMPSHIRE PRIMARY HAPPEN (THE LIGHTS,ANYWAY).
ImageChris Malloy, owner and executive director of Malloy Events, worked with his crew to set up a rally for Senator Bernie Sanders at the Hampshire Hills Athletic Club in Milford, N.H.Credit...Tamir Kalifa for The New York Times MILFORD, N.H. — The better Chris Malloy does his job, the less people will notice him. In fact, they might only know he had been there if things had gone terribly wrong. Mr. Malloy runs a small events business in Rochester, N.H., near the seacoast. Most of the time, his business is busy producing corporate dinners in Nashua, weeknight fund-raisers in Manchester and the occasional wedding; the week before the New Hampshire primarywas
different.
Mr. Malloy’s business has all but cornered the market on producing political rallies here for Democratic presidential candidates. The eyes of the nation are on town halls and rallies predominantly produced by Mr. Malloy’s company, Malloy Events. Read more The man who makes the New Hampshire primary happen (thelights, anyway).
Anyone who followed the bungled Iowa caucuses would know that things in the early states could go south, and that when they did the consequences reverberated. “If the event goes flawlessly and it’s on TV, it just kind of meets expectations,” Mr. Malloy said. “There’s a lot of downside if something goes wrong.” From a town-hall-style meeting for Elizabeth Warren last week in Keene to several election night parties scheduled for Tuesday night, Malloy Events will have built stages and audience risers, set up chairs and lights, wired microphones and speakers and assembled press filing areas for more than 60 presidential campaign events featuring Ms. Warren, Amy Klobuchar, Bernie Sanders and Andrew Yang (plus an election night party for Tom Steyer).Read more here
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2:17 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Nick Corasaniti
KLOBUCHAR, SPEAKING AT A ROTARY CLUB, AIMS TO PICK OFF MODERATEVOTERS.
ImageAmy Klobuchar speaking to voters at the Nashua Rotary Club on Monday. Credit...Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times NASHUA — By now, most candidates have so finely tuned their stump speech that they are like a classical concert, every note intentional, and often repetitive, night to night, show to show. But as Amy Klobuchar spoke to a Rotary Club here, more often a stop for Republican primary candidates than Democrats, she added an extra overture toward small businesses to the top of her speech, angling for a different kind of voter. She spoke of starting the “entrepreneur caucus” with Senator Tim Scott, a Republican from South Carolina, and her ranking position on the Senate Antitrust Committee, and she targeted consolidation. Read more Klobuchar, speaking at a Rotary Club, aims to pick offmoderate voters.
“It’s why we have the Sherman Act, it’s what Teddy Roosevelt rode his horse into the White House on,” Ms. Klobuchar said. “More needs to be done to step back and look at consolidation in this country. Not in terms of this radical idea, but in terms of the competition. Because otherwise you just shove out small businesses.” She used her presence at the Rotary Club, addressing people as they picked over the remnants of lunch and split chocolate chip cookies, as a counter to her more progressive Democratic rivals. “When we were asked if a socialist should lead the ticket, I was the only one who raised my hand and said, ‘No, I don’t think so,’” Ms. Klobuchar said, recalling Friday’s debate. “And that doesn’t mean I’m not good friends with Bernie. I am, I just have a differentphilosophy.”
