New Hampshire ballot: A lot of candidates 鈥 but no Joe Biden
To vote for Biden on Tuesday, New Hampshire Democrats will have to write in his name, thanks to a dispute with the national party over the calendar.聽
To vote for Biden on Tuesday, New Hampshire Democrats will have to write in his name, thanks to a dispute with the national party over the calendar.聽
Republicans aren鈥檛 the only ones voting for a presidential nominee tomorrow in New Hampshire. Democrats, too, will head to the polls 鈥 where some may be surprised to discover their ballots don鈥檛 feature President Joe Biden鈥檚 name.
Because of a disagreement between the Democratic National Committee and Granite State officials over the primary calendar, the Democratic ballot here lists some two dozen candidates 鈥 ranging from self-funded Rep. Dean Phillips of Minnesota and author Marianne Williamson to a rapper from Brooklyn and a plumber from Maryland 鈥 but not the incumbent president of the United States. Voters wanting to back Mr. Biden on Tuesday will have to write him in.
It all stems from a decision last year by the DNC to put South Carolina first on its schedule of nominating contests 鈥 bumping New Hampshire from its century-old kickoff primary to a shared second place with Nevada.聽South Carolina, the reasoning went, is more racially diverse than New Hampshire and thus more reflective of the party鈥檚 voters nationwide. Perhaps not unrelatedly, Mr. Biden also did terribly (fifth place!) in New Hampshire鈥檚 2020 primary, but rebounded in South Carolina and went on to win the nomination.聽
Granite State Democrats reacted to the snub by opting to hold their primary first, anyway. They say they had little choice: New Hampshire鈥檚 鈥渇irst in the nation鈥 status, they note, is mandated by state law.
Mr. Biden still declined to add his name to the ballot and has not campaigned here. Tuesday鈥檚 contest will be essentially for show, with no delegates at stake.
Yet Democrats also realized they didn鈥檛 want Mr. Biden to suffer an embarrassing 鈥渄efeat鈥 here. So party activists belatedly wound up organizing a 鈥渨rite-in Biden鈥 campaign, with sign-waving on street corners, TV ads, and flyers flooding Democratic voters鈥 mailboxes with instructions on how to add the president鈥檚 name to their ballots.
Cabinet members and prominent elected officials have flooded New Hampshire in recent days in support of Mr. Biden 鈥 from Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg and Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack to Rep. Ro Khanna of California and Boston Mayor Michelle Wu.聽
Some say the situation paradoxically has helped energize Democrats, at a time when polls show Mr. Biden broadly suffering from an enthusiasm deficit.聽
鈥淔rom an organizing standpoint, there鈥檚 already more happening for Joe Biden in New Hampshire than the rest of the country,鈥 says Kathy Sullivan, former chair of the New Hampshire Democratic Party and now聽treasurer of a group organizing the Biden write-in effort.
A poll released Sunday by CNN and the University of New Hampshire showed 63% of the state鈥檚 Democrats planned to write in Mr. Biden, with Representative Phillips at 10% and Ms. Williamson at 9%.聽
Whether the grassroots effort might persuade the DNC to rethink New Hampshire鈥檚 place in future cycles, however, is less clear. Some observers see this year as the end of an era for the state鈥檚 鈥渇irst in the nation鈥 contest, and all its storied traditions.聽
鈥淲hen candidates decide it鈥檚 not in their strategic interest to compete here, that鈥檚 it,鈥 says Fergus Cullen, a former state GOP chair and author of a history of the New Hampshire primary.聽