The Jerusalem Post

Republican voters set up camp at New Hampshire primaries

- • By HILARY LEILA KRIEGER

MANCHESTER, New Hampshire – David Dalrymple has thick, black gloves and a wool hat. He has bottled water, yogurt and fruit. He has a lawn chair and umbrella. He even has a woven wool mat so his feet don’t have to rest on the ice-cold cement sidewalk.

After 20 years of participat­ing in New Hampshire primaries, he knows what’s

Jerusalem Post correspond­ent needed to stay comfortabl­e in the New England winter while campaignin­g for a candidate outside a polling station.

“I’m here for the duration, so I know what to bring,” Dalrymple said. “I’m prepared.”

Most importantl­y, he has a large Mitt Romney sign.

“I think it’s going to be extremely hard for anybody to catch up to Romney,” he stated with confidence.

Going into the vote Tuesday, the polls bore that out. Romney, a former Massachuse­tts governor, earned 33 percent in a survey released Monday, and though the survey had registered a 10point drop in recent days, that number was still 13 points above Texas Representa­tive Ron Paul, his nearest competitor. Former Utah governor Jon Huntsman followed with 13%, former

Pennsylvan­ia senator Rick Santorum with 10% and former speaker of the US House Newt Gingrich with 10%. Texas Governor Rick Perry mustered just 1% of the vote.

In a national poll that Reuters released Tuesday, Romney also surpassed all the other GOP candidates for the Republican presidenti­al nomination, besting the second-place Gingrich 30% to 20%. Results from Tuesday’s primary were not available by press time.

Romney also has a big advantage in New Hampshire, which neighbors Massachuse­tts and where he owns a vacation home. In addition, Republican voters in the Granite State tend to focus on economic concerns rather than the social issues that motivate many of his opponents’ supporters.

“I watched what Mitt did in Massachuse­tts, and I liked it,” Dalrymple explains. “He’s been here. He has a home here. He’s a neighbor.”

He adds that he also supports Romney because of his stance on foreign policy issues, including in the Middle East.

“I think he’ll be a good friend of Israel, not like the president we have now,” he says.

Israel is a crucial issue for Marty Weinstein, who also voted Romney. He did so reluctantl­y, as he wanted to vote for Santorum but decided it was more important to back someone who was better positioned to win.

“We need someone who can challenge [President Barack] Obama,” he says while standing outside a polling station in Salem. He labels the president’s policies on Israel and the broader Middle East “dangerous.”

He notes that he feels reassured by all of the Republican candidates’ stances on Israel, except for the isolationi­st Paul.

“Most of them were pretty good on Israel,” he says. “Ron Paul scares the hell out of me – but also out of everyone else.”

Another voter at Weinstein’s polling station says Paul’s foreign policy views have eliminated him from the list of candidates she is considerin­g.

“Ron Paul’s got a lot of interestin­g things to say, but I wouldn’t go for him at all,” says Harriet Cooper. “[He says,] ‘Just put a big fence around the country,’ and you can’t do that.”

But his internatio­nal positions haven’t been a turn-off to three supporters who showed up in front of the polling site to hold signs supporting his candidacy, one of several voting locations where only Paul campaigner­s were present.

At Dalrymple’s station, he is the only activist holding a sign for a candidate other than Paul, where five supporters have come to campaign – two from Massachuse­tts and three from New Jersey.

And outside a polling station in Manchester at mid-day, dozens of impassione­d supporters have packed the lawn of the Webster School to cheer Paul on during a brief visit.

Waving Ron Paul signs, they chant, “President Paul!” and call the libertaria­n candidate the “father of the constituti­on.”

Not all present are swept up in the excitement, however. As a Red Sox fan might do upon hearing a cheer for the archrival Yankees, one man inserts his contrary opinion whenever the crowd calls out the candidate’s name.

“Ron Paul!” the crowd chants.

“Sucks!” he shouts back. •

 ?? (Reuters) ?? REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTI­AL candidate Mitt Romney holds a child while visiting a polling station in Manchester, New Hampshire yesterday.
(Reuters) REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTI­AL candidate Mitt Romney holds a child while visiting a polling station in Manchester, New Hampshire yesterday.

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