But it was not lost on Ms. Klobuchar that campaigning at a Rotary Club before a Democratic primary might be an interesting choice. But in New Hampshire, where independents can vote in the Democratic primary, Ms. Klobuchar said she was reaching for every vote she could find. “I’m going to every diner, going to every place,” she said in a brief media scrum after her remarks. “And going to places here like the Rotary Club. That is how I have built a wide coalition and a big tent in the past. I know that seems like an interesting choice to come here before a Democratic primary, but I think you’ve got to reach out to everyone, and that’s why we did this today.” 1:56 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Sydney Ember
SIGNS FOR SANDERS COME IN ALL FORMS. ImageBernie Sanders made a campaign stop in Rindge, N.H., on Monday. Credit...Chang W. Lee/The New York Times RINDGE — As supporters for Bernie Sanders arrive at his events, there are plenty of signs that they are in the right place. Of course, there are the campaign signs staked into the ground, the banners that are hung behind each stage. But there are often other signs, too. As Mr. Sanders campaigned in Iowa, for instance, a rainbow “Bernie” was chalked on sidewalks before several venues. Before a rally in Rindge on Monday, there was something different on display: a heart with the letters B-E-R-N etched into the snow on the side of a brick pillar. Read more Signs for Sanders come in all forms. Once the rally began, however, it was more of the same: Mr. Sanders gave a version of his now-familiar stump. 1:39 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020 By Giovanni Russonello THE FINAL CNN TRACKING POLL SHOWS SANDERS AHEAD IN NEW HAMPSHIRE. Bernie Sanders holds a seven-point lead over Pete Buttigieg in the final CNN/University of New Hampshire tracking poll before Tuesday’s primary in New Hampshire, 29 percent to 22 percent. Joseph R. Biden Jr. (11 percent), Elizabeth Warren (10 percent) and Amy Klobuchar (7 percent) are bunched in a statistical tie for thirdplace.
The preferences of moderate voters have been in flux — particularly since last week’s Iowa caucuses, in which Mr. Buttigieg performed better than expected and Mr. Biden finished fourth, leading him to admit that he had taken “a gut punch.” Mr. Buttigieg is polling better than anyone else among voters who have not settled firmly ontheir choice.
Read more The final CNN tracking poll shows Sanders ahead in NewHampshire.
But there is evidence that Amy Klobuchar, who placed fifth in Iowa, is attracting new attention after a strong performance in Friday’s nationally televised debate. The CNN poll includes results from Thursday through Sunday; in the first two days of the collection period she garnered only 4 percent support, but in calls over the weekend — that is, after the debate — she rose to 11percent.
Mr. Sanders’s backers are more likely to be settled in their decision. He has 42 percent support among those who say their minds are made up, versus 18 percent for Mr. Buttigieg.ADVERTISEMENT
1:25 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Maggie Astor
BERNIE SANDERS AND PETE BUTTIGIEG OFFICIALLY REQUEST AN IOWARECANVASS.
Bernie Sanders formally requested a recanvass of 25 Iowa caucus precincts and three satellite caucuses, and his campaign suggested that he intended to request a recountafterward.
A recanvass means checking worksheets from each challenged precinct. A recount is a more intensive process that requires hand-counting the preference cards completed by individual caucusgoers. “While a recanvass is just the first step in the process and we don’t expect it to change the current calculations, it is a necessary part of making sure Iowans can trust the final results of the caucus,” Jeff Weaver, a senior adviser to Mr. Sanders, said in a statement on Monday. Read more Bernie Sanders and Pete Buttigieg officially request an Iowarecanvass.
Mr. Weaver said the campaign believed “a subsequent recount” would show that Mr. Sanders had earned more state delegate equivalents than Pete Buttigieg. If that happened, it would shift one national delegate from Mr. Buttigieg to Mr. Sanders. In response, Mr. Buttigieg’s campaign requested a recanvass of its own — saying that it would not have done so if no one else had, but that once Mr. Sanders challenged results that benefited Mr. Buttigieg, it had no choice but to challenge results that benefited Mr. Sanders. If Mr. Sanders is correct about all the errors he alleged in his recanvass request, he will net at most six state delegate equivalents. If Mr. Buttigieg is correct about all the errors he alleges, he couldnet 14 or more.
Just last Thursday, Mr. Sanders had indicated in a town-hall-style event on CNN that he would not seek a recanvass. While he said he believed the Iowa Democratic Party had “screwed up the counting process,” he emphasized his lead in the raw alignment numbers and added: “We have got enough of Iowa. I think we should move on to New Hampshire.” 1:17 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Nick Corasaniti
KLOBUCHAR INCLUDES FORMER TRUMP VOTERS IN HER PITCH. NASHUA — Amy Klobuchar has repeatedly pitched herself as the best option for centrists in the Democratic field. She says she’s the candidate who is best equipped to win over independents and even “moderate Republicans.” She namechecks Mitt Romney in almost everyspeech.
