91麻豆天美 DC Neighborhood Stories from American University Tue, 06 Feb 2024 22:20:20 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 /wp-content/uploads/2024/04/cropped-2-32x32.png 91麻豆天美 32 32 Fighting for favorites /2024/02/06/fighting-for-favorites/ /2024/02/06/fighting-for-favorites/#respond Tue, 06 Feb 2024 22:20:20 +0000 /?p=18268 By Gaby Waksberg

MANCHESTER, N.H. 鈥 Randall Walden believes that likability and even public opinion on candidates shouldn鈥檛 interfere with what they鈥檝e actually said and done during their careers. The school bus driver supports President Joe Biden or any Democrat willing to work on issues he鈥檚 focused on, such as the necessity of accurate history education in schools. 

鈥淟ikability has nothing to do with it鈥. I just want to go by what they鈥檝e done with their lives. I read up, and when I hear someone get trashed like Hillary, I get the book, and I read and find out,鈥 he said.

Favorability polls conducted by The Bulfinch Group in the past week show that 56% of Americans disapprove of President Biden. Likability and favorability in New Hampshire take on a new meaning when retail politics brings candidates to town. Communities across the state have shaken hands and heard directly from candidates, but polling hasn鈥檛 shown much of a change in likability related to their travels. Nikki Haley, the former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, campaigned in New Hampshire for months but only had a 39% favorability rating in the first-in-the-nation primary earlier this week.

Sign from a Nikki Haley rally, where Judith Sheindlin, “Judge Judy,” spoke. (Gaby Waksberg/91麻豆天美)

Haley鈥檚 favorability score was reflected in the results from the New Hampshire primary, where she lost to Trump by 11%. This race was closer than her loss in Iowa but shows that despite 40-plus appearances across the state, favorability is hard to swing with retail politics. In conversations with New Hampshire voters, many said their opinions weren鈥檛 changed by meeting, or not meeting, with candidates. 

Stephan Loranger, 21, and his sister, Katie, 20, agree that meeting a politician doesn鈥檛 change their opinion of the candidate much. The Gen-Z siblings weren鈥檛 driven to vote based on strong favorability toward a particular candidate but said they voted because it was their civic duty. Katie is a first-time voter and believes that policy is what controls who she is voting for, not the opportunity to shake a hand. 

Nashua local Karl Blanchette felt similarly, worrying most about foreign policy. He said he is loyal to former president Donald Trump. Blanchette has a son who has served overseas and believes that Trump is the best candidate to keep the armed forces and U.S. citizens safe. He can see how Trump鈥檚 personality is polarizing and, at times, immature, but he thinks people are ready to look past that. 

Blanchette said that more people are interested in policies rather than a likability or popularity contest. 鈥淕ood thing it’s not a populist vote, or we鈥檇 have Brad Pitt running for president,鈥 he said.

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What is presidential? /2024/02/03/what-is-presidential/ /2024/02/03/what-is-presidential/#respond Sun, 04 Feb 2024 03:32:37 +0000 /?p=18285 By Abigail Pritchard

MANCHESTER, N.H. 鈥 Following former president Donald Trump鈥檚 win at the first-in-the-nation primary Tuesday, Americans are likely facing a Biden-Trump matchup in the 2024 general election. Numerous polls suggest that most people don鈥檛 want to see this, which leaves them asking what it means to be presidential?

Most Americans are dissatisfied with a face-off between President Joe Biden, 80, and Trump, 77, according to 2023 polls from AP-NORC, CNN-SSRS, and NBC. The problems? Age for both and indictments. Trump is facing 91 felony indictments across four separate trials. A Harvard CAPS-Harris poll found that while Trump could lead Biden in a general election, Biden would likely lead Trump if Trump were convicted of any of his charges.

Still, New Hampshire voters varied on whether Trump鈥檚 indictments are deal-breakers.

At a rally for former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, India Boillot, 17, said, 鈥淗e has no place being on the ballot, especially since he was impeached, and he has all the indictments against him.鈥

Adamant Trump supporters such as Richard Boddie, 50, however, think the indictments are entirely politically motivated. In the search for someone presidential, Boddie said he values Trump鈥檚 leadership and compassion.

