The Daily - The Results From New Hampshire
Episode Date: February 12, 2020Senator Bernie Sanders won New Hampshire’s Democratic primary last night, with Pete Buttigieg and Senator Amy Klobuchar close behind in second and third. After two candidates once considered front-r...unners, Senator Elizabeth Warren and former Vice President Joe Biden, finished toward the back of the pack, we consider what Mr. Sanders’s win means for the rest of the race for the Democratic nomination. Guest: Alexander Burns, a national political correspondent for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading: With his New Hampshire win, Mr. Sanders tightened his grip on the Democratic Party’s liberal wing, benefiting from a field that has divided moderate voters.Here are the full results. Unlike in Iowa, where we have yet to declare an official winner, we can confidently say Mr. Sanders won in New Hampshire in a tight race with Mr. Buttigieg.
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OK, so we are walking.
We are walking into the Stan Spiro Field House in Manchester,
a.k.a. the Bernie Sanders primary night rally spot.
And there are a lot of people lined up outside,
despite the fact that it is very cold and snowy on the ground.
So we're expecting a very large crowd.
And then you can have an audio.
30, 30.
The crowd is counting down.
This crowd is loving these numbers.
Bernie Sanders absolutely in the lead. Something's happening.
Bernie! Bernie! Bernie!
Bernie! Bernie! Bernie!
Bernie! Bernie! Bernie! Bernie is taking the stage right now.
Seems very triumphant.
Thank you, New Hampshire!
Thank you, New Hampshire.
From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, Bernie Sanders wins the New Hampshire primary
with Pete Buttigieg and Amy Klobuchar
following close behind him in second and third place,
and Elizabeth Warren and Joe Biden
coming in a distant fourth and fifth place. Alex Burns on what that means for the rest of the race.
It's Wednesday, February 12th.
Okay. Alex, I'm pleased to be sitting with you, albeit at 12.15 a. Okay.
Alex, I'm pleased to be sitting with you, albeit at 12, 15 a.m., because we actually have election results to discuss this time.
It's sort of a novel experience, right, for the 2020 campaign.
They just count the votes, and the person who got the most votes is the guy who won.
And they count them on the same night as the election.
Right.
So I want to start at the top of the results. Let me take this
opportunity. So thank the people of New Hampshire for a great victory tonight. On the one hand,
that's the expected result, and it has been for months, right? And New Hampshire went for
Sanders overwhelmingly in 2016 over Hillary Clinton. So how should we be thinking about the significance of this result tonight?
Look, there's no question that this is an important milestone for the Bernie Sanders campaign.
Let me say tonight that this victory here is the beginning of the end for Donald Trump.
is the beginning of the end for Donald Trump.
It reestablishes him clearly as the leader of the left wing of the Democratic Party,
which was not sure to be the case at this point in the race.
But you saw Elizabeth Warren really recede as a competitor,
and Bernie Sanders consolidate his support in a way that positions him pretty well for the next couple rounds of this thing.
way that positions him pretty well for the next couple rounds of this thing. At the same time, you saw him come out on top with about 26% of the vote. Four years ago, he won 60% of the vote here.
Now, there are many, many more candidates running this time, so it's not an apples to apples
comparison. But I do think that when you look at the results in both Iowa and New Hampshire,
But I do think that when you look at the results in both Iowa and New Hampshire, you see a majority of the Democratic electorate leaning towards those more moderate candidates and Bernie Sanders prevailing mainly because there the vote, 25 percent, and he won.
But another way of thinking about it is that if you add up all the more moderate candidates vote tonight, they collectively got something like 70 percent of the vote.
Right. Now, of course, for Bernie Sanders purposes, winning is winning. Right. But
what that tells you is that as this race advances, if you end up with fewer and fewer moderate candidates,
it could become harder and harder for Bernie Sanders to keep winning states. Right, because
those votes would likely coalesce around one moderate. One or maybe two moderates compared
to the three, four or five moderate options we have had in the race up to this point. Sanders
is going to need at some point to broaden his coalition within the
Democratic Party. And, you know, delegate math is a boring and arcane subject. Says who? Well,
I think that between friends, we can say that it's an arcane subject. But the way the Democrats
hand out delegates, which are ultimately the point system that determine who gets to be the nominee,
is really proportional to the share of the vote you get.
