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| THE NEW HAMPSHIRE PRIMARY | |
January 26, 2004 | |
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Gwen Ifill reports from New Hampshire, where the Democratic presidential candidates campaigned vigorously to win over independents and undecided voters in the final hours before Tuesday's primary. |
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GWEN IFILL: To understand the lively and unexpectedly volatile nature of the 2004 presidential campaign, one need look no further than the agonizingly undecided voters of New Hampshire.
KATHRYN HILDRETH: I'm looking at Kerry, and I'm looking at Edwards and I'm looking at Dean. I'm not sure. GWEN IFILL: Have you worn anybody's button ever so far? TERRENCE PARKER: I had originally Kerry, then I had a Dean button. I still have a Dean sticker on my door, and then I had a Clark sticker, so I've been around the bush.
TERRENCE PARKER: I would think I would. JOE GRANDMAISON: Normally in New Hampshire, you know, we really, we kind of begin with the premise that God put us on Earth to pick presidents. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Senator Kerry ahead in the polls | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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GWEN IFILL: No one knows that better than these candidates. They have been focused, working through a final, frigid week, shaking every hand and bending every ear -- to change minds and get voters to the polls Tuesday. SEN. JOSEPH LIEBERMAN: Thank you very much. Hope you can come out next week and give us a hand.
GWEN IFILL: John Kerry is working hard precisely because he's been leading in the polls. And he knows his history. In New Hampshire, the polls are often wrong. JOHN MCCAIN: Thank you, God bless, and on to South Carolina! GWEN IFILL: In 2000, front-runner George W. Bush was upended by Sen. John McCain Buchanan in 1996, Pat Buchanan surprised front-runner Bob Dole ... and in 1984, it was Gary Hart, not eventual nominee Walter Mondale, who won New Hampshire. Well, how is the air up in front-runner land?
GWEN IFILL: Is it dangerous to be considered a front-runner? SEN. JOHN KERRY: Yeah. Well, I mean, I think it's always. I don't like it. I don't like the term. I have too much respect for the voters. They make up their minds, and you gotta ask, you ask people for their vote, and you go out and give them a reason to vote for you. | ![]() | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Howard Dean attempts to regroup | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| SPOKESPERSON: The next president of the United States, Howard Dean.
Dean spent the better part of the week as the butt of comedians' jokes for this Iowa victory night moment. HOWARD DEAN: And we're going to South Dakota and Oregon and Washington and Michigan and then we're going to Washington, D.C., to take back the White House. Yeah! GWEN IFILL: By the time Dean arrived in New Hampshire, he was keeping his jacket on, and his voice down. HOWARD DEAN: Those of you who came here intending to be lifted to your feet by a lot of red meat rhetoric, are going to be a little disappointed. GWEN IFILL: And, he began to make fun of himself on the stump... HOWARD DEAN: I just want you to know I am so excited to be here that I could just scream. GWEN IFILL: and at campaign rallies.
GWEN IFILL: But what caused the Dean slide was it the message, or the messenger? Is it conceivable that people are suddenly more interested in changing presidents than changing America? HOWARD DEAN: I think people really are interested in changing America. Let's not forget what happened in this campaign. We became the front-runners after I was virtually unheard of, simply because we are willing to stand up for Democratic values when nobody else was. And then they have all gotten religion after looking at the polls, and now they're all standing up for Democratic values. The question is: Are you really willing to try to change America by nominating an inside-the-beltway president? GWEN IFILL: Dean insists the "Dean scream," as it has come to be known, will have no long-term impact. HOWARD DEAN: I was talking to my team in South Carolina, and I said, what kind of fallout -- and they said nobody is talking about it. This is really an obsession from inside-the-beltway folks.
GROUP CHANTING: Let's go Joe; let's go Joe! GWEN IFILL: The late-deciding voters say they agree with most of these Democrats on health care, job creation and the war. Bobby Jones, interviewed at a John Edwards rally, was originally drawn to Howard Dean. BOBBY JONES: I'm impressed by him, but I just don't know right know if he can win, so I think the most important thing is to get someone who can win. | ![]() | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Candidates promote their platforms | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| GWEN IFILL: Just behind Kerry and Dean, all counting on a better-than-expected finish, are Joe Lieberman, Wesley Clark and John Edwards. Edwards, the first-term North Carolina senator, scored a surprise second place Iowa finish, which drew curious new crowds to see him in New Hampshire. He, too, casts himself as a Washington outsider.
