Loading...
|| News ||
Page 1 of 1

New Hampshire: A Day at the Polls With GOP Candidates

Even a cup of coffee didn't sway one stubborn independent voter -- though Republican Mike Huckabee gave it his all Tuesday as New Hampshire residents went to the polls in the state's presidential primary. At the Brookside Congregational Church in Manchester, Huckabee waded into the crowd to greet voters outside the polling place. He ran into Joe Legay, 70, and asked him what candidate was getting his vote. ''I'm independent,'' Legay said, ducking the question.


Even a cup of coffee didn't sway one stubborn independent voter -- though Republican Mike Huckabee gave it his all Tuesday as New Hampshire residents went to the polls in the state's presidential primary.

At the Brookside Congregational Church in Manchester, Huckabee waded into the crowd to greet voters outside the polling place. He ran into Joe Legay, 70, and asked him what candidate was getting his vote.

''I'm independent,'' Legay said, ducking the question.

''So I have one more chance -- what can I do? Can I pour you coffee?'' Huckabee asked, then poured him a cup of coffee from a doughnut shop coffee container. ''Where else than in New Hampshire does a candidate come out and personally pour coffee?''

Then he asked Legay again how he would vote.

''I'm independent, so I have to be quiet,'' Legay said -- apparently not wanting to hurt Huckabee's feelings, because as Huckabee moved on, Legay told a reporter he was voting for Democrat Barack Obama.

''My suggestion is that if he [Obama] makes it, then [John] Edwards should be his vice president,'' Legay said.

Huckabee had more success later outside a church voting precinct in Dover. For more than eight minutes the candidate engaged an undecided voter one-on-one on the intricacies of Medicare reimbursements and health insurance. Wendy Hay, a nurse, walked away a convert.

''I was originally a [Fred] Thompson supporter, but I was unhappy with the amount of time he spent here,'' Hay, 48, said.

It was mere coincidence that she chose the noon hour to vote, just as Huckabee drove up to the St. John's Methodist Church parking lot to shake voters' hands and distribute granola bars and bottled water to his volunteers.

Elsewhere, at Republican Mitt Romney's second stop of the morning -- a polling location at Bedford High School -- a line of cars that snaked out of sight was moving too slowly for the candidate. He and U.S. senator Judd Gregg, a New Hampshire Republican, got out of their car and trudged the last third of a mile across packed snow, shaking hands with voters and posing for pictures along the way.

''I liked his stance on immigration the most,'' said Mary Doughtie of Bedford, a Romney supporter. ''And I'm against abortion. And I'm against gay marriage. So his ideals were the most like mine.''

At the Beech Street School in Manchester, city highway department employee Daniel Lencki, 58, said he had been going back and forth between Democrats Hillary Rodham Clinton and Edwards, but decided after watching Saturday night's debate to go for Clinton. The deciding factor, he said, was when Edwards boasted about backing a patient bill of rights as an accomplishment in the Senate and Clinton noted that the plan didn't pass. ''I like the other day the way she fought Edwards,'' he said.

Republican John McCain was mobbed by supporters after arriving at a polling place in Nashua, N.H., in his campaign bus.

The crowd of media and supporters was so big that some voters complained. Finally, one of the poll workers climbed onto McCain's bus and pleaded for him to leave. "People are so upset because they can't get in here to vote," the worker said. Seconds later the bus pulled away. (AP)

Click here to follow The Advocate on Twitter. Page 1 of 1



More Online Only
  • Film Teen Spirit

    While Native American cultures have long honored people of integrated genders, a new documentary looks at a shocking hate crime against a two-gendered Colorado teenager.

  • Politicians L.A. Confidential

    What's it like to be 33, gay, and one of the most powerful people in America's second-largest city? Stressful, says Matt Szabo, the new deputy chief of staff to Los Angeles mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.

  • Commentary Love Bites for Twilight's Gay Fans

     

    