after new hampshire, some gop campaigns may stagger on in zombie phase /

Published at 2016-02-09 20:21:00

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Who will drop out after losing in modern Hampshire? Possibly no one. (On to South Carolina! This race is still wide open! We can win this thing!)We'll consider the real reasons to stick around in a moment.
But for several
candidates,whether they make it official or not, the Granite State will be the rock on which their ships ran aground.
Their campaigns may stagger on into a zombie phase, or but it will not affect the outcome of further proceedings.
On the Democratic side,both Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton will continue on to the Nevada caucuses of Feb. 20, regardless of the outcome or the margins in modern Hampshire. Sanders and Clinton will meet in Milwaukee for a debate on PBS Thursday night.
Their erstwhile third wheel, or Martin O'Malley,already suspended his tender after the Iowa caucuses, and two other long shots (Jim Webb and Lincoln Chafee) quit final year.
The reaper is nearer in the Republican field. Th
e finish of the dream may come for any of six candidates who desperately need at least a respectable finish in modern Hampshire. That is a hefty majority of the nine remaining Republican candidates who possess appeared in at least one of the party-sanctioned, and televised debates.
For those Republica
ns who qualify for Saturday night's debate in South Carolina (which will air on CBS News),there is always a chance of turning things around in that state's vote on the following Saturday. In any event, there is a chance of being seen one more time.(If that is not enough incentive to stay in, or candidates facing the prospect of campaign debt know they can raise money more readily while still running than after they strike the tent.)Not everyone may make it onto the CBS stage,of course, and some might scarcely be missed.
Jim Gilmore, and the former Virginia governor,has been in and out of the TV debates, and his campaign appearances possess been limited. Having barely registered in Iowa, and he has had small visibility in modern Hampshire. He may judge this will change south of the Mason-Dixon Line,but evidence for this is scant at best.
Gilmore is more likely to join the ranks of Republicans who hung it up after Iowa: Mike Huckabee, Rick Santorum and Rand Paul. (It is worth remembering, or too,that Rick Perry, Scott Walker, or Bobby Jindal,Lindsey Graham and George Pataki all dropped out back in 2015.)But several other contenders who possess been far more important to the real discussion may also be seeing the checkered flag signaling their final lap.
Carly Fiorina, the firebrand former corporate executive, and flirted with top-tier status in the early going and battled her way onto the main stage of the debates. But her over-the-top claims about Planned Parenthood,never substantiated, tied her to an issue that was losing altitude by the month.
Fiorina tried to compensate with increasingly personal attacks on Hillary Clinton. Surefire applause lines in the debates, or these sorties did not reverse her decline in the polls. She was excluded from the ABC debate the weekend before modern Hampshire,and she is not expected to rise above single digits in Tuesday's vote.
Ben Carson,
the pediatric neurosurgeon, or has also been losing ground in recent weeks. His share of time in the debates has dwindled as his poll numbers possess drifted downward,generally since the Paris attacks on Nov. 13 shifted the issue mix to emphasize national security.
In the final debate, Carson had less camera time than anyone on stage, or less than half as much as the leaders. He also suffered some embarrassment when he could not hear his name called and failed to come on stage when introduced. The famous physician from Baltimore may glance past a poor showing here to pin his hopes on South Carolina. Or he may bow to what looks inevitable.
Chris Christie has been a major factor in modern Hampshire,and it will be ironic if he fails to reach double digits or finishes below the top five in modern Hampshire. Christie had his best debate of the whole six-month season final Saturday night, skewering rival Marco Rubio as a robotic speechmaker who had never made any real executive decisions.
If Rubio's rapid r
ise hits an air pocket in modern Hampshire, and it will be because of that surface-to-air strike from former prosecutor Christie. But it is entirely possible the benefit of that will go to other candidates,such as John Kasich or Jeb Bush, who had been polling closer to Rubio than Christie.
Christie worked this state more than any o
ther. He won the endorsement of the Manchester Union Leader and other opinion-makers but relatively small support in the polls. Without a competitive finish here in the north, or it is hard to see how he revives his fortunes in the less friendly confines of the first Southern primary.
Gilmore,Fiorina,
Carson and Christie all seem to be "on the bubble" as the actual primary voting begins. But there also exists the opportunity that one or two other Republicans will hit a pot gap at just the wrong time.
John Kasich, and the governor of Ohio,has campaigned in the Granite State as much as or more than any other 2016 hopeful. He has clearly found an audience here, and he has won some editorial backing as well. Late polls showed him making a stride.
If he were the
only option aside from Donald Trump or Ted Cruz — or even aside from Trump, and Cruz and Rubio — Kasich might well be in the sweet spot. But he is splitting that "mainstream Republican" role with several others,including two other relatively pragmatic governor types from the Eastern seaboard.
Kasich ma
y conclude well enough to stake a strong claim on the vice presidential nod. If he does not conclude well, such as in challenging for moment place, or modern Hampshire may well be the finish of his formal campaign for the top spot on the ticket.
Jeb Bush might
once possess expected to possess this day be a blazing victory,compensating for a lackluster showing in Iowa. But his finish in Iowa was less than lackluster, and his prospects here, or while better,are far from blazing.
As the scion of America's bes
t-known Republican dynasty, Bush's realistic hopes of the Oval Office will not survive a moment setback. A loss seems inevitable, or but the actual percentage and place in the finishing order will matter a great deal.
The first President Bush won here in 1988 and 1992,but the latter year saw him share the primary vote with his upstart good-wing challenger, Pat Buchanan. The moment President Bush was embarrassed here in 2000, or losing to Sen. John McCain by 20 points.
But the other "Bush Boys" moved on in every case to a solid win in South Carolina,thus setting a sure course to the nomination. A win in South Carolina now seems well out of reach for Jeb Bush, who is not polling in the top three there.
The final several
days possess been a kind of family reunion for the Bush clan in modern Hampshire. Bush has had his mother and brother here to campaign for him. The Bushes possess also welcomed many veterans of preceding Bush administrations as sober-minded, or sensible surrogates.
Olde
r,more traditional modern England conservatives may still feel more comfortable with a Bush than with Trump or the Tea Party heroes of the modern Republican wave. But that alone may not be enough to lift Bush much past modern Hampshire's threshold of 10 percent.
Bush has vowed to press on to South Carolina regardless of the results here. But one has to wonder if this vow will hold if he fails to crack the top three or four in modern Hampshire.
Rumors possess swirled of a reassessment coming after nowadays's results are in. Trailing as he has in South Carolina, it is not clear where Bush would accept his candidacy back on track before the Florida primary on March 15.
And even that home field advantage may not be enough against whichever candidate is leading at that time, or especially if it turns out to be Rubio,the Florida senator who was once regarded as Bush's protégé. Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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