鈥淵ou stand back and watch him talk to people,鈥 Boddie said of Trump. 鈥淗e is humble. He will stand there, and he will listen to you talk. He will not speak over you. He wants to hear what you have to say. Do you think Joe Biden would do that?鈥

Voters at a Laconia Trump rally tended to agree that Trump is presidential because he鈥檚 tough.

Charles Bradley, a 75-year-old Laconia voter, said, 鈥淲hat makes somebody presidential is the ability to make tough decisions and see that they鈥檙e acted on.鈥

Sarah Zeballos, 18, is also looking for someone tough 鈥 and Haley is her pick on that front.

鈥淚 think toughness is being brave,鈥 Zeballos said at a Haley rally. 鈥淚 actually really admire Nikki Haley as a woman to go out there and stand your ground and ignore backlash. I think being tough is to be a little stupid and to be a little brave.鈥

However, Max Abramson, a New Hampshire congressional candidate, said he wants a 鈥渧ery civil Eisenhower-type candidate,鈥 someone who makes the Republican party look good. He criticized Trump for bringing his 鈥渘ame-calling鈥 into the presidency.

鈥淵ou can kind of do that as a candidate,鈥 Abramson said. 鈥淏ut once you鈥檙e president, you鈥檙e supposed to kind of bring the country together.鈥

Still, Abramson thought Trump had good traits.

鈥淚 think that a lot of people were impressed by how much he supports military guys, how clear he was on foreign policy.鈥

But Bob Daly, a 64-year-old Laconia voter, said that in looking for someone presidential, he was more concerned with Trump鈥檚 age than his indictments.

鈥淭he legal issues don鈥檛 bother me,鈥 Daly said. 鈥淚f I thought they were that severe, I wouldn鈥檛 be here.鈥

At the time of the rally, Daly didn鈥檛 know who he would vote for. His wife, Nancy, 60, also went back and forth on the issue.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 believe he鈥檚 innocent, but I don鈥檛 believe the other side is innocent either,鈥 Nancy said. 鈥淲hat scares me is that we鈥檙e down to the same election that we had last time.鈥

Both Bob and Nancy said the slate of candidates is 鈥渄isappointing,鈥 partly because of the frontrunners鈥 age. But Nancy said that no candidate appears presidential.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think they represent the values that I grew up with 鈥 honesty, integrity 鈥 and I think for years we’ve been lied to. By all of them,鈥 Daly said. 鈥淪o I don’t think any of them are very presidential in my book.鈥

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24 hours with the Phillips campaign /2024/01/31/24-hours-with-the-phillips-campaign/ /2024/01/31/24-hours-with-the-phillips-campaign/#respond Thu, 01 Feb 2024 02:11:00 +0000 /?p=18277 By Jasmine Thomas

MANCHESTER, N.H. 鈥 After launching an unlikely bid to challenge President Joe Biden for the Democratic nomination, Congressman Dean Phillips (D-Minn.) spent the final day before the first-in-the-nation primary rallying supporters and giving high fives.

The night before election day, Phillips supporters gathered at his campaign鈥檚 headquarters in downtown Manchester. Supporters were treated to free campaign merchandise, including Dean for President T-shirts and Missing Joe Biden posters. Former 2020 presidential candidate Andrew Yang introduced Phillips to a crowd of supporters and journalists.

Former presidential candidate Yang rallies support for Dean Phillips (D)
Andrew Yang rallies Dean Phillips supporters. (Stephen Leverton/91麻豆天美)

鈥淚 personally think it鈥檚 absurd that New Hampshire Democrats are being punished for holding a primary [that] you all are required to hold by state law,鈥 Yang said, referring to Biden鈥檚 absence from both the ballot and in the state leading up to the election. 鈥淲e need a guy who is actually making the case here in New Hampshire.鈥

Phillips talked less about policy and more about civic engagement, 鈥淭hank you for your belief in me,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hank you for recognizing that if we don鈥檛 get our act together and start treating people with respect, and decency, and collegiality, we鈥檙e in big trouble.鈥

鈥淚f you want to be the leader of the United States of America, you cannot and should not ever condemn 50% of this country,鈥 Phillips said, referring to his outreach to Trump supporters the night before. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 who I am. Are you ready for that kind of change?鈥

On election day, Phillips spent the morning greeting voters from polling place to polling place. He made a point to shake hands with sign-holders for every candidate.

