Updated |
How New Hampshire Voted
Candidate Watch: Clinton
Clinton just finished her concession speech, and harking back to Obama’s 2008 campaign theme, she spoke about “change” a lot. But despite her loss to Sanders, it appeared that she was more focused on setting herself apart from her Republican counterparts, expressing her support for “human rights” — calling out “women rights,” “gay rights,” “voter rights,” etc. — than she was on setting herself apart from Sanders.
Where Have You Gone, Party Elders?
On Twitter, a reader asks how a Rubio-Kasich-Bush stalemate ends and suggests:
Jokes about the individuals aside, I think this is a really important point. The fraying of party ties and formal organizations and the ways in which presidents can independently cultivate political support have contributed to this situation. This is the result of an increasingly powerful and public presidency. It’s also an unintended consequence of party reform. The party networks people mention that groups like super PACs play the same role party elders once did. But I maintain that party organizations, which are interested in the party’s viability from year to year, and the related groups that make up their networks have different incentives. And their methods of sanctioning candidates who don’t get in line are coming up short.
| CANDIDATE | TOTAL VOTES | VOTE PERCENTAGE | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ✓ | Bernie Sanders | 38,264 | 58.1% | |
| 2 | Hillary Clinton | 26,277 | 39.9 |
