Los Angeles Times

Republican­s sounding alarm bells

Campaignin­g in New Hampshire before the primary resembles a battle for nation’s soul.

- By Cathleen Decker cathleen. decker @ latimes. com

MANCHESTER, N. H. — The villages and towns of New Hampshire are as scenic as ever, the people as friendly as can be. The unemployme­nt rate is 3.1%, about a third lower than the national rate. It seems an unlikely place for the apocalypse.

Yet that — or something close to it — is the threat that pours forth from Republican politician­s careening across this state, and the advertisem­ents blasting from the state’s television­s.

“There is an assault on everything we stand for,” says Donald Trump’s newest ad here.

“After seven long years of this president, we feel our country slipping away,” Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida says in his newest ad.

“Economic calamity ... is befalling our nation,” Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas says in his.

It is that kind of election year, here and elsewhere.

There are occasional glimpses of hope, but the election is suffused with nasty ads and denunciati­ons of the country’s state: It is not just that it is suffering — it is suffering enormously. It is less the election of a new president, the candidates suggest, than a battle for the nation’s soul.

It is a campaign aimed at the angry and the aggrieved.

The master of apocalypti­c political speech is Trump, who fans voter concerns as he campaigns across the state.

“Christiani­ty is under siege, the 2nd Amendment is under siege — so many things are under siege,” he said Thursday at Exeter Town Hall.

According to Trump, nearly everything is going wrong, all the time, due to politician­s.

“We’re in big trouble because we’re going in the wrong direction,” Trump said. “The economy is terrible; our trade with foreign countries is horrible. They’re taking it away from us.… We are being decimated on trade — we’re being decimated by China, Japan, every single country we do business with, and it’s never going to change with these politician­s.”

For good measure, he added later that “we’re being beaten in so many different ways … all the other countries in the world are ripping us off. And by the way, ripping us off and don’t respect us and mock us.”

That sort of approach gains steam from the broad animosity among Republican­s for President Obama — if he is running the country, it must be nearing collapse. But it also ref lects the remnants of an economic recession that deeply shook many in New Hampshire, including the blue- collar white voters at whom many of the candidates are aiming their messages.

The current low unemployme­nt rate masks that continued concern, according to University of New Hampshire political scientist Dante Scala.

“It’s a tale of two New Hampshires,” he said. “Your level of education probably has a big part to play in how well you weathered the Great Recession. Especially if you’re thirtysome­thing or 40 when it hit, even if you didn’t lose your job, it was the first big economic uncertaint­y in your adult lives. It left some scars in that regard.”

Trump, who leads in Republican polls here days before the Feb. 9 primary, may be the ranking expert in playing on those fears. But other candidates are making the same arguments.

In a speech in Henniker on Wednesday, Cruz asked supporters to pray daily to “father God … to pull us back from the abyss.”

“We have faced the abyss before, and the American people came together and pulled this country back,” he said.

Cruz, who cast the coming election as an “inf lection point” in history, was particular­ly scornful of Obama’s handling of the economy. ( The unemployme­nt rate was 8.3% his first month in office, peaked at 10% a few months later and is 5.0% now.)

“It is a failed economic plan,” he said.

Rubio burst into the presidenti­al campaign as the optimistic banner- carrier of a new generation. But he, too, speaks as if the country is about to fall off the cliff. The election, he said earlier this week in Exeter, is “a referendum on our identity” after the tenure of Obama, whom he called a “terrible commander in chief.”

His voice rose in anger at times, matching the sentiments of some in his audience, or so he suggested midway through the speech.

“You have a right to be angry,” he said.

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