Dean Phillips speaks to supporters in Manchester
Dean Phillips speaks to supporters in Manchester. (Stephen Leverton/91麻豆天美)

When asked how he鈥檇 unify the Democratic party, Phillips said, 鈥淚鈥檓 really excited about the opportunity to not just unify Democrats, but actually bring independents and most Republicans along and re-establish what America really is 鈥 which is working together.鈥

Democratic primary voters had many options on their ballots, none of which were Biden. Many Democratic voters expressed displeasure at Biden鈥檚 absence from the state and the subsequent write-in campaign.

Donna LeRoy鈥檚 I-voted sticker. (Jasmine Thomas/91麻豆天美)

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 pathetic,鈥 Donna LeRoy, 56, said. She and her husband, wearing Dean for President shirts, took photos with Phillips outside their polling place on election day.

鈥淗ow dare they say our vote doesn鈥檛 matter to them and then want us to write his name in?鈥

Retired teacher Jill Gendron, 64, was disappointed by Biden鈥檚 absence but still voted for him. 鈥淭o tell you the truth, I鈥檓 voting for Biden just because he鈥檚 a Democrat.鈥

Her husband, retiree Michael Gendron, 65, wasn’t convinced by Phillips鈥 campaign. 鈥淚 thought it was a very good campaign鈥 I don鈥檛 know anything about him other than that he鈥檚 been on the TV the past three weeks.鈥

On Tuesday night, Phillips鈥 supporters gathered at the Millyard Museum in Manchester, where they were treated to food, an open bar and free campaign merchandise.

The room erupted in boos when it was announced that news organizations projected a win for Biden.

鈥淪o I鈥檓 here to say, are you ready to keep this baby going?鈥 Phillips asked. 鈥淭his is not a campaign about me, this is a campaign about all of you, and all the people around this great country who are looking for someone to get excited about.鈥

Phillips finished second with 19.6% of the Democratic vote.

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Can Haley make her mark? /2024/01/29/can-haley-make-her-mark/ /2024/01/29/can-haley-make-her-mark/#respond Mon, 29 Jan 2024 20:36:55 +0000 /?p=18212 By Natasha LaChac  

 MANCHESTER, N.H. 鈥 Minutes after the polls closed in New Hampshire, the Associated Press the race for former president Donald Trump. His sole remaining opponent, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, was undeterred. 

 鈥淭hank you for the love, New Hampshire. We are going home to South Carolina!鈥 Haley said in a after the election, her claims leading up to the primary that she would not drop out of the race even if she lost in New Hampshire.鈥 

 Haley has been the underdog since the Iowa caucuses, where she to Trump by a 30-point margin. She stayed in the race while the two remaining Republican challengers, businessman Vivek Ramaswamy and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, dropped out. Haley continued to lower than Trump and eventually to him in New Hampshire by an 11-point margin. 

 Haley persists against the odds, as the Republican National Committee is a resolution to declare Trump the presumptive nominee. In New Hampshire, however, a state that prides itself on holding the primary in the nation, her supporters are adamant that she stands a chance. 

 Haley charmed some voters with traditional New Hampshire retail politics and face-to-face campaigning. She and Gov. Chris Sununu tour local breweries, restaurants and businesses, pouring beers and shaking hands with voters.

Republican presidential primary candidate Nikki Haley with New Hampshire governor Chris Sununu.
Republican presidential primary candidate Nikki Haley was at a retail politics event at a local brewery with New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu. (Natasha LaChac/91麻豆天美)

 The morning of the election, Nicholas Bridle braved the cold in front of Winnacunnet High School, bearing a 鈥淣ikki Haley for president鈥 sign.鈥 

 鈥淲hat I really appreciate about candidate Haley is that she鈥檚 actually making an effort to go around and do that retail politics, talk to the people of New Hampshire. It鈥檚 one of the great things about the primary here,鈥 Bridle said.鈥 

 鈥淚n my opinion, she鈥檚 not an underdog campaign,鈥 he added. 鈥淚鈥檓 a volunteer. I鈥檓 here on my own accord. I had the day off from work today, and I was like, I鈥檓 going to hold down signs for my candidate and support her because I knew it was going to be a very contested race.鈥 

 The real allure of Haley is what supporters say she represents: change. The public is with the likely Biden versus Trump rematch in the 2024 election. As the only viable challenger to the two presumptive nominees in either party, Haley excites voters. 

