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Clinton trying to prevent a big Sanders victory in NH

Ted Cruz – 11.1 percent; Florida Sen.

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(Kevin R. Wexler/The Record of Bergen County via AP).

Kasich, who said he has held more than 100 town hall meetings in the state, said he is seeing enthusiasm.

(AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty). Almost all of the Republicans made appearances on Monday.

JUST hours before polls close, unlikely United States presidential candidates Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders are tipped to win New Hampshire’s primary. Almost half of Republicans said they were dissatisfied and 4 in 10 were angry.

John Kasich grabbed the second spot, with 16 percent of the vote.

If Rubio and the governors finish in a pack Tuesday, it’s likely to frustrate Republican Party elites who are eager to coalesce around a single candidate to challenge Trump and Cruz.

“You know, I just love the way New Hampshire does this”, Clinton said as she and daughter Chelsea greeted cheering, sign-waving campaign volunteers at a school in Manchester, the state’s largest city.

During a Friday night interview on Real Time With Bill Maher discussing the Democratic primary, Steinem said young women support Bernie because they want attention from boys.

Count vehicle salesman Val Goldenberg as one of those Trump voters.

“I have no idea what they’re talking about or who they are talking to”, Clinton said on MSNBC. He said a “good night” from his campaign would “show the American people that the voters in New Hampshire understand that this country needs a political revolution”.

Yes. He came out of Iowa with momentum, and with a strong result here he would stand a decent shot of coalescing a lot of support among mainstream GOP voters. What will be important to watch is whether or not the huge generational split that showed up in the Iowa caucuses last week persists in New Hampshire, and the size of the young-voter contingent that turns out. “Thank you, New Hampshire!”

“If he can do it for OH he can probably do it for the rest of America”, she said.

The survey was conducted for The Associated Press and the television networks by Edison Research as voters left their polling places at 44 randomly selected sites in New Hampshire. So it’s kind of not fair to measure most women by the standard of most men, because they’re going to get more activist as they grow older. Fewer Democrats were later deciders, about two in 10. In contrast, less than 20 percent of Democrats said they felt betrayed by Democratic politicians. Now the leading White House hopefuls from both the political parties are hoping to win the primary and strengthen their claim for the nomination from their respective parties. Donald Trump is the double-digit polling leader in the state, and is most experts’ pick to take home the lion’s share of New Hampshire delegates. But it won’t be much of a lead.

Jeb Bush spent almost $30 million in ads in New Hampshire, accounting for about 41 percent of all Republican spending in the state, according to Kantar Media.

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Trump has managed to win a primary as a political novice after calling for a ban on Muslim immigration, referring to Mexicans as “rapists” and calling his chief rival Ted Cruz a “pussy” on the eve of the primary.

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