Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders Win the New Hampshire Primaries
By PATRICK HEALY and JONATHAN MARTIN
Wednesday, February 10, 2016
MANCHESTER, N.H. — Donald J. Trump and Senator Bernie Sanders of
Vermont harnessed working-class fury on Tuesday to surge to commanding
victories in a New Hampshire primary that drew a huge turnout across the
state.
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But Mr. Trump also tapped into a deep well of anxiety among Republicans and independents in New Hampshire, according to exit polling data, and he ran strongest among voters who were worried about illegal immigrants, incipient economic turmoil and the threat of a terrorist attack in the United States.
With more than 80 percent of precincts reporting, Mr. Trump had
received 34 percent of the vote, and Mr. Sanders approached 60 percent.
The
win for Mr. Sanders amounted to a powerful and painful rejection of
Hillary Clinton, who has a deep history with New Hampshire voters and
offered policy ideas that seemed to reflect the flinty, moderate
politics of the state. But Mr. Sanders, who has proposed an emphatically
liberal agenda to raise taxes and impose regulations on Wall Street,
drew support from a wide cross-section of voters, even edging her out
among women, boosted by his appeal among the young.
At his
victory party, Mr. Sanders, flashing a wide, toothy grin, pointed to the
large voter turnout as evidence that only he could energize the
Democratic electorate to defeat the Republicans in November.
"Together
we have sent a message that will echo from Wall Street to Washington,
from Maine to California,” Mr. Sanders said. "And that is that the
government of our great country belongs to all of the people, and not
just a handful of wealthy campaign contributors and their ‘super PACs.’ ”
While Mr. Sanders led New Hampshire polls for the last month, and Mr.
Trump was ahead here since July, the wave of support for both men was
nonetheless stunning to leaders of both parties who believed that in the
end, voters would embrace more experienced candidates like Mrs. Clinton
or one of the Republican governors in the race. Yet the two men won
significant support from voters who felt betrayed by their parties and
were dissatisfied or angry with the federal government.
Beyond
Mr. Trump, four Republicans were clustered together, each receiving less
than 20 percent of the vote. Mr. Kasich’s surprise second-place finish
was driven by voters who described themselves as moderates and
independents and were charmed by his pragmatism and his upbeat campaign.
Effectively skipping Iowa, Mr. Kasich spent 62 days in New Hampshire,
holding 106 town hall-style events.
"We never went negative because we have more good to sell than to spend our time being critical of somebody else,” an ebullient Mr. Kasich told supporters, vowing "to reshine America, to restore the spirit of America and to leave no one behind.”
Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders Win the New Hampshire Primaries
The success by two outsider candidates dealt a remarkable rebuke to the political establishment, and all but guaranteed protracted, bruising races for each party's nomination.