NASHUA, N.H. – With voices
gone hoarse and stress starting to show, Democratic and Republican
presidential candidates made their final pitches to New Hampshire
voters yesterday as a possible record turnout threatens to swamp
the former front-runners in both parties.
Deep snow remains on the ground but temperatures could approach
60 degrees for today's primary – weather tailor-made for the
armies of new voters who have been attracted by the candidates'
vigorous attacks on the status quo in Washington and repeated
promises of change.
The likelihood of a high turnout augurs well for the candidates
atop the polls – Democratic Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois and
Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona.
Both are challenging their party's establishments and both have
sparked excitement with appeals to voters tired of partisan
battles in Washington. Each spent yesterday working to stave off
frantic, last-minute efforts from the candidates who only a month
ago enjoyed big leads in the polls.
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York, a Democrat, and former
Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, a Republican, lost those leads
after faltering in Thursday's Iowa caucuses. New polls showed them
falling further behind Obama and McCain.
The stress on Clinton was particularly evident yesterday. Famed
for her poise, the senator and former first lady permitted a rare
glimpse at her emotional side when a voter in Portsmouth asked her
how she was holding up in what has become a grueling campaign.
“It's not easy,” Clinton replied. “It's not easy.” Then with a
catch in her voice and struggling to contain her emotions, she
added: “I've had so many opportunities from this country. . . .
This is very personal for me. It's not just political.”
The show of emotion triggered a small media furor, with Clinton
later laughing about all the attention. “I actually have emotions.
Some people don't believe that,” she said in a CNN interview,
explaining she was “touched” by the voter's expression of concern.
Clinton also tried to raise more questions about Obama's
ability to deliver on his promises of change, even reaching back
to Walter Mondale's 1984 campaign against Gary Hart to ask of
Obama's promises, “Where's the beef?”
For Obama, the emotions were all excitement bordering on
exultation as his crowds continued to swell and his lead in the
polls grows. The only snag for him was his voice, battered from so
many speeches, forced him to pay a visit to a doctor on Sunday.
The doctor's advice, Obama reported in Claremont, was to “shut
up.”
He didn't take the advice. When hundreds of his supporters
could not get into an event in Lebanon, he spoke to them from the
steps outside. “You guys caught us a little by surprise,” he said.
“You're the wave and I'm riding it.”
On the Republican side, McCain and Romney seem to have tight
grips on the top two spots, but McCain appears to have the
momentum.
McCain mounted one last bus tour of the state that gave him a
surprise victory eight years ago. “The Mac is Back” bus tour took
him to several towns in a pitch to wavering voters.
Romney, meanwhile, used his money advantage over McCain to
purchase a two-minute, statewide commercial.
The Republican winner in Iowa, former Arkansas Gov. Mike
Huckabee, enjoyed very little bounce in New Hampshire.
The best hope for those chasing Obama and McCain is the
willingness of so many New Hampshire voters to change their minds
at the last minute. Voters such as Patricia Larkin, a 48-year-old
independent, and her accountant husband, Jim, who waited patiently
outside Manchester City Hall to see McCain.
She is torn between McCain and Obama. Her husband, 54, a
Republican, said he was undecided between Romney and McCain.
Arriving 45 minutes late, McCain delivered a 7-minute version of
his standard stump speech. It included a pledge “to get Osama bin
Laden if I have to follow him to the gates of hell.”
Afterward, both Larkins said they were no closer to a decision
than before. “Too short. I didn't hear anything new,” Pat Larkin
said. “What time is the Obama thing tonight?”