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The Night Hillary Clinton Shocked The World And Her Staff By Winning New Hampshire
MANCHESTER, N.H. -- Hillary Clinton finds herself in a familiar place Tuesday morning, the day that New Hampshire voters finally choose who should be their party’s prospective nominees for president.
She is down by a significant margin, and once more facing an opponent with more swagger and youthful appeal. This was Clinton's lot back in 2008 too. Coming off a third-place finish in the Iowa caucus that year, she was careening towards a truly disastrous second-place finish in New Hampshire. (I, for one, chose to follow around Barack Obama on primary day, telling an editor, "I want to see a winner.") But then the tide shifted, and Clinton unexpectedly won. The Democratic primary would go on for months. A repeat of that miraculous victory doesn't seem likely Tuesday night, with Clinton facing an even greater polling deficit this year to Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.). But it's still informative to look back at that moment in January 2008, if only to fully understand how unpredictable this whole process can be. Clinton’s aides at the time recalled feeling nothing but sheer doom the morning of Jan. 8, 2008. Days before, they had flown from Iowa with what Glenn Thrush, a reporter now with Politico, called karma “as bad as anything” he’d ever seen. When they took stock of the situation the next morning, it looked bleak. Patti Solis Doyle, Clinton’s campaign manager at the time In Doyle’s telling, Clinton had found a message, or at least an image. She was “fighting back” against expectations that the race was over and assumptions that her candidacy was a flop. The question was: Would it catch on in time? Guy Cecil, Clinton's national political and field director at the time As Clinton was barnstorming around New Hampshire, Obama was drawing tremendous crowds. Thrush recalled how reporters who had been following her in Iowa basically bolted to catch a glimpse of the phenomenon that was the other campaign. Things crested when Clinton appeared to break down in tears during a campaign spot in Portsmouth. A former Clinton aide, who would only talk about '08 anonymously By the day of the primary, no one on staff assumed a victory was likely. Judd Legum, Clinton’s research director at the time As the results came in, they showed Clinton actually with a small lead. Crunching the data back at the campaign headquarters, Cecil thought the sampling was too small to be bullish. But then a second batch came in from around the state, and a third. Guy Cecil Twenty minutes later, it’s become clear that Clinton could win. Suddenly, sullen aides begin reassessing the shitty hand that they felt they'd been dealt. Patrick H. Hays, former mayor of North Little Rock, Arkansas, and longtime Clinton supporter Phil Singer, a top Clinton spokesman at the time Shortly after Clemons and Cecil whispered about the possibility of an upset, former President Bill Clinton called Clemons to ask if there was an actual chance. Clemons told him there was. “It was the first time it was said out loud,” said Cecil. About 45 minutes later, the Associated Press called it for Clinton. Phil Singer Judd Legum Clinton staffers weren't the only ones experiencing a dramatic mood change. A number of Democrats who had descended on New Hampshire abruptly altered their plans for that evening. Bob Mulholland, a longtime DNC member from California At the Obama event, a different type of shock was setting in. Ben LaBolt, Obama’s New Hampshire press secretary at the time Inside the Southern New Hampshire University gymnasium in Manchester, Clinton’s crowd was delirious, drowning her out in wild applause as she took the stage. “I listened to you,” she declared. “And in the process, I found my own voice.” The campaign staff watched from backstage. Guy Cecil A few days later, however, reality set back in. Senior staff gathered around a table in Ballston to assess the state of the campaign. And Harold Ickes, the Clintons’ longtime adviser, presented them with stunning data. Their bad loss in Iowa and upset win in New Hampshire had come at a price. They’d spent virtually all of the $100 million they had raised. “The cupboard is empty,” Ickes said. -- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. ![]() More... |
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