Speaking before a rotary club here on Monday, sensing some momentum from strong fund-raising numbers and swelling crowds across New Hampshire, Ms. Klobuchar added a new target: former Trump voters. “I’ve also seen a lot of anger, from people who stayed home in 2016, or independents, or Republicans that maybe voted for the president and are now stepping back and thinking, I don’t know if I did the right thing,” Ms. Klobuchar said. “My campaign has always been about reaching out and not shutting people out, but bringing themwith me.”
Read more Klobuchar includes former Trump voters in her pitch. With President Trump set to campaign in New Hampshire on Monday night, Ms. Klobuchar repeatedly attacked the administration in her speech here, taking aim at his administration’s record on small business growth, start-ups and immigration. Mr. Trump, she said, “has been treating the people in this country like poker chips in a bankrupt casino.” 1:08 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020The New York Times
WE FOUND PETE BUTTIGIEG’S BIGGEST FAN. ImageCredit...Tamir Kalifa for The New York Times Pat Provencher, 89, of New Hampton, N.H., attended her 11th Pete Buttigieg event at Plymouth State University on Monday.ADVERTISEMENT
1:07 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Shane Goldmacher
WARREN WOULD ‘LEAD THE PARADE’ FOR RIVALS (IF THEY WIN AND ADOPTHER PLANS).
MANCHESTER — Elizabeth Warren has been pitching herself as a the “unity candidate” of late, the kind of politician who could bring together the various wings of the Democratic Party in a generalelection.
And in an interview with Time magazine,
she made clear that her campaign was less about herself and more about her ideas, saying it would be “fabulous” if a rival like Bernie Sanders or Pete Buttigieg won and adopted her plans. “I think the question you’re asking me is, ‘If the things you want to get done actually get done, will your heart be broken?’ And the answer is, ‘No! I’ll lead the parade!’” Ms. Warren said. Read more Warren would ‘lead the parade’ for rivals (if they win and adopt her plans). Ms. Warren does think she would be the best president, even if, as she put it, “I ran for president not because I’d been looking at myself in the mirror and saying, ‘You’d make a wonderfulpresident.’”
The line could be read as a slight toward Mr. Sanders and Joseph R. Biden Jr., who have run for president multiple times between them, or Mr. Buttigieg, a 38-year-old trying to make the leap from small-townmayor to president.
Ms. Warren also directly addressed her gender and persistent voter concerns that are heard on the trail about nominating a woman. “We have to show that we’re willing to take the risk,” she said. “Because if we’re not, then women will never win.” 1:00 p.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Katie Glueck
THE BIDEN CAMP SEEKS TO LOWER N.H. EXPECTATIONS, VOWS TO PUSH ON WHATEVER THE OUTCOME. MANCHESTER — On the morning before the New Hampshire primary, one of Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s most important surrogates in the state and a top Biden campaign official spoke with reporters about their path forward in the race, playing down expectations here and insisting that Mr. Biden would remain strong in more diverse states that hold their primaries and caucuses later, whatever the outcome in New Hampshire. Here are some highlights from a conversation with the surrogate, former Gov. John Lynch of New Hampshire, and Mr. Biden’s deputy campaign manager, Kate Bedingfield, at a breakfast hosted by BloombergNews.
ON MR. BIDEN’S PATH IN UPCOMING STATES Read more The Biden camp seeks to lower N.H. expectations, vows to push on whatever the outcome. KATE BEDINGFIELD: “Our campaign has argued that no candidate has been the Democratic nominee for president since 1992 without the support of African-American voters. And Joe Biden is currently the candidate who has that support, who I think has the longest relationships and connections in the African-American community. And so we believe that regardless of what happens tomorrow night, we’re going to continue on with our plan to compete hard in Nevada, South Carolina, Super Tuesday and beyond.” ON TRYING TO KEEP EXPECTATIONS LOW FOR MR. BIDEN (AND HIGH FOR BERNIE SANDERS AND ELIZABETH WARREN) BEDINGFIELD: “Doing well means we compete here, we make our case to New Hampshire voters, and we continue on. We continue on with our plan which is to ensure that diverse voices have their say before you guyscall this race."
