Porterville Recorder

N.H.’S new voters critical

- David M. Shribman is the former executive editor of the Pittsburgh Post-gazette.

INTERVALE, N.H. — Oh, no! Not New Hampshire again! Not another elegy to those flinty and finicky voters! No, not that!

Yes, that. Because when we last left the state, back in pre-coronaviru­s times, the Presidenti­al Range was draped in snow, Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and former Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Ind., both had captured nine Democratic convention delegates, and former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. was buried in a distant fifth place. Only one in 12 voters supported him.

Now we are back, and if you stand at the vista here by the White Mountain Highway, you will see wildflower­s in the foreground, leaves changing brilliantl­y in the valley, and, in the distance, the Presidenti­al Range draped in late-summer sunshine. But the political season has changed, too. We have a new perspectiv­e on presidenti­al ranges in general: Biden is the Democratic presidenti­al nominee, Sen. Kamala Harris of California (who folded her campaign even before the primary here) is his running mate, and once again this state is a political battlegrou­nd of great consequenc­e.

How can that be? New Hampshire, once as reliably Republican as the butter-and-sugar sweet corn is reliably ready for picking in August, has voted for the Democrats in six of the last seven elections — and it would have been seven straight had independen­t Ralph Nader not siphoned off 22,198 from Vice President Albert Gore’s support in 2000.

But here’s why President Donald Trump dropped in here recently, why Democrats are mobilizing as if they’re preparing for a winter nor’easter, and why never-trumper Republican­s are organizing in a way independen­t-minded party members haven’t done since Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., the American ambassador to Saigon, was the stunning beneficiar­y of a write-in campaign that actually won the 1964 New Hampshire primary:

Trump lost this state and its tiny (but perhaps consequent­ial in a close contest) haul of four electoral votes by a margin of only 2,736 four years ago. To put that number in hardscrabb­le granite perspectiv­e worthy of the White Mountains here, that’s about one-quarter the number of votes Rep. Tulsi Gabbard won in the Democratic primary in February, and you probably have forgotten she even ran and never actually knew who she was.

This kind of fevered politics is, to be sure, unusual here. From 1920 to 1988 — from the presidenti­al candidacie­s of Warren Harding to George H.W. Bush — the Granite State deviated from the Republican column only four times, three for Franklin Roosevelt and once for Lyndon B. Johnson in the Texan’s 1964 landslide over Sen. Barry Goldwater. In that period, Republican­s basically sat back and watched that handful of electoral votes slip effortless­ly into the GOP slot.

Now there’s a different New Hampshire — and it has grown even more different in recent years.

New Hampshire once was a remote colony of Yankees who pretty much stayed put and stayed the same. But now this is one of the fastest-changing states in the union.

Indeed, from that 2000 election, where Nader played such a pivotal role, to 2008, when Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois prevailed, fully a third of potential voters actually were different people than the electorate before the turn of the century; they were people who either weren’t 18 at the end of the 20th century or didn’t live in the state. That phenomenon occurred again between 2008 and 2016. That churn is chilling news for the Republican­s, and thus for Trump.

“The newer people and younger people are more likely to identify as Democrats,” said Andrew Smith, a University of New Hampshire pollster, “as the younger people look to that party and some older people either die or move to Florida.”

But New Hampshire also is ground zero for both parties’ efforts to draw new voters into the polling booths in November — a critical task for Trump, whose strategist­s believe there’s a hidden force of potential new voters who can carry him over the line, just as it is for Biden, whose strategist­s believe mobilizing the young and attracting voters, particular­ly Independen­ts, disillusio­ned with Trump’s style and comportmen­t, could be the margin of his victory.

“It is impossible for the polls to accurately reflect a race in which Donald Trump is the candidate,” said former Gov. John H. Sununu, the paterfamil­ias of the Sununu clan. On that, if on nothing else, all the state’s politicos agree.

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