Search Results for New Hampshire

Giuliani Speaks!

On Saturday, Rudy Giuliani addressed a New Hampshire Republican crowd in Manchester. Here's the report...


Romney Ahead in New Hampshire

Mitt RomneyA recent Rasmussen poll has Mitt Romney ahead in New Hampshire. Romney is receiving support from 26% of those polls and the trio of Rudy Giuliani, John McCain and Fred Thompson receive about 17% each.

A couple of weeks ago, I noted that Romney is doing well in the early primary states. Momentum is a wonderful partner. As Romney wins, the money will flow in. Furthermore, it seems that the real loser will be Rudy. If he can't win in the east, it may effect his standings nationally.

Fred Thompson will do well in the South and Rudy may find himself riding the McCain Express down to the bottom of the pack. Romney may change his positions for the occasion but it is working. People like what he is saying ....now.

This could wind up being a race between Thompson and Romney.


Edwards, Romney Eye New Hampshire

The primary season has produced something of a mirror image. John Edwards on one side, Mitt Romney on the other. While both men trail at least two other candidates in national polls, each shows strong support in Iowa. Likewise, Edwards and Romney are increasingly focusing on New Hampshire in a bid to dole out a one-two punch to their rivals. The strategy is to snatch all the publicity from two early wins and translate it into an unstoppable momentum. Hey, stranger things have happened.

So what about a head-to-head match up between these two dashing gents? Well, according to Gallup, it's not even close. In fact, if you believe in this sort of speculation, Edwards would trounce Romney 61% to 32%, a higher margin of victory than either Obama, who was second, or Clinton. But then, once again, all Democrats beat all Republicans (though Thompson wasn't included in this survey).

The electability question factors large in a new article about Edwards, which highlights not only on the Iowa/New Hampshire game plan, but the former North Carolina Senator's belief that he can compete in the reddest of Southern states:
As much as he declares himself the antidote to George W. Bush, it's what he shares with the Texan--known for whacking brush in Crawford and using Lone Star State grammar instead of what he learned at Andover and Yale--that could be his best hope for winning: Southern authenticity.
Moreover, it is his attention to rural matters that makes Edwards popular with audiences in the little towns all across the country. Romney? Well, he has a varmint gun.



Granite State-ments

The New England granite industry seems like a relic of another era. A brochure from Halibut Point State Park in Rockport, Mass., informs the reader that "Today, a single granite quarry remains in operation on Cape Ann; several others are active across New England." Has the "first-in-the-nation" primary in the Granite State, New Hampshire, also outlived its era?

Every four years, the New Hampshire primary exercises a disproportionate influence on who becomes our chief executive. This tiny state, with a population of just over 1.3 million, a land area of under 9,000 square miles, and four electoral votes, can quickly create front-runners and doom candidates who fail to finish first.

Is there any way to counter the power of the Granite State? Or will the winners of the 2008 New Hampshire Democratic and Republican primaries use their sudden momentum to triumph elsewhere? This country needs a state to challenge the New Hampshire primacy. "Checks and balances" aren't just needed in our federal government; they would also prove useful in our presidential primary system.

Merci to my muse on this one...


Musings on McCain

On Saturday, the same day Rudy Giuliani addressed a Republican state committee meeting in Manchester, New Hampshire, another politician worked the crowds for John McCain.

Some of the folks who heard Giuliani speak at the Palace Theater then came to the Merrimack Restaurant, where Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. praised the Arizona Republican, who won the New Hampshire primary in 2000.

In Huntsman's speech, he cited two anecdotes about McCain: an exchange between the senator and hundreds of American servicemen, and a visit to the Hanoi Hilton in the wake of 9/11.

"I saw the looks on the faces of these troops, 400 of them," Huntsman said. "He shook their hands. To me, it was a remarkable display of the human spirit."


Richardson Rising In New Hampshire

I've been wondering for a long time when the Democrats would discover they had, underneath their noses, a qualified, experienced presidential candidate who would be an electoral nightmare for Republicans to fight. This week Bill Richardson has gotten some attention. Walter Shapiro in Salon:

This week, for the first time, the respected Granite State Poll, sponsored by CNN and WMUR, put Richardson in third place (10 percent support), just ahead of John Edwards and Al Gore (tied at 8 percent), giving the New Mexico governor new bragging rights. But the most relevant number by far in the poll -- and another statistic that can only give Richardson hope -- is that 64 percent of New Hampshire Democrats say they are "still trying to decide" on a candidate.

Good news for the Richardson team. Focused attention on a key state may do the trick. Also, a widespread realization that Edwards is not a serious potential candidate if the Democrats want to, you know, win. The article goes on to quote Richardson on a couple of interesting topics:

...since he has gone from his initial support of the Iraq war to being an outspoken anti-warrior....

...Richardson grimaced comically and then said, "Full disclosure -- the National Rifle Association has given me an 'A' rating."...