“He’s been very clear he’s the underdog here. We have two home-state senators, essentially, who are competing here. We’ve made no bones about the fact that we believe he’s the underdog here.” ON THE BIDEN CAMPAIGN’S DIGITAL AD SLAMMING PETE BUTTIGIEG’SMAYORAL RESUME
, AND
WHETHER MR. BIDEN, WHO AVOIDED REPEATING THOSE CRITICISMS ON SUNDAY, WAS COMFORTABLE WITH IT BEDINGFIELD: “Of course he was comfortable, first of all. It was hisad.”
“In terms of the experience argument for the duration, I mean, yeah, it’s a core piece of why the VP is running. He has said many times that with age comes experience and wisdom, and that’s a good thing. And that’s what we need.” “If you’re asking if he’s backing away from that argument, he isnot.”
“Of course he thinks the work that mayors do and that the work that happens in towns in this country is important. However, it doesn’t mean that a mayor of a small town is prepared to be president of the United States, and that’s the question he’s raising at a time when the stakes in the election couldn’t be higher.” ON WHY THE CAMPAIGN DIDN’T RUN THE AD IN IOWA BEDINGFIELD: “There is a sense that as we are coming into voting here in New Hampshire that we need to clarify and bring into clear focus the fundamental questions that voters need to ask themselves.” ON WHETHER THE CAMPAIGN REALLY FEELS THAT SOUTH CAROLINA REMAINS A FIREWALL, REGARDLESS OF NEW HAMPSHIRE RESULTS BEDINGFIELD: “I do. Because I think again it goes back to the long relationships that he has in the African-American community. They have a sense of who he is, what he’s done in public office.” “Just as I’m sure the governor would say that the people of New Hampshire don’t like being told by Iowa who to vote for, I don’t think that people in South Carolina feel like they’re going to change their allegiance or their vote based on what’s happening”elsewhere.
ON WHETHER MR. BIDEN WOULD WIN THE NEVADA CAUCUSES IF THEY WERE TODAY BEDINGFIELD: “We would be competitive, just like we will be whenthey happen.”
“I think it is a more diverse state, I think it’s one that showcases the vice president’s kind of best strength … an opportunity to talk to people individually. It’s a caucus state so those individual interactions are particularly important. So I expect we will be competitive and we will do well there.” ON CHANGES IN MESSAGING AND STRATEGY (LAST WEEK THE CAMPAIGN UNDERWENT A SIGNIFICANT SHAKE-UPTO ITS STAFFING)
BEDINGFIELD: I think you saw the vice president acknowledge that he took his lumps in Iowa. I think you saw him come out and show that he’s going to fight. I think you saw him make the case that again diverse states are going to have their say before we decide who the nominee is. So I think you’ve kind of seen him adjust a little bitin real time.”
_She later noted the small number of delegates at play in Iowa._ “It underscored for people that he’s fighting and that, you know, he is going to compete for every single vote. So, you know, in terms of adjustment to the campaign? Not for an eight-delegate separation between the top four candidates.” JOHN LYNCH: “I haven’t seen, out in the field, any particular adjustment that Joe Biden’s campaign staff made as a result ofIowa.”
ON A POSSIBLE THREAT FROM AMY KLOBUCHAR BEDINGFIELD: “Unless and until she is chipping away at his support with African-American voters, no, I don’t think that she’s made significant inroads into his base. In Iowa, “I don’t think we saw a significant undercut from her. In New Hampshire I expect the same. I mean I think the race is fluid, we still have a significant number of undecided voters.” ON OTHER CANDIDATES TRYING TO SEIZE THE OBAMA MANTLE BY INVOKING THE FORMER PRESIDENT IN ADS BEDINGFIELD: “Voters know that Joe Biden was Barack Obama’s vice president. I think that if anybody in this race is trying to stake a bigger claim to a partnership with Barack Obama than Joe Biden, then I wish them good luck with that.” ON MICHAEL R. BLOOMBERG’S VAST EXPENDITURES ON ADVERTISING AND THE POSSIBLE THREAT HE POSES BEDINGFIELD: “It has not chipped into Biden’s support with, particularly with African-American voters.” “We continue to make our case, I think the relationships Biden has particularly in the African-American community, the sense that people know him, that they, you know, have a clear sense of who he is, Ithink that matters.
