Trump triumphs in New Hampshire

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump. File picture: Brendan McDermid, Reuters

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump. File picture: Brendan McDermid, Reuters

Published Feb 10, 2016

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Manchester, New Hampshire - Riding a wave of voter anger at traditional politicians, billionaire Donald Trump won New Hampshire's Republican presidential nominating contest on Tuesday and US Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont won the Democratic primary.

The results, though decisive, did little to clear up confusion about who would emerge as the establishment contender to Trump on the Republican side, and there were signs that the campaign of Sanders' rival, former secretary of state Hillary Clinton, was defensive about her future prospects.

Trump's win solidifies his front-runner status in the race to be the party's White House nominee for the November 8 election. The former reality television star has campaigned to deport illegal immigrants and temporarily ban Muslims from entering the United States.

Sanders, who describes himself as a democratic socialist, has called for eradicating income inequality, breaking up the big banks and providing free college tuition. He had 58 percent of the vote based on about 21 percent of the vote, ahead of Clinton, the perceived front-runner nationally, who had 40 percent, CNN said.

“You can be certain that our victory tonight will prompt a desperate response from the nation's financial elite and the political establishment who want to stop our campaign to transform America,” Sanders said in an email to supporters.

Clinton called Sanders to congratulate him. In a statement, Clinton's campaign acknowledged it had lost in New Hampshire.

Campaign manager Robby Mook said in a memo they had “split” the first two nominating contests - Clinton won Iowa last week - and said the Democratic nomination would “very likely” be decided in March.

The Clinton campaign said the support of black and Hispanic voters would be key to victory. The next primary races are in Nevada and South Carolina later this month.

“It will be very difficult, if not impossible, for a Democrat to win the nomination without strong levels of support among African-American and Hispanic voters,” Mook wrote in a memo titled “March Matters”.

“The nomination will very likely be won in March, not February, and we believe that Hillary Clinton is well positioned to build a strong - potentially insurmountable - delegate lead next month,” he said.

Nearly an hour after polls closed at 8pm EST (01h00 GMT), Trump was in first place with 34 percent of the vote. Ohio Governor John Kasich, who staked the viability of his campaign on the New Hampshire outcome, was in second place with 16 percent, CNN said, based on an estimated 19 percent of returns.

A logjam of Republican candidates were in a dead heat for third place. Former Florida governor Jeb Bush, the son and brother of former presidents, had 12 percent; US Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, who won the Iowa caucus last week, had 12 percent, and US Senator Marco Rubio of Florida had 10 percent.

REUTERS

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