So it's not like winning by one percentage point or one and a half percentage point over Pete Buttigieg means you get all the delegates and he gets zero.
In other words, these kind of victories, 26 percent of the vote means functionally you get something like 26% of the delegates. It doesn't mean you're collecting
just a giant boatload in a state like New Hampshire or Iowa for that matter.
Right. There's certainly a value in bragging rights and in momentum of winning fundraising
for just winning. But in terms of winning delegates to claim the nomination, a larger
share of the vote matters almost as much as just actually
winning. Well, so when it comes to that question, to momentum, what does this mean for Sanders?
There is now an 11-day sprint for the candidates until the next contest in Nevada. And what Bernie
Sanders now has is an opportunity to try to broaden his support and to try to go out and get some of those progressives who have been voting for Elizabeth Warren or some more working class voters who have been voting for Joe Biden and pull them into his camp and make himself more formidable as not just a really strong candidate, but as a front runner to take control of this race and to do it before one of those moderate alternatives catches up with him.
Right. Time here is of the essence for Sanders.
Right.
All the way! Brandon State! What do you say? Better Pete! All the way! Brandon State! What do you say? Better Pete! All the way!
So let's talk about who is currently leading that moderate pack, Pete Buttigieg.
And I don't think he can beat what Pete's talking about. He may not win tonight, but number two, that keeps him going. And that's all
we're looking for. Who came in second tonight, just behind Sanders. Buttigieg came into the
state with a whole lot of momentum coming out of Iowa. And just looking at his events, at his
crowds over the last week in New Hampshire, you could see a lot of support moving
away from Joe Biden and into the Mayor Pete camp. And but for a couple moments in that debate last
Friday, he might have won this state outright. In this election season, we have been told by some
that you must either be for revolution or you are for the status quo. But where does that leave the rest
of us? Most Americans don't see where they fit in that polarized vision. And we can't defeat the
most divisive president in modern American history by tearing down anybody who doesn't agree with us
100 percent of the time. You really saw him take a beating on the debate stage for the first time
from every direction.
Senator Warren, is that a substantial answer from Mayor Buttigieg?
No.
Literally every other candidate on stage went after Mayor Pete.
Mayor Buttigieg is a great guy and a real patriot.
He's a mayor of a small city who has done some good things,
but has not demonstrated his ability to,
and we'll soon find out,
to get a broad scope of support across the spectrum,
including African-Americans and Latinos.
And the one who probably went after him
to the greatest effect was Amy Klobuchar.
We have a newcomer in the White House,
and look where it got us.
I think having some experience is a good thing.
Another moderate from the Midwest
who went out there and
made a very, very blunt case that he's just not qualified to be president. It is much harder to
lead and much harder to take those difficult positions because I think this going after every
single thing that people do because it's popular to say and makes you look like a cool newcomer.
I just, I don't think that's what people want
right now. And you think that was effective or it just did enough to hurt him here? Well,
when you look at how Amy Klobuchar finished in New Hampshire, I don't want to jump the gun here,
but she did pick up an enormous amount of momentum at the end. I think you do have to
consider the strong possibility that a bunch of moderate voters who ended up with her after that
debate would otherwise have been with Pete.
So it may have been Klobuchar and her game here that cost Buttigieg a victory.
I think that's pretty likely.
I also think that she has really benefited from the decline of Elizabeth Warren, that
there are a lot of voters out there who feel very strongly that they'd like to see a woman
elected president, and particularly they'd like to see a woman elected president, and particularly,
they'd like to see a woman go up against Donald Trump. And that was a big dynamic fueling Elizabeth Warren's rise. And I don't think that that demand has gone away. And part of what you
saw here in New Hampshire was a lot of more moderate and older women who may have been
drawn to Warren, but were concerned about whether or not she could win the general election suddenly see this other alternative pop up, who is a woman
and a moderate and from the Midwest and has a much blunter electability argument in her arsenal.
And what exactly is that argument?