CROWD: No. SEN. JOHN EDWARDS: I mean it gets to be a really simple thing; if you believe that you have other choices; that's not me. I present you with a different choice. GWEN IFILL: Edwards says he would like to do well in New Hampshire, but readily admits he is keeping his eye on another prize. New Hampshire is important. It would be good for you to do well here, but South Carolina is critical. SEN. JOHN EDWARDS: Critical. GWEN IFILL: How do you focus on New Hampshire and still keep an eye on that main chance?
GWEN IFILL: Edwards' positive message may have struck a chord here. The airwaves have been blanketed with last-minute political advertising. All of it gauzy, biographical and upbeat none of it negative. GEN. WESLEY CLARK: I'm Wes Clark, and I approve this ad because deep down we are all patriots. LIEBERMAN AD: Think about Joe Lieberman's courage and conviction. KERRY AD: For 35 years, John Kerry's fought for the people. EDWARDS AD: I believe in the politics of what's possible. SEN. JOHN EDWARDS: The truth is, the voters here in New Hampshire and everywhere in the country know when politicians are cynically attacking each other, they're not hearing the voices of the American people, and not addressing their concerns. And it also feels like the same old, same old. You know, here we go again. Haven't we been through this before? And for voters who want change, they're looking for something different. GWEN IFILL: Richard Killion, who conducts polls for New Hampshire's Franklin Pierce College, says independents, the same unaffiliated voters who helped John McCain four years ago, are the key to a Tuesday victory.
GWEN IFILL: Wesley Clark, along with Joe Lieberman, skipped Iowa to concentrate on New Hampshire. GEN. WESLEY CLARK: I believe our country needs leadership that looks out for the good of America as a whole, and is not captive to special interests. Leadership that looks for what's good for the next generation, not just the next election cycle, leadership that looks for specific goals and is not afraid to be held accountable and leadership that will pull this country together. That's a higher standard of leadership, and that's why I'm running. GWEN IFILL: Clark is counting on independent voters drawn to those qualities. Trouble is, so is everyone else. You told the Democrats at the annual meeting in Nashua that you hadn't been a Democrat for very long, something that they seemed to know. Do you think that will serve to be an advantage for you with independent voters on election day?
SEN. JOSEPH LIEBERMAN: Hello. This looks like a dynamic group here. GWEN IFILL: Lieberman is struggling for traction, even though he and wife Hadassah literally moved to New Hampshire for the final month of the campaign.
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| Next steps after New Hampshire | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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GWEN IFILL: Surviving New Hampshire means the chance to compete for a far richer prize only a week away -- 269 delegates up for grabs in seven states Feb. 3rd. GWEN IFILL: If you fight for first place and don't get it, where does that leave you?
GWEN IFILL: Want to say that a little louder? Didn't think so. HOWARD DEAN: and Delaware and North Dakota and Missouri and New York. GWEN IFILL: So a third or fourth place finish wouldn't slow you down? GEN. WESLEY CLARK: Well, we're not even looking at what place. This has been the first election I've ever been in. I've never run for elective office before. It's been the thrill of a lifetime. SEN. JOHN EDWARDS: I think it'll unscramble pretty quickly; actually I think after Feb. 3rd, particularly, we'll have a good sense of who the two or three people are who have the best chance of getting the nomination. GWEN IFILL: How do you take this beyond New Hampshire and Iowa? SEN. JOHN KERRY: Gwen, I'm just going one step at a time. I mean, we've I really want to focus on the next hours here in New Hampshire. If the New Hampshire voters reward me with their votes and help me to carry this mission on, which I hope they will and I asked them to, I will go to each of those other states and I will campaign my heart out. GWEN IFILL: But that's next week, in what is turning into a long campaign. For this final New Hampshire campaign weekend, the crowds were
big and the ice was cold
GWEN IFILL: An unfinished race and for these candidates, an unexpectedly tough one. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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