 Jennifer Nassour, the northeast regional chair of Women for Nikki, has been volunteering on campaigns since she was 19. Nassour said that in that time, she鈥檇 鈥渙nly ever seen people this excited about two candidates,鈥 , who replaced the late Sen. Ted Kennedy in 2010, and Haley.鈥 

 Renee McBride-Rogers and Tyler Baker are both young New Hampshire voters; this will be her first time voting for McBride-Rogers. They attended a Haley rally on Jan. 21 and left feeling excited to vote for her. 

 鈥淒onald Trump and Joe Biden, they鈥檙e both saying: Here鈥檚 all the problems I鈥檓 having right now, here鈥檚 all the stuff, but it鈥檚 not true,鈥 said Baker. 鈥淏ut she鈥檚 actually focusing on being a politician and what she wants to do for us.鈥 

 Baker is 鈥100 percent鈥 sold on Haley. McBride-Rogers agreed, praising Haley for her defense of free speech and composure after a climate protester interrupted the rally. 

 鈥淒efinitely, for me, it鈥檚 her focusing on the future, whereas the people who are against her are focusing on the past,鈥 said McBride-Rogers. 鈥淚 want change, and I believe Nikki Haley is that change.鈥 

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The 鈥榮tability鈥 factor in the New Hampshire primaries /2024/01/29/the-stability-factor-in-the-new-hampshire-primaries/ /2024/01/29/the-stability-factor-in-the-new-hampshire-primaries/#respond Mon, 29 Jan 2024 20:28:13 +0000 /?p=18206 By Noah Fischer

MANCHESTER, N.H. 鈥 Voters and volunteers at the 2024 New Hampshire primaries repeatedly cited one character trait they want to see in the next president: stability.

“I think what folks are really looking for here, and just everywhere, is common sense and a person who brings stability back to the White House,” said Brittany Martinez, a 32-year-old Republican strategist volunteering for former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley’s presidential campaign.

Multiple attendees at Haley’s events spoke of the former governor as a woman who embodied stability as a person and in her political experience.

“Steady,” said Sam Pimm, a 68-year-old donor to the Haley campaign. “She did a wonderful job as U.N. Ambassador. That is a very difficult job.”

“Great consistency. Showing thoughtfulness,” said Rand York, a 68-year-old nonprofit worker, describing the qualities he is looking for in a leader. “Firmness and kindness together.”

Former president Donald Trump often casts himself as an outsider, and as such, views of his stability vary within his own party. 

Gary Lee Pitts, a 65-year-old retiree who voted for Trump in the primary, sees him as an upstanding citizen whose policies make life more stable for Americans. 

“The economy was thriving” under Trump, Pitts said. He wants to return to having a president who is “looking out for the average American.”

Meanwhile, other Republicans portray the former president as a man who would drag the country into four years of chaos.

“Trump is like a bull in a china shop,” said Jennifer Nassour, the former chairwoman of the Massachusetts Republican party. “He went through, and he knocked everything down and took everything out. But then he failed to actually rebuild it and to fix anything.”

And for some, President Joe Biden, who is running for reelection in 2024, is also seen as a candidate needing more stability.

April Sheerin, a self-employed 71-year-old, said that the country had gone from one extreme under Trump to the opposite extremity under Biden. “He’s trying to make everybody think that everybody should be woke.”

Voters for self-help author Marianne Williamson and President Joe Biden also echoed the stability factor. 

“It’s really hard to vote for someone who campaigns every once in a while,” said Eddie Love, a 34-year-old dietary aide at a Williamson campaign event. “[Williamson is] somewhere every day.”

Tim Tregea, a 73-year-old retiree, said, “[Biden] comes across as a very honest person,” and he wrote his name on the ballot box. He said the president’s economic policies “improve the life standards of U.S. citizens.”

Representative Dean Phillips speaks to a crown in New Hampshire.
Rep. Dean Phillips, D-Minn., a candidate in the Democratic primary, speaks to a crowd at a rally (Noah Fischer/91麻豆天美)

Lisa Gibson, a 47-year-old operations manager for an event space that routinely hosts Democratic Party events, said, “People’s fear of the unknown and what’s gonna happen next” is driving voters’ choices at the ballot box,” she said.

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Media bias concerns primary voters /2024/01/29/media-bias-concerns-primary-voters/ /2024/01/29/media-bias-concerns-primary-voters/#respond Mon, 29 Jan 2024 20:22:24 +0000 /?p=18189 By Albert Arron

LONDONDERRY, N.H. 鈥 Voters in the Granite State are accustomed to seeing potential candidates out and about. While many are proud of their vote, others say they are unhappy with the media鈥檚 representation of their candidate.