“The perception among Democratic voters is that Bloomberg is trying to buy his way to the nomination. I think there are a lot of voters who, you know, who bristle at that and who don’t want that.” ON CONFRONTING CONCERNS ABOUT MR. BIDEN’S AGE LYNCH: “I haven’t heard that, really. A little bit, but notmuch.”
“The No. 1 issue that people talk to me about is electability … Occasionally they might mention age, but you know there are a lot of older people running this time. But it’s electability that I hearmost often.”
ON WHETHER BIDEN WILL HAVE THE FINANCIAL RESOURCES NEEDED TO CONTINUEON TO SUPER TUESDAY
BEDINGFIELD: “Yes. We actually had the best fund-raising week online last week that we’ve had since the launch of our campaign. So money continues to come in. And yes, we’re absolutely going to have the resources that we need to compete on Super Tuesday.” She declined to share numbers. 11:57 a.m. Feb. 10, 2020The New York Times
ELIZABETH WARREN’S MORNING ROUTINE. ImageCredit...Ruth Fremson/The New York Times Elizabeth Warren, sporting a “Make Earth Cool Again” hat, went for a morning walk in North Conway. She said she walked 2.2 miles and picked up tea from McDonald’s on the way.ADVERTISEMENT
11:47 a.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Reid J. Epstein
BUTTIGIEG WARNS AGAINST SANDERS’S ‘BROKEN PROMISES’ ON HEALTHCARE.
ImagePete Buttigieg arrived for an event in Plymouth.Credit...Tamir Kalifa for The New York Times PLYMOUTH — On the last day of campaigning before New Hampshire’s primary, Pete Buttigieg leaned hard into appealing to the state’sindependent voters.
The former mayor of South Bend, Ind., warned that nominating Bernie Sanders, the lone rival ahead of him in the polls here, risked repelling the sort of voters who Democrats will need to defeat President Trump in November. “Knowing how much depends on bringing Americans together, we cannot risk alienating Americans at this critical moment,” Mr. Buttigieg told a crowd that had braved a morning snowstorm to see him at Plymouth State University. “This is where I part ways with my friendSenator Sanders.”
Read more Buttigieg warns against Sanders’s ‘broken promises’ onhealth care.
Mr. Buttigieg then digressed into a clinical dissection of Mr. Sanders’s “Medicare for all” health care proposal. Mr. Buttigieg said Mr. Sanders has only identified funding sources to pay for half of the plan and praised the Vermont senator for being “honest” about a plan to raise middle-class income taxes to fund it. “Are we going to pay for it in the form of more taxes or broken promises?” he asked. While he’s focused his arrows at Mr. Sanders, Mr. Buttigieg has dropped from his stump speech his attacks on Joseph R. Biden Jr., whom his campaign does not view as a threat in New Hampshire. Instead, their focus is on driving up support from independent voters and scaring progressive Democrats away from Mr. Sanders. “A picture where your only choice is between the revolution and the status quo,” he said, “is a picture where most of us don’t seeourselves.”
11:30 a.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Sydney Ember
SANDERS OFFERS NEW HAMPSHIRE A ‘CHOICE.’ ImageSenator Bernie Sanders spoke to supporters in Manchester.Credit...Chang W. Lee/The New York Times MANCHESTER — Bernie Sanders delivered a truncated version of his familiar stump speech at a breakfast in Manchester on Monday morning. But at the end, as the audience ate bagels and muffins, he grewreflective.
“Tomorrow you have a choice,” he said. “You have a choice about going forward and voting for a candidate who will defeat Donald Trump. You have the option to vote for a campaign which will not only defeat Trump but which will transform this country.” For a man who rarely strays from his message, the slight deviation from his normal address was notable as he closes out his campaign inNew Hampshire.
