Lodi News-Sentinel

Dems struggle to narrow field as New Hampshire prepares to vote

- By Evan Halper, Melanie Mason and Caroline S. Engelmayer

MANCHESTER, N.H. — Democrats’ hopes that New Hampshire voters might bring clarity to the chaotic fight for their party’s presidenti­al nomination were fading Monday as the state’s primary election neared, with the wide swath of voters seeking a moderate candidate continuing to resist coalescing behind any one contender.

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders seems to be solidifyin­g his support among voters on the party’s left, boxing out Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, according to multiple polls of New Hampshire voters.

At the same time, Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar and Pete Buttigieg, the former mayor of South Bend, Ind., continued to joust for position as the main centrist alternativ­e to Sanders, raising the likelihood that the contest will continue long after candidates exit the state.

“This is just getting started,” former Vice President Joe Biden said in an interview Monday on CBS’ “This Morning.”

A prominent Biden supporter, however, all-but conceded New Hampshire.

“New Hampshire is going to be tough,” Bill Shaheen, a long time Democratic activist who is married to Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, said in an interview. “But we will go on. This race isn’t over just because of New Hampshire.”

Biden’s plunge in support in the days leading up to Tuesday’s primary here has left the moderate lane wide open to other candidates, including former New York Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg. He skipped this state, but a national poll released Monday by Quinnipiac University showed him moving into a rough tie with Biden among Democratic voters nationwide, with Sanders leading both of them.

The former vice president has sought to downplay the importance of New Hampshire and its heavily white electorate.

“Nothing is going to happen until we get to a place — and around the country — where there is much more diversity,” he said.

Later, speaking to about 100 people in a church basement in Gilford, he steered clear of criticizin­g his rivals, focusing instead on President Donald Trump, who arrived here Monday evening for a rally.

Trump plans to run on the healthy economy, and Biden told voters he was the best candidate to counter that pitch.

“He’s telling the American people they should accept a devil’s bargain — that it’s OK to sell the soul of this nation just to help a few very, very wealthy people,” he said.

But the bulk of the job growth in the country happened before Trump took office, Biden said.

“Guess where he got that good economy from? The Obama-Biden administra­tion.”

Trump, in a message on Twitter, made clear that his rally plan was in part an effort to troll the opposition.

“Want to shake up the Dems a little bit — they have a really boring deal going on,” Trump wrote in a post that jibed at the Democratic candidates and their Iowa caucuses meltdown of last week.

During an evening rally in Milford, Buttigieg said “the president of the United States thinks we’re suckers” pointing to administra­tion proposals to cut programs Trump had said he would protect.

“Did you see the budget he put out today?” Buttigieg said. “Cuts to environmen­tal protection, cuts to public education. He’s already said that Social Security is fair game and on the table. Underminin­g Medicare, cutting Medicaid.

“But we know, we know, that there will be accountabi­lity for all of those broken promises.”

Trump narrowly lost this state in the 2016 general election, and his campaign has targeted it as one that potentiall­y could be flipped in 2020 and whose four electoral votes could make the difference in a close race.

The night before his arrival, Trump’s supporters began pitching tents outside the arena where he is scheduled to speak. Their enthusiasm contrasted with the anxiety pervading Democratic ranks.

Centrist Democrats here have been bouncing among a cluster of candidates. Many have gravitated toward Buttigieg, but tracking polls suggest his momentum may have stalled over the weekend as his rivals pounded away at him, with Biden in particular questionin­g his experience and fitness for office.

Over the weekend, Klobuchar moved into position for a strong showing. The tracking polls showed her edging into a possible third place behind Buttigieg and Sanders.

“We can’t be sure because tracking polls are a quick snapshot of where voters are,” said David Paleologos, the director of the Suffolk University Political Research Institute, which runs one of the surveys. “Is it a spike that will come back down, or is it a continuati­on?”

Five other major candidates — Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii, former Massachuse­tts Gov. Deval Patrick and two wealthy businessme­n, Tom Steyer and Andrew Yang — will also appear on the ballot, but the bulk of voter attention has focused on the top five.

Both Klobuchar and Buttigieg appealed to moderate voters in part by criticizin­g Sanders.

Klobuchar, speaking at a Rotary Club in Nashua, in the vote-rich southern part of the state, reminded the audience that in Friday’s debate, she had been the only candidate willing to raise her hand and say that Democrats would be making a mistake to nominate a candidate who calls himself a democratic socialist.

“That doesn’t mean I’m not good friends with Bernie; I am,” she said. “I just have a different philosophy than he does and a lot of it is grounded in a respect for entreprene­urship.”

Buttigieg, at a rally in Plymouth, a small city in central New Hampshire, said that while “I respect his intentions,” the Vermont senator was making promises he would be unable to keep without tax increases on the middle class.

“Look at Senator Sanders’ math — $25 trillion worth of revenue” over the next 10 years, much of it in new taxes to pay for health care, Buttigieg said. Some of those taxes, including higher levies on the wealthiest Americans, “we can agree on,” he said.

“But here’s the problem, there’s $50 trillion worth of spending. So about half of it is unaccounte­d for, and there’s no explanatio­n for where the other $25 trillion is supposed to come from.

“Are we going to pay for it in the form of still further taxes? Or are we going to pay for it in the form of broken promises?”

An American majority exists for major, progressiv­e change, he said, but not “if we take it all the way to the extreme.”

Sanders has said in interviews that he does not believe voters expect him to lay out a complete accounting of taxes and spending at this stage of the campaign.

A key to the result for both Buttigieg and Klobuchar likely will be the preference­s of independen­t voters, who are allowed to participat­e in the Democratic primary here.

Nonparty voters likely will make up more than 40% of the turnout in Tuesday’s election. In 2016, independen­ts delivered the lion’s share of their votes to Sanders as he competed against Hillary Clinton, who was the choice of establishm­ent Democrats.

Many of the state’s independen­t voters, however, are politicall­y moderate. Biden has little support among them, and if they swing heavily behind either Buttigieg or Klobuchar, they could have a major impact. They also tend to be late deciders.

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