... I'm not going to rail against rich persons. That's not me. I believe that we should have a pro-growth economy."...

So we have an anti-war liberal, who is also a pro-business, pro-gun governor from a key western state. This is a scary combination for a potential GOP opponent. Think Jon Tester in Montana and you have about sized up the situation. Thankfully for the GOP, the Democrats appear to be hell bent, just like 2004, in nominating one of their weaker candidates.


More on Giuliani, Granite State

Rudy Giuliani was in Manchester, New Hampshire, on Saturday to give a speech at a Republican state committee meeting. (My cartoon on the speech is here.) How would Granite State GOP members respond?

Based on interviews with people at the Palace Theater (which hosted the event), it seems New Hampshire Republicans have a favorable reaction to Giuliani as American hero, but a less favorable reaction to Giuliani as liberal-social-position-holder.

"I think Giuliani is an excellent leader, but what is he leading us to?" former state representative Gary Hopper asked. Citing the Second Amendment, he added, "Conservative Republicans believe the Constitution is absolutely necessary to keep power in the hands of the people. If Giuliani doesn't understand that, he should never become Commander-in-Chief."


Thompson Chooses Leno Over New Hampshire

From here on out, the name of the game for Fred Thompson is "living up to expectations." To this point, he's been able to control his message with scripted YouTube videos on Federalism, homespun kitsch as a fill-in for Paul Harvey, and a handful of selective public appearances. The biggest question facing Mr. Thompson is how well he'll perform when going toe-to-toe with the competition. Rudy Giuliani, Mitt Romney and John McCain (Not to mention Mike Huckabee) have proven themselves to be worthy adversaries at the slew of Republican debates which Mr. Thompson has sat out.

Well, add another missed opportunity to the list. In a calculated maneuver, Mr. Thompson will "officially" join the field of contenders the day after what one could argue is an important New Hampshire debate tomorrow night. But don't despair, Thompson fans, you can catch your man on Jay Leno, where he'll hope to reach a bigger audience and duck the live fire of his rivals. Believe me, Mr. Thompson's absence will not be lost on the proceedings. Nor should it. He could just as easily announced his entry into the race on the 5th, and made the debate the first big event of his fledgling campaign, but the potential for a let-down performance was just too great.

Indeed, in an even greater affront to voters, Thompson plans to run an ad during the Republican debate. How's that for having your cake and eating it, too?

Unfortunately for Mr. Thompson, these kinds of scripted, tightly-choreographed forays will soon be coming to an end.

Picture Says It All: Brownback's Challenge

Sam Brownback campaigns in New Hampshire
Life on the campaign trail can indeed be lonely for a presidential candidate struggling to gain traction.

The photo above captures Republican Sam Brownback speaking to a sparse audience at the New Hampshire Institute of Politics at Saint Anselm College in Manchester, N.H., Tuesday. To be fair, there were at least 11 more people on the right side of the room, not pictured here.

Still, this can't bode well for the Brownback campaign. What does the Republican senator from Kansas need to do to capture the voters' interest? Or is it a hopeless case? Leave your comments below.

Hillary: Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy is Back


You remember the term, don't you? Hillary Clinton first coined it back in the 90's to explain away the charge that her husband was having an affair with Monica Lewinsky. Hmm. I wonder how that turned out. To be fair, what Mrs. Clinton most objected to was the organizational network of conservatives that funded a series investigations against the former first-couple.

Well, Hillary has invoked the terminology once more. Today's conspirators? Those who helped engineer election day phone jamming in New Hampshire in 2002. The allegation seems a safer bet this time around. Three Republican operatives have, after all, been found guilty in the matter.

"To the New Hampshire Democratic party's credit, they sued and the trial led all the way to the Republican National Committee," Clinton said. "So if anybody tells you there is no vast right-wing conspiracy, tell them that New Hampshire has proven it in court."

Even if Mrs. Clinton has a valid point, the conspiracy rhetoric is not kind on the ears. It may play well to the liberal base of the party, but will ultimately serve to further divide Republican from Democrat come the general election. Should Mrs. Clinton win the Democratic primary, she'll need all the independent votes she can muster, and she should either take the time to lay out a meticulous case against those she sees as part of the VRWC, or just let it drop.

Surely This Merits Firing


Super bizarre news out of New Hampshire, where it appears a top aide to Mitt Romney is impersonating a police officer -- and not for the first time. The same staffer got in trouble a few years back "for having flashing lights and other police equipment in his car without proper permits." That was when he was on Governor Romney's staff -- on the public payroll, in other words.

Jay Garrity apparently impersonated a cop in order to harass both a New York Times reporter and a truck driver. I'm not even sure that this is just bad politics. It actually sounds pathological.