Read more Sanders offers New Hampshire a ‘choice.’ According to recent polls, Mr. Sanders and Pete Buttigieg, the former mayor of South Bend, Ind., are in a close race here, after finishing in a near-tie in the broken Iowa caucuses. The two have assailed each other in recent days as they have crisscrossed New Hampshire, with Mr. Sanders attacking Mr. Buttigieg for accepting money from big donors. Early on Monday, Mr. Sanders did not mention Mr. Buttigieg by name. But in saying he had “changed the nature of the game” with respect to fund-raising, he implicitly drew a contrast with his 38-year-oldopponent.
“You are my donors,” he told the crowd. “We don’t go to rich people’s homes and get advice from millionaires and billionaires who are raising all kinds of money.” 11:11 a.m. Feb. 10, 2020The New York Times
A DIFFERENT BUS IN THE PARKING LOT. ImageCredit...Elizabeth Frantz for The New York Times Joseph R. Biden Jr. parked his bus next to school buses as he stopped to deliver doughnuts to drivers in Nashua.ADVERTISEMENT
10:57 a.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Nick Corasaniti
KLOBUCHAR BOASTS OF POLLING RESULTS. ImageSenator Amy Klobuchar held a campaign event in Keene.Credit...Alyssa Schukar for The New York Times KEENE — Arriving an hour late to her event here on a wintry Monday morning, Amy Klobuchar kicked off her final day of campaigning before the New Hampshire primary boasting of two new polls that showed her inthird place.
“I didn’t have a big name going into this, but what I have is grit,” Ms. Klobuchar said. “And literally I woke up this morning and found out that not in one poll, but two, including the Boston Globe, had us in third place.” The crowd of roughly 300 (with many more stuck in an overflow area outside) cheered Ms. Klobuchar’s reference to the Boston Globe/WBZ-TV/Suffolk University tracking poll that found Ms. Klobucharat 14 percent.
Read more Klobuchar boasts of polling results. That put her behind Bernie Sanders, who had 27 percent, and Pete Buttigieg, who had 19 percent, and ahead of two former polling leaders, Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Elizabeth Warren, who were tied for12 percent.
Ms. Klobuchar, clearly enthused by the polling, also touted her weekend online fund-raising haul, saying she pulled in more than $3 million, an amount that was boosted by a well-received debate performance on Friday night. She briefly recalled that Monday marked one year since she kicked off her campaign at an event held during a blizzard in Minnesota. Looking outside at the sleet and snow pelting the New Hampshire roads, Ms. Klobuchar tied the two appearances together. “I know we are late,” she said. “The weather is just so typicalof me.”
10:50 a.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Matt Stevens
TRACKING POLL SHOWS SANDERS IN LEAD, FOLLOWED BY BUTTIGIEG ANDKLOBUCHAR.
MANCHESTER — Amy Klobuchar received a bit of welcome news over the weekend as a tracking poll of New Hampshire voters showed her climbing to third place here heading into Tuesday’sprimary.
In the final day of the weeklong Boston Globe/WBZ-TV/Suffolk University tracking poll, Sunday, Ms. Klobuchar rose to 14 percent support, behind Bernie Sanders (27 percent) and Pete Buttigieg (19percent).
Elizabeth Warren and Joseph R. Biden Jr. tied with 12 percent support, just behind Ms. Klobuchar. Read more Tracking poll shows Sanders in lead, followed by Buttigiegand Klobuchar.
The poll had a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points. Ms. Klobuchar showed strength in the Iowa caucuses and left with a single pledged delegate, but finished in fifth place there, behind Ms. Warren and Mr. Biden. 10:22 a.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Thomas Kaplan
BIDEN BRINGS DOUGHNUTS TO SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS. ImageFormer Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. in Nashua.Credit...Elizabeth Frantz for The New York Times NASHUA — On the last day of campaigning before polls open in New Hampshire, Joseph R. Biden Jr. stopped by a school bus depot on Monday and greeted workers there. On a rainy morning, Mr. Biden brought boxes of doughnuts from Dunkin’, which he said were from “one former school bus driver to another.” He explained that he had worked as a school bus driver when he was in law school at Syracuse University, in upstate New York. Mr. Biden asked workers to consider him in the primary on Tuesday. “Look me over, O.K.?” he said. Read more Biden brings doughnuts to school bus drivers. At one point, he instructed a woman to call her grandmother on the phone so he could speak to her, something he likes to do. He alsoposed for pictures.
