Justus For All

None Sine Causa

New Hampshire

5:10 am on Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Unlike Iowa, where I should have trusted the polls, I don’t see any reason to doubt the expected results from New Hampshire.

On the Democrat side it is Obama followed by Clinton and then Edwards. Clinton’s loss in Iowa has been magnified by her actions since, not unlike although to a lesser degree then Howard Dean four years ago. Clinton can still come back if she can recover from her downward spiral and hold on until Florida and California, but it is beginning to seem like her own behavior may present that from happening. Hillary is at her best when she is assured and feels in control, and at her worst when she feels personally threatened. Obviously right now she is feeling the latter.

On the Republican side it looks like McCain followed closely by Romney. Third place will be interesting though as some polls indicate Huckabee might beat out Giuliani for this spot. A third place finish in New Hampshire would be very good for the Huckabee campaign. Still though, it looks to me like the real winner coming out of New Hampshire will be Giuliani. He won’t have a clear single competitor with momentum at that point and that makes his large states primary strategy very viable. We may not know who the Republican nominee will be until well after Super-Tuesday though. It also seems to me that unless Romney pulls an upset and defeats McCain, his campaign has really no where to go. While by the numbers he would still seems strong (2 second places isn’t bad when no one has 2 firsts) his strategy was to gain momentum in the early primaries, without that he doesn’t have much.

Update:  Obviously my predictive abilities are not great.  Hillary is certainly back.

2 Comments »

Comment by Bob Morris

January 9, 2008 @ 11:08 am

My brief opinions:

Democratic nomination comes down to Obama and Clinton. Edwards is fading fast, and while I admire Richardson for sticking it out, his chances are slim to none.

Republican nomination appears to be coming down to McCain and Huckabee, unless Romney manages to pull a surprise somewhere. Giuliani, in my opinion, probably isn’t going to make the headway you project he might. The chance certainly exists, but if Huckabee and McCain keep exchanging wins, with Romney staying in the top three, Giuliani climb to win it goes further uphill.

Comment by Dave Justus

January 9, 2008 @ 11:41 am

Yeah, Edwards is done, although he will keep running, after all he as been constantly running for about 6 years now, so it isn’t like he has anything better to do.

As for the Republicans, I don’t think Giuliani can be counted out yet. His large state stretegy works by the numbers, and unless someone else grabs real momentum he is pretty strong in enough states with enough delegates to win. I think Romney haing in actually helps him, as the more viable candidates there are until the large states, the less any one of them will have momentum to overcome Giuliani’s advantages there. I think right Giuliani is the most likely Republican nom. McCain is going to have real trouble in some states, NH semi-open primary really favors him and he has problems with ‘the base.’ Unless either Huckabee or Romney implode, I think they continue to split different wings of the same group to much to win, and Thompson is of course out of it as far as I can tell.

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