Boston Herald

SANDERS’ FAITHFUL ‘NEVER WAVERED’

Cast ballots for the socialist senator

- By SEAN PHILIP COTTER

MANCHESTER, N.H. — Bernie Sanders squeaked out a win in New Hampshire’s first-in-the-nation primary, holding off surging moderates Pete Buttigieg and Amy Klobuchar to win the Granite State’s Democratic contest on the strength of his fervent base.

“Let me take this opportunit­y to thank the people of New Hampshire for a great victory tonight,” Sanders, the independen­t senator from Vermont, told thunderous­ly roaring supporters in Manchester on Tuesday night. “This victory here is the beginning of the end for Donald Trump.”

Sanders edged out former South Bend, Ind., Mayor Buttigieg and Minnesota U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar to claim victory in the influentia­l New Hampshire primary.

Sanders told supporters, “We have a grassroots movement from coast to coast with millions of people . ... We are putting together an unpreceden­ted multigener­ational, multiracia­l political movement.”

Sanders is leading in increasing­ly more polls nationally, especially as previous front-runner former Vice President Joe Biden drops in recent days. Polling aggregator­s Real Clear Politics and FiveThirty­Eight both have Sanders on top of the race after Sanders and Buttigieg essentiall­y split a victory in the chaotic Iowa caucuses.

The narrow margin is much slimmer than Sanders’ 2016 New Hampshire victory, when he trounced

former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton by 22 percentage points in New Hampshire, even though Clinton ended up winning the nomination.

Neil Holbert, who’d just cast his vote for Sanders in New Hampshire’s first-inthe-nation primary, cited the senator’s stances in favor of universal health care and taxing the rich, saying of Sanders, “He’s fighting for the workingcla­ss people.”

“He’s been my first choice since last time,” said the Manchester Democrat.: “He’s been the best choice all along, and he got screwed last time.”

Political independen­t Genara Clay, standing in a line of Sanders supporters outside, said, “I’ve been with Bernie since 2015 —

I’ve never wavered. He’s changed my whole life.”

Clay said she believes Sanders can expand beyond his current fervent base of supporters as the race heads to more diverse states.

“He has the people, he has the money, he has the volunteers,” Clay said. “This is the revolution, and people will feel that.”

Emily Norton and her parents, Steve and Jeanne, all switched from U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren.

“People will stop fearing the ‘democratic socialist’ label,” said Emily, referring to how Sanders identifies his lefty politics. She said Sanders’ health care plan is more specific than Warren’s, and she didn’t like when Warren accused Sanders’ campaign of sexism.

 ?? AP ?? ‘FIRST CHOICE SINCE LAST TIME’: Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders meets with people outside a polling place in Manchester, N.H., on Tuesday. Opposite page, a Sanders supporter holds a sign and his dog in Manchester.
AP ‘FIRST CHOICE SINCE LAST TIME’: Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders meets with people outside a polling place in Manchester, N.H., on Tuesday. Opposite page, a Sanders supporter holds a sign and his dog in Manchester.
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