When he met a woman in a Boston Bruins sweatshirt, he said that his wife, Jill Biden, was going be mad at him because she was a Philadelphia Flyers fan. “I don’t want to sleep alone,” he said.ADVERTISEMENT
10:02 a.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Ruth Fremson
A WARREN SUPPORTER WAS TOLD TO LEAVE HER SIGN OUTSIDE. SO SHEIMPROVISED.
ImageCredit...Ruth Fremson/The New York Times LEBANON — Roxana Matthews had a message for Elizabeth Warren, but she also had a problem. She was not allowed to bring her homemade sign into Ms. Warren’s town hall at Lebanon High School on Sunday. Ms. Matthews, 44, is from Romania and now lives in Plymouth, N.H., where her husband teaches philosophy at Plymouth State University. She will be voting in her first presidential election this year after being naturalized in September. She left the sign behind and quickly wrote “New Americans for Warren” on her hand with a marker. Then she showed it to Ms. Warren when she reached her in the selfie line at the end of the event. Read more A Warren supporter was told to leave her sign outside. Soshe improvised.
“She’s authentic, a go-getter who understands the needs of people,” Ms. Matthews said. ImageCredit...Ruth Fremson/The New York Times 9:52 a.m. Feb. 10, 2020By Thomas Kaplan
‘I’M STILL LEADING NATIONALLY,’ BIDEN SAYS. NASHUA — Joseph R. Biden Jr. on Monday defended his standing in the primary race, despite a fourth-place finish in Iowa and shaky poll numbers in New Hampshire, emphasizing that the nominating process was just getting underway. “I don’t see any diminution in national support,” Mr. Biden said in an interview on “CBS This Morning.” “I’m still leadingnationally.”
Mr. Biden said of the nominating process: “This is just getting started, and I’ve said that from the very, very beginning. And I feel confident about where we are.” Read more ‘I’m still leading nationally,’ Biden says. Once again, Mr. Biden pointed to the lack of diversity in Iowa and New Hampshire, where the electorate is overwhelmingly white. Mr. Biden is counting on stronger performances in later contests in more diverse states, such as South Carolina’s primary at the end of the month. “The other voters out there represent a significant portion of the American people, and they look like America,” Mr. Biden said. Mr. Biden entered 2020 with the smallest amount of cash on hand among the top four finishers in Iowa, but he insisted on Monday that he had enough money to fund his campaign. He said his campaign had been raising about $500,000 per day, though there was no way to independently verify that number. His campaign raised about $250,000 per day in the fourth quarter of 2019, the last period for which he has reported his fund-raising. 9:46 a.m. Feb. 10, 2020The New York Times
IT’S ALMOST DECISION TIME IN NEW HAMPSHIRE. ImagePete Buttigieg held a campaign event at Dover Middle School on Sunday.Credit...Tamir Kalifa for The New York Times With decision time just two days away, scores of New Hampshire voters on Sunday — and some political tourists — flocked to school gyms and hotel ballrooms to get a glimpse of the Democratic candidates as they made their closing arguments. Photographers for The New York Times are following candidates across the state this week.See more
Decision Time Nears in New HampshireFeb. 9, 2020ADVERTISEMENT
9:40 a.m. Feb. 10, 2020The New York Times
WE’RE STILL LEARNING MORE ABOUT THE IOWA MESS. As disastrous as the 2020 Iowa caucuses have appeared to the public, the failure runs deeper and wider than has previously been known, according to dozens of interviews with those involved. It was a total system breakdown that casts doubt on how a critical contest on the American political calendar has been managed for years. Until now, the main public villain in the Iowa caucus fiasco has been a faulty results-reporting app, along with a “coding issue” in a back-end results reporting system that state party officials blamed for the chaos. But the crackup resulted from cascading failures goingback months.
Read more:
How the Iowa Caucuses Became an Epic Fiasco for Democrats The problems that beset the Democratic Party’s first state caucus of the presidential race ran far deeper and wider than one bad app.Feb.9, 2020
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