Londonderry school district worker and Republican voter Rebecca Mitchell, 55, contends that coverage varies by party. 鈥淚 think the media is a huge problem,鈥 she said.

At the same polling site, Laurie Riedel, vice president of finance for a software company, expressed her support for former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley but said she would vote for President Joe Biden if he wins the nomination.

Riedel, 58, said, 鈥淚 don’t think Biden gets enough credit for what he has done.鈥 She said it’s the media鈥檚 fault for the lack of press because 鈥渢he media 鈥 and the voters 鈥 like to focus on the drama.鈥

Data analyst Lee Sinkow, 39, and hospital administrator Linda Sinkow, 38, also voted in the Republican primary, casting their votes for Haley. 鈥淚 find that she’s very much in the middle, which is a majority of America,鈥 said Lee.

鈥淚 think a lot of the media or whatnot portrays everything to be very black and white,鈥 Linda said. 鈥淵ou have to be on one side or another when most of America’s in the middle. I feel like she’s that middle-road representation.鈥

The couple hoped Haley would win the nomination, but if the election were between former President Trump and President Biden, they would be 鈥渢orn鈥 in their choice.

Media and supporters flock to Nikki Haley
Media and supporters flock to Nikki Haley at a retail event at the Peddler’s Daughter in Nashua, N.H. (Albert Arron/91麻豆天美)

Donna and Paul LeRoy are loyal Democrat voters. After voting for President Biden in the 2020 presidential election, they turned to Democratic candidate Dean Phillips.

Her assessment of current coverage? 鈥淚 don’t think they’ve been fair in representing Dean,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think that they should have been out there more telling people that Biden stole our votes.鈥

The two also expressed their dissatisfaction with major T.V. networks.

鈥淚 was watching ABC, and they were covering a whole bunch of Republican candidates and so forth, but they have no spots on anything that happened on the Democrat side,鈥 said Paul.

Paul LeRoy did say, 鈥淐hannel 9 here in the state has always been very, very good about covering all the candidates.鈥

Michael Gendron, 65, and Jill Gendron, 64, both retired, voted for President Biden in the write-in campaign. Michael feels that 鈥淛oe doesn’t get enough positive coverage鈥 and the 鈥淒NC needs to get their act together.鈥

Veteran and Trump voter Jim Baub had a more pessimistic outlook on the media. 鈥淚 try to take in what I can, but 鈥 I don’t trust the conservative or formerly conservative media 鈥. The liberal media, I don’t trust any of them.鈥

Baub had said, 鈥淭hey’ve changed… Everybody’s got an agenda. That’s exactly it, propaganda.鈥

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Climate issues take center stage /2024/01/29/climate-issues-take-center-stage/ /2024/01/29/climate-issues-take-center-stage/#respond Mon, 29 Jan 2024 20:17:12 +0000 /?p=18210 By Zoe Bell

NASHUA, N.H. 鈥 Young climate protesters interrupted a series of rallies across New Hampshire last week as candidates prepared for the primaries, including three campaign events by former President Donald Trump. 

The protesters stood up and shouted during former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley鈥檚 Jan. 20 speech in Nashua, N.H. and Trump鈥檚 Jan. 22 speech in Laconia, N.H., calling the candidates 鈥渃limate criminals鈥 before being removed from the premises.

Adah Crandall, 17, is an organizer for the Sunrise Movement who traveled from Portland, Oregon, to protest at rallies in Iowa and New Hampshire throughout the past two weeks. 

鈥淚 joined the Sunrise Movement because, in the state of Oregon, my home is literally on fire from climate disasters,鈥 Crandall said in an interview. 鈥淚 walk outside my house in the summer, and I’m literally breathing the smoke of wildfires. And I believe that young people have the power to change the path of this country.鈥

Although Oregon saw an average number of wildfires in 2023, the . According to the Associated Press, the 2020 wildfires were among the worst natural disasters in the state鈥檚 history, forcing more than 500,000 people to evacuate their homes. She said she wants to see 鈥渁mbitious, bold climate policy鈥 from the U.S. government. 