The argument is that she has won three statewide elections in Minnesota,
which is on the verge of being a swing
state. I'm the only one up on this stage, you can check it out, that has consistently won in red
congressional districts, not once, not twice, but three times. And she likes to tick off, and she's
very, very happy to do it, the list of the numbers of counties that voted for Donald Trump in 2016 that she then carried when she ran
for reelection in 2018. It's a little bit of an oversimplified case because she had a pretty
weak opponent in 2018. It's not like it was this battle of the titans thing that she somehow
miraculously survived. But for voters, I think, especially outside the Midwest, this notion that you're from the part of the country that Democrats lost last time is really appealing.
I think it's also appealing to people when they hear Pete Buttigieg talking about his identity as a Midwesterner.
You're saying it should not be seen as a coincidence that two of the top three candidates here are Midwestern moderate Democrats.
No, absolutely not.
We'll be right back.
So the results are still coming in from across the state, but right now it is clear that Senator Sanders and Mayor Buttigieg had strong nights.
Okay, fourth up, Elizabeth Warren.
And I also want to congratulate my friend and colleague Amy Klobuchar for showing just how wrong the pundits can be when they count a woman out.
You said that Klobuchar benefited from her decline.
But help us understand Warren's decline.
She got 9% of the vote tonight, which was really pretty underwhelming.
So I think part of why Elizabeth Warren became such a strong candidate for a long period of time in this race was that
she managed to get out from under Bernie Sanders' shadow. Because she got out there and defined
herself so clearly in the eyes of Democratic voters as a daring leader, her own person,
someone with big thoughts and big plans, she managed to appeal to a set of voters who weren't
accessible to Bernie Sanders in 2016 2016 may not be accessible to him
today.
Liberal women who voted for Hillary Clinton and other people who are pretty progressive,
but not far left enough to feel comfortable going the full Bernie Sanders.
And she, for a while, was able to sort of straddle these worlds and look like she was
somebody who could bring together these disparate parts of the Democratic
coalition. And then she was forced in the early fall to really choose a side over this question
of Medicare for all. So yes, I'm with Bernie on Medicare for all. And let me tell you why.
I spent a big chunk of my life studying why families go broke. And one of the number one
reasons is the cost of health care, medical bills. And her decision was to align herself far more closely with Bernie Sanders.
That leaves families with rising premiums, rising co-pays, and fighting with insurance companies to try to get the health care that their doctors say that they and their children need.
Medicare for all solves that problem.
That made it much tougher for her to continue being this unifying figure within the party.
I do think Elizabeth Warren is still, for a lot of Democratic voters,
a compelling enough personality and thinker and communicator
that she may be tougher to push out of this race than someone like, say,
Bernie Sanders would like her to be. But it's really hard sitting here tonight to sort of draw
the path back to frontrunner status for her. Alex, what do you take away from what we've
seen with Warren? What lesson is there when it comes to understanding the Democratic electorate
and this race? I think you see a really low tolerance for anything that they perceive as risk.
I think you see that Democratic voters are in a really unforgiving mood when it comes to
candidates who they see as making a mistake of any kind because they want a nominee who's
a sure thing for the general election. I think you have consistently seen and heard from voters anxiety about the implications of nominating a woman, even as there is still a lot of excitement about that idea. a durable space for themselves in a race where you have had, on the one hand, Bernie Sanders
as this really tenacious leader on the left, and Joe Biden as, until recently, a pretty
dominant figure on the political center.
When you say low tolerance for risk, I guess I'm not understanding that.
What makes them a risk?
Well, in the eyes of voters, the notion that somebody could make a big misstep in a debate is sort
of anathema to Democrats at this point.
The idea that somebody could fumble a big policy question when the hot lights are on,
I think, is a hard thing for Democratic voters to process.
And I think that you do see sort of pretty conventional assessments of people's electability kick in as we get closer to primaries.
So coming from Massachusetts, not as appealing to somebody who's thinking about electability as coming from Minnesota.
Somebody who maybe fits demographically a voter's idea of what a president looks like may be an easier sell than somebody who would be a historic candidate.
Well, I wonder if this low tolerance for risk, if that's also a way of understanding what
happened to Joe Biden.
This is Tom Kaplan, and I'm at Joe Biden's election night party in Nashua.
This is a pretty strange party in that Joe Biden isn't going to be here.
He already left the state to go to South Carolina.