This, of course, comes on the heels of news that Rudy "Broken Windows" Giuliani's South Carolina campaign chair got busted for coke. Mitt Romney's bagman in Utah is being sued for operating private schools were students were subject to physical, emotional, and sexual abuse. So let's just hope that these candidates are more honest and/or competent than the folks surrounding them.

Clinton Leads in Early States

The primary season will begin on January 14, 2008 and if the polls are right, Hillary Clinton is going to be sitting pretty on January 30, 2008. Rather than bore you with my words, take a look at the latest state polling numbers below.

Electoral
Date STATE Votes Obama Clinton Edwards
Jan. 14 Iowa 7 18% 22% 21%
Jan. 19 Nevada 5 16% 40% 16%
Jan. 22 New Hampshire 4 22% 36% 12%
Jan. 29 South Carolina 8 34% 25% 12%
Jan. 29 Florida 27 21% 37% 20%

I have limited the poll numbers to the above three candidates because they have consistently remained competitive. The other candidates have not yet been able to get into the serious numbers. Hillary seems to be getting stronger and stronger. Her numbers in Iowa have constantly improved.

The next primary will be on Feb. 5 and that will involve at least thirteen states (perhaps more) and a Democrat could easily hit the magic number by that date.


McCain Leads IA, NH, SC


According to a poll from American Research Group. He's up by 7 in Iowa, 5 in New Hampshire and by a whopping 13 in South Carolina. Ryan Sager comments in NYSunPolitics.com:

I still believe the February 5, 2008, big-state Super Duper Tuesday primary is going to render the early three primaries irrelevant. Well, with this caveat, applicable to both parties' primaries. If one candidate wins all three, the big states' results will probably reflect that - though, it's by no means a certainty, if there's a big gap between the national polls and the early state results.

But if the early states split between two or three candidates, the national results will control.

So, while a Hillary Clinton or Rudy Giuliani can lose one or two of the big three, a John McCain or John Edwards has to pull off a hat trick. Thus, Mr. McCain's got to hope those ARG numbers are on the mark.

In other words, a front-runner can lose one or two of the big early races. But a non-front runner can't afford to lose a single trick. Implicitly, Sager has classified John McCain as a second tier candidate, behind Rudy Giuliani and potentially behind Fred Thompson.

Welcome to the second tier John McCain! Please make yourself comfortable and sit yourself right next to Mitt there.
%Gallery-2780%

Fred's First Debate

Fred Thompson at the Minnesota State FairWhen will it be? Maybe sooner than you think. Somehow I missed this in the Boston Globe, but the speculation is that Fred Thompson will announce on or around September 5, and simultaneously show up for the University of New Hampshire debate on the same date.

Asked Wednesday by a Nashville, Tenn., radio commentator whether Sept. 5 is likely to be the day, Thompson said: "I can't give you a particular date, but sounds like you're in the neighborhood."

"I'm taking the time that I've got allotted to me to get my team together, to get my act together," Thompson said.

More speculation of the same sort here.

Well, it's not like there has been any lack of opportunity! If he misses this debate, there will be another, we can count on that. As someone who's warming up to Thompson, I'm afraid to say it, but I think the superheated buzz around his non-campaign is raising expectations extremely high for his potential performance in any potential debate. He's going to have to hit a home run every single time.

Who benefits from the expectations game? Mike Huckabee, who, with an impressive achievement in the Iowa Straw Poll, will be watched closely in any future debates. He will no longer be lumped in with the others in the second tier but will be watched closely for any breakout potential. Which he has, in spades. Thompson or no Thompson, the next GOP debate and the reactions to it will be interesting for that alone.


Republican Senator(s) Hit the Endangered List

Sen. John Sunnunu, R-N.H., might as well pack his bags. He can barely get a 43% approval rating and now former Gov. Jeanne Shaheen is going to run for his seat. From an e-mail sent to the press

because we have major problems facing this country, and there is an urgent need for real change in Washington," Shaheen said. "We've proven in New Hampshire that we can work together to get things done. I want to take that common-sense approach to Washington and help get this country moving in the right direction."
She will make an announcement Sunday. Just by entering the race preliminary polls show her leading the incumbent. That doesn't happen often. Meanwhile Sen. Ted Stevens, he of the bridge to nowhere, is now facing the problem of what happens when one accepts free help. According to the guy who did the bribe (CEO, pipeline company)
"I gave Ted some old furniture," Allen said. "I don't think there was a lot of material. There was some labor."
Nothing to see here. Move on, move on. Except for this:
The workers were Veco employees, probably one to four at a time, Allen said. He said the work on the home lasted for "probably a couple of months." Later, he said it might have been as much as six months. The remodeling work in summer and fall 2000 more than doubled the size of the house, a four-bedroom structure that is Stevens' official residence in Alaska.
Gosh, we just threw some old furniture around and didn't do much besides DOUBLE the size of his house. Maybe Sen. Ted Stevens could find that bridge and keep driving.


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