鈥淲e鈥檝e been out here confronting Republican presidential candidates about their ties to the fossil fuel industry because these people claim to represent Americans, they claim to represent working people, but at the same time, their campaigns are literally funded by the Koch brothers and by fossil fuels that are poisoning our communities,鈥 she said.

Over the last two decades, fossil fuel billionaires Charles and the late David Koch have that oppose science and policy solutions. 

Crandall added that it was 鈥渢errifying鈥 to stand up and speak in front of the hundreds of attendees at the Laconia rally, but she had courage knowing that she had the support of members of the Sunrise Movement.

鈥淚 know my values, and I know that I cannot morally stand to let this man lie to these people and to the public. But I know that my home is burning, my friends鈥 homes are flooding, this entire country and everyone in the world is going to be hurt by the climate crisis,鈥 Crandall said. 鈥淚 was shaking in there right before I stood up. But to me, it’s absolutely worth it because it’s my values, and it’s my future.鈥

, a network founded by the Kochs, Haley鈥檚 presidential run in November 2023, which will include a multimillion-dollar ad campaign launching this week.

On Jan. 20, young protesters stood up one by one during Haley鈥檚 rally to ask what she would do to combat climate change as President.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e taking millions of dollars from the fossil fuel industry!鈥 Crandall shouted before being escorted outside by security. 鈥淭he climate crisis destroyed our homes. Will you look me in the eye? 鈥 You destroyed my generation鈥檚 future!鈥

Haley asked the crowd not to boo Crandall: 鈥淢y husband and other military men and women sacrifice for us every day for her to be able to do that,鈥 she said to cheers and applause before continuing her speech. Bruce Denner, an attendee, shouted, 鈥淟et her speak!鈥 numerous times during the series of protests at the rally.

Nikki Haley speaks to the crowd on Jan. 20 in Nashua, New Hampshire, in preparation for the primary. (Albert Arron/91麻豆天美)

Near the end of the rally, Haley addressed the young protesters who had interrupted her speech and offered steps to remedy climate change.

And what I will tell you is we’re all worried about the environment, too. We all want clean air. We all want clean water. We all want a world that we can have our kids and our grandkids grow up. That’s not up for debate,鈥 she told the crowd. “What we need to do is do it in a sensible way. First, call out India and China for the big polluters that they are. They are the ones that have to start cutting our emissions if we ever plan on doing something that’s really going to save the environment.”

Crandall spoke to the importance of young voters in the upcoming election year.

鈥淓very candidate right now 鈥 Democrat or Republican 鈥 is vying for the youth vote,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd young people with Sunrise are here to say that regardless of which party you鈥檙e in if you want [Generation] Z to support you, you have to be willing to fight for us.鈥

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New Hampshire voters get educated on the candidates /2024/01/29/new-hampshire-voters-get-educated-on-the-candidates/ /2024/01/29/new-hampshire-voters-get-educated-on-the-candidates/#respond Mon, 29 Jan 2024 20:10:27 +0000 /?p=18187 By Matthew Gillett

HAMPTON, N.H. 鈥  Robert Casassa is the poll moderator for the New Hampshire town with 13,000 voters on the checklist.  The Hampton native has served as the moderator for 20 years.

Robert Casassa shows an accessible polling booth. (Matthew Gillett/91麻豆天美)

Just as he had in years past, Casassa oversaw the election processes at Winnacunnet High School, Hampton鈥檚 only polling location. Casassa said voters in New Hampshire feel a 鈥渞esponsibility to go out to events鈥 and get educated鈥 to get a different feel for [the candidates] than on TV.鈥 

Volunteer election workers prepare to take ballots from voters. (Matthew Gillett/91麻豆天美

 One of those events occurred on election day in the school鈥檚 parking lot when former U.N. Ambassador and presidential candidate Nikki Haley stopped by. She talked to voters alongside New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu and Gen. Don Bolduc, saying she was 鈥渟uper excited鈥 and grateful to Dixville Notch’s residents, whose residents voted at midnight and gave her a  6-0 victory 

Casassa said it is 鈥渉ighly complementary when candidates stop by. It energizes the voters.鈥 He noted that such visits are common occurrences for candidates. He recalled the 2016 race when his daughter took a picture with former president Bill Clinton, who was then campaigning for his wife and former secretary of state, Hillary. Casassa attributed the candidate visits to Hampton being a 鈥渢ossup community. It鈥檚 roughly 30% Republican, 30% Democrat, and 40% in the middle, and so everyone can have a dream.鈥

Presidential candidate Nikki Haley speaks to reporters.
Presidential candidate Nikki Haley speaks to reporters at Winnacunnet High School in Hampton, New Hampshire. (Matthew Gillett/91麻豆天美)

 One of the things that makes New Hampshire unique is the large number of undeclared voters in the state. These voters can choose to vote in either primary. While 鈥渁 lot of people enjoy the flexibility of being able to vote in either, the parties don鈥檛 tend to like it,鈥 he said.  

I voted stickers artwork
鈥淚 Voted鈥 stickers featured art from 4th graders who submitted artwork to the Secretary of State. (Matthew Gillett/91麻豆天美)

 

 

Over 1,700 people voted in the Democratic primary and 4,500 in the Republican primary. 

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Biden-Trump rematch nears /2024/01/29/biden-trump-rematch-nears/ /2024/01/29/biden-trump-rematch-nears/#comments Mon, 29 Jan 2024 19:52:32 +0000 /?p=18182 By Edozie Umunna

MANCHESTER, N. H. 鈥 Former President Donald Trump cruised to a comfortable win in New Hampshire鈥檚 Republican primary Tuesday, ending with 54% of the vote. Despite a formidable challenge from former ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley, the nation鈥檚 45th president won the state by over 11 percentage points, following up on a dominant win last week in Iowa.

Trump鈥檚 victories in Iowa and New Hampshire almost certainly assures him the nomination as his team shifts their attention to South Carolina.

On the Democratic side of the primary, a campaign to write-in President Joe Biden鈥檚 name coasted to a commanding victory with 59% of the vote. Warding off Dean Phillip鈥檚 energetic attempt to complicate things with a primary challenge, Biden took another step toward the nomination despite not once campaigning in New Hampshire.

Trump and Biden鈥檚 victories indicate that the country is headed toward a repeat of the 2020 general election 鈥 a reality that many voters in New Hampshire object to. However, the alternatives to the two parties鈥 presumptive nominees have failed to entice the state鈥檚 voters sufficiently.

Young voter holds up a sign at Nikki Haley’s January 21 rally in Exeter, N.H. (Edozie Umunna/ 91麻豆天美)

Karishma Manzur of Exeter, New Hampshire, came to Nikki Haley鈥檚 Jan. 21 rally hoping to find a candidate with the will and capacity to defeat Donald Trump. Instead, she found herself disappointed with Haley鈥檚 messaging.

鈥淲e need to see democracy over autocracy. And we want to see decency over vulgarity, and we want to see truth over lies. And unfortunately, the Trump train has taken over America,鈥 Manzur said. 鈥淎nd we were hoping Nikki Haley was going to be truly on the attack. But we were so saddened by the fact that she barely criticized him.鈥

Manzur instead found Haley鈥檚 words misguided. The candidate, in Manzur鈥檚 eyes, had directed aggression at the wrong adversaries.

鈥淪he’s opposing Trump on Tuesday, but it sounded like she’s opposing China and Biden on Tuesday,鈥 Manzur said. 鈥淪he was way harsher with China and Biden than she was with Donald Trump 鈥 with that attitude, she cannot possibly stop the Trump train. I am really, really sad.鈥

Cooper Aleyar, 19, a student at St. Olaf鈥檚 College from Rosemont, Minnesota, expressed a similar sentiment. Having traversed over 1,500 miles to campaign in New Hampshire for Biden, Aleyar found himself unmoved by Philipps鈥檚 challenge.

鈥淚鈥檓 from Minnesota, so I’m a bit familiar with Dean Phillips,鈥 Oleyar said. 鈥淚’ve looked at some of his policies, and he just seems like a real flip-flopper. Kind of like he鈥檚 throwing a bunch of policies on the wall just to see what sticks.鈥

While Aleyar noted that Biden was far from his ideal candidate, he called on the electorate to rally around the presumed nominee.

鈥淭he world isn’t perfect, and you can’t get everything you want to get done, and sometimes you do have to compromise your ideals,鈥 Aleyar said. 鈥淏ut I think that if you look at everything Biden has done, he is by far the best candidate to get through, that supports policies that help young people and progressives.鈥

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Education on the ballot for many /2024/01/29/education-on-the-ballot-for-many/ /2024/01/29/education-on-the-ballot-for-many/#comments Mon, 29 Jan 2024 19:45:07 +0000 /?p=18201 By Kathryn Gilroy

Former educator Judi Lindsey said education is one of her top issues in 2024. She voted for Democratic presidential candidate Marianne Williamson and canvassed for her in front of the Green Street Community Center in Concord, New Hampshire, this week because of Williamson鈥檚 positions on education reform and climate policy.

鈥淏ecause I was a teacher, I saw the public schools,鈥 Lindsey said. 鈥淭hey need to be, as [Williamson] says, palaces of learning. We should have the best there.鈥

Lindsey said that the entire education system needs to be redone to make it more child-centered.

鈥淲e make it fun, and you can make it so much more affordable,鈥 Lindsey said. 鈥淓very kid should have the same chance.鈥

However, Guilford, New Hampshire, resident Ivan Govish said the education system should teach children only some topics.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e pushing a lot of the trans stuff into school,鈥 Govish said. 鈥淭hat is probably the biggest one, and then the gender therapy for little kids and all that nonsense.鈥

Classes addressing gender identity are an exception in American schools, according to The . Only seven states require that curriculums include LGBTQ topics, and the federal government recommends that schools include lessons on gender identity in their sex education programs.

At a rally in Manchester on Saturday, former President Donald Trump said that the U.S. education system is ranked at the bottom of every single list.

Outside Southern New Hampshire University arena during a rally for former president Donald Trump. (Kathryn Gilroy/91麻豆天美)

鈥淥n day one, I will sign a new executive order to cut federal funding for any school pushing Critical Race Theory, transgender insanity and other inappropriate racial, sexual or political content onto our children to destroy their lives,鈥 Trump said to a cheering crowd.

However, there is 鈥渓ittle to no evidence鈥 that K-12 public schools are teaching Critical Race Theory, but elements such as the current consequences of slavery have been taught, according to . The term 鈥渃ritical race theory鈥 is being used by state legislatures to pass laws restricting how teachers can teach racism and examine history through the lens of racism, according to the .

Cameron Ouellette, a 17-year-old high school senior from Winnisquam, New Hampshire, said he wants the education system to focus on setting up students for success rather than teaching about different genders.

鈥淭hey鈥檝e changed it within the last three years to this political agenda that is being pushed nowadays,鈥 Ouellette said.

Ouellette said Trump is the best candidate to change the education system because he remembers what schools were like when Trump was president.

During Trump’s term in office, he created the , a program that promotes American history education principles that are 鈥渁ccurate, honest, unifying, inspiring, and ennobling.鈥

鈥淗e wants people to go out in a world, whether it鈥檚 a blue-collar job or a white-collar job, and to know what they鈥檙e learning in school and to be able to apply that to a work ethic and go home with a decent paycheck to support their families,鈥 said Jason Foster, a 52-year-old disc jockey from Laconia, New Hampshire.

Former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley also touts education reform as an issue in her campaign.

At a rally in Exeter on Sunday, Haley said the country needs to focus on getting kids back to reading.

鈥淚f we don鈥檛 do something and do something quick, we鈥檙e going to be in a world of hurt 10 years from now,鈥 Haley said. 鈥淲e need to focus on not sending those kids forward but holding them back, bringing in their parents, doing reading remediation and let鈥檚 set them up for success.鈥

As governor of South Carolina, Haley helped get her education reform package passed by the state legislature in 2014, which redistributed money to districts with higher poverty levels and allotted $29 million for all state schools to hire a reading coach, according to 

New Hampshire State Sen. Tim Lang said the parental choice in kids’ education is extremely important.

鈥淭he ability that we have compulsory education, and the ability for parents to find a school that works for every child,鈥 Lang said. 鈥淚 got four kids. They鈥檝e all learned differently.鈥

Lang said education nationally has lost focus.

鈥淓ducation used to be about learning, teaching kids how to read, how to do math, how to do science, right?鈥 Lang said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e kind of wandered into all kinds of areas that are distracting from that, and I think our test scores show that kids are not scoring high in basic reading.鈥

Foster said that education is an essential issue in America at the moment and that teachers’ personal opinions should be set aside in the classroom.

鈥淲e should teach what’s appropriate to navigate yourself through life, without any physical altercation or verbal altercations, and be peaceful,鈥 Foster said. 鈥淜nowledge is power.鈥

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