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Bernie Sanders 55,698 25.93% Pete Buttigieg 51,504 23.98% Amy Klobuchar 42,940 19.99% Elizabeth Warren 20,254 9.43% Joe Biden 18,385 8.56% Tom Steyer 7,683 3.58% Tulsi Gabbard 7,060 3.29% Andrew Yang 6,043 2.81%
Elizabeth Warren@ewarren·1mOur campaign is built for the long haul—and we’re just getting started.I’m grateful down to my toes for every person who has put their heart into our campaign. Will you chip in $3 to help @TeamWarren keep growing?
Charlie Kirk@charliekirk11·14mTo my fellow Trump supporters:Beating Bernie is no guaranteeHe has a energetic base, devoted followers, and a consistent message
Candidate Votes Percent QuoteBernie Sanders 70,628 25.82% Pete Buttigieg 66,127 24.18% Amy Klobuchar 54,338 19.87% Elizabeth Warren 25,330 9.26% Joe Biden 23,815 8.71% Tom Steyer 9,762 3.57% Tulsi Gabbard 8,845 3.23% Andrew Yang 7,733 2.83% 88.55% reporting (263 of 297 precincts) | 273,527 total votes
Bernie Sanders 70,628 25.82% Pete Buttigieg 66,127 24.18% Amy Klobuchar 54,338 19.87% Elizabeth Warren 25,330 9.26% Joe Biden 23,815 8.71% Tom Steyer 9,762 3.57% Tulsi Gabbard 8,845 3.23% Andrew Yang 7,733 2.83%
The Democrats really need to change their way of thinking.
The Night Socialism Went MainstreamRussell BermanBernie Sanders’s victory in the New Hampshire primary marks a turning point for Democratic politics.February 11, 2020 It has taken a single week for Senator Bernie Sanders to achieve a distinction that eluded him for the entirety of his underdog campaign four years ago: The 78-year-old democratic socialist from Vermont is now, at least for the moment, the front-runner for the Democratic nomination for president.Sanders’s victory tonight in the New Hampshire primary, combined with his strong finish last week in Iowa and a bounce in national polling, places him firmly at the top of the Democratic field as the nomination race heads to Nevada and South Carolina. He has benefitted from a split in the moderate vote, as a late surge from Senator Amy Klobuchar slowed the momentum of Sanders’s closest New Hampshire rival, former Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Indiana. Former Vice President Joe Biden’s second consecutive lackluster result could threaten his firewall in South Carolina, where Sanders was on the rise and cutting into Biden’s lead among its crucial constituency of African American voters.But the significance of Sanders’s standing in the race goes far beyond the next round of primaries. In the modern history of American politics, no candidate so firmly planted on the left has been so well positioned to capture the nomination of the Democratic Party. Sanders has won election after election in Vermont as an independent, regularly declining the label of the party he now seeks to lead. His rise to the top of a field filled with more mainstream candidates could point to an important shift in the electorate. In Iowa and New Hampshire, Sanders’s talk of revolution overtook Biden’s pleas for a return to normalcy in the age of Donald Trump, and with his platform representing a kind of untainted progressive purity, the oldest white candidate on the ballot prevailed—albeit narrowly—over a plethora of younger, more diverse options.Read more at: https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2020/02/bernie-sanders-wins-new-hampshire/606022/