He's supposed to address the party via live stream. It's fair to say the room here, it's not exactly buzzing with excitement.
There's probably not going to be much to celebrate tonight if you're a Biden supporter.
We are in the battle for the soul of the nation. Now Jill and I are moving on to Nevada and South
Carolina and beyond. And we want you all to know how much we appreciate everything you've done.
Look, we're going to be back. We're going to you've done. Look, we're going to be back.
We're going to be back in New Hampshire.
We're going to be back there to defeat Donald Trump in November, elect Jeannie the next
senator again, and up and down the ticket.
So don't go away.
You're not getting rid of this.
We're coming back and we love you.
We're going on and we're going to win in Nevada and in the South Carolina.
And I almost can't believe we're talking about the electability candidate. The guy whose ads
declared him to be the one person who could beat Donald Trump coming in fifth place here.
It's really staggering and such an abrupt decline for Biden in this race. I think for months,
and such an abrupt decline for Biden in this race. I think for months, you heard this from voters over and over again, they were willing to give Joe Biden a pass on a lot of stuff that they would not
have tolerated from other candidates because they did perceive him as the electability candidate,
that if all they cared about was beating Donald Trump, then the fact that he wasn't so impressive
in debates and his message wasn't so clear didn't really matter all that much to them, except to the voters who saw him the most up close, the people in Iowa and New Hampshire. Hampshire, that this was a guy who voters had already been suppressing a lot of anxieties about
because they thought he could win, suddenly losing and losing pretty badly in the first state. And
what has happened here just over the last eight days is just a rushing of the air out of the
balloon. His support has just scattered to other candidates, probably mostly Pete Buttigieg and
Amy Klobuchar.
It felt like Biden knew this was coming, right? He left New Hampshire today for South Carolina,
didn't even stay for the results. I think he did some streaming video to a crowd here in Manchester. Is there a version of this where the story that Joe Biden has been putting forward?
This is a long, long race. I took a hit in Iowa, and I'll probably take a hit here.
Traditionally, Bernie won by 20 points last time,
and usually it's the neighboring senators who do well.
That these first two states do not represent his greatest strength
and his possibility, that that's accurate.
Absolutely.
I don't think we can sit here right now and say Joe Biden is totally finished.
Absolutely. I don't think we can sit here right now and say Joe Biden is totally finished.
I think we can say that he's entering by far the most difficult stretch of his campaign. There are already signs that Biden's support among black voters may be more vulnerable than he hopes that it will be.
But we're going to find out soon enough that he staked his claim pretty clearly on the idea that now the rest of the country, states that look like
the country as a whole, Nevada and South Carolina, are going to have their say. And because he has
put so much moral weight on those states, it would be very, very difficult, probably impossible,
for him to shrug off another loss. Okay, so you have brought us at long last to Mike Bloomberg.
another loss. Okay, so you have brought us at long last to Mike Bloomberg. Help us understand how he fits into all this, particularly in light of what happened to Joe Biden tonight.
Well, when Bloomberg got into the race in November, what his advisors said was that he
wasn't convinced that Joe Biden could make it out of the early states and that he wanted to essentially be
waiting in March if Biden took a dive before then. And you ended up either with Bernie Sanders
emerging from February as a front runner or just a jumbled split decision among the other candidates
running. How do you like that prediction? Well, I think Mike Bloomberg likes that prediction quite
a bit right now, that if the idea for Bloomberg was Biden had to fall for him to rise, at least half of that has
happened now. And so help me understand what their vision of this race is. He's not been on the
ballot these first two states. Joe Biden is, as their prediction required, stumbling. So what
needs to happen for the Bloomberg candidacy to take off?
The Bloomberg theory of the case is that as moderates at the national level shift away from Joe Biden,
and as people who don't live in these small rural states tune into his television ads.
Mike Bloomberg started as a middle class kid who had to work his way through college,
then built a business from a single room to a global entity, creating tens of thousands of
good paying jobs along the way. Check out his campaign appearances that they will start to
see him as the safe option in the race. The electable guy. The electable guy. Because there's
an America waiting to be rebuilt where everyone without health insurance is guaranteed to get it, and everyone who likes theirs can go ahead and keep it.
And there is some sign that that's already happening.
There's at least some polling to suggest that a good number of moderate voters and a good number of Black voters are shifting at least somewhat in Bloomberg's direction. This is Matt Stevens.
I'm here at Andrew Yang's campaign party on primary night here in New Hampshire.
So finally, we'd be remiss if we didn't mention the two candidates who dropped out tonight.
Mr. Yang is going to announce that he's dropping out of the race for president when he comes and gives his speech here sometime shortly after 8.
Well, we lost Andrew Yang and we lost Michael Bennett, the senator from Colorado.
Though thousands of voters came out for our campaign tonight,
tonight is not the outcome we fought so hard to achieve.
And while there is great work left to be done, you know I am the math
guy and it is clear tonight from the numbers that we are not going to win this race. I
am not someone who wants to accept donations and support in a race that we will not win.
And so tonight I am announcing I am suspending my campaign for president. We still love you!
Thank you so much.
Hi, my name is Gene Bishop.
I live in Aston, New Hampshire.
I'm 81 years old, and I've been a political junkie my whole life.
And I never, ever, before Andrew came along, I never contributed to a candidate.
I never worked for a candidate.
But I saw him in March of 2018, 2019.
And the first time I saw him, I knew he was something special.
Very, very different. And I had to do what I could to help him be successful.
So I just can't believe that it's over.
Are you upset?
Yeah, very upset.
I was probably just as...
I'm being very selfish because he's probably very upset too.
It was something that probably he never wanted to do,
but it just
hurts. You think you'd ever get disconnected to a candidate where you'd feel this strongly when
he drops out? Never. No, never. He was a big part of my life. I do think that when you look at the
Andrew Yang experience, he is somebody who comes out of this race as a political player in a way that he was not at all two years ago, that he has a following.
And when you talk to Democratic voters, even voters who, like most people, supported other candidates, there is like an interest in him and almost a certain affection for him that he was often the most lighthearted character in
a debate. And people liked the way he talked about the economy. And the question is, if he does want
to stay in politics, what does he do with that? Right. He seems to have cabinet member written
all over. If he wants, if he wants it, what do we think happens to the Yang gang? Where do they go?
We don't really know because he's one of these candidates and it's a sort of genre of candidate that crops up from time to time who seems to draw on a constituency that isn't really partisan.
It isn't ideological in the sense that we think of it.
They're drawn to a candidate's personality and worldview and just sort of the way they talk about things.
Like Ross Perot.
Yeah, I think that's a pretty good comparison in a lot of ways.
And do they go to another candidate?
If it's anybody, it might be Bernie Sanders because he does have this following of younger, disaffected liberal men that overlaps at least somewhat with the people supporting Yang.
But a lot of them also may just sit out the rest of the primaries because they may have been drawn uniquely to
Andrew Yang. So it's now a little after 1 a.m. on Wednesday morning. We had this absolute mess
of a situation in Iowa. We have a quite real result in New Hampshire. What is Alex Burns
thinking beyond all the many thoughts that you have already shared with us?
We are still in a really, really muddled race. I think last week we talked about how thinking beyond all the many thoughts that you have already shared with us?
We are still in a really, really muddled race. I think last week we talked about how five candidates in Iowa cracked double digits and nobody got more than about a quarter of the vote.
Well, this time three candidates cracked double digits and their vote shares were a little bit
higher, but you still don't have anybody here running away with the New Hampshire primary the way we saw both Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump do in 2016.
So there are still a bunch of people in this race who have a great chance to make their case, a couple people who have a less great chance to make their case, and then sort of Michael Bloomberg sitting out on the horizon.
And I think the next three weeks are going to be some of the
most unpredictable and fluid that certainly I've seen in presidential politics. Thank you.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
Four federal prosecutors have withdrawn from the case of Roger Stone, a longtime friend and advisor of President Trump,
case of Roger Stone, a longtime friend and advisor of President Trump, after senior officials at the Justice Department recommended a more lenient prison sentence for Stone. Stone was convicted
last fall of trying to obstruct a congressional investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016
election, a conviction for which prosecutors
had originally sought a seven to nine year sentence.
But in a surprise filing on Tuesday afternoon,
the Department of Justice
called that recommendation excessive,
prompting the prosecutors to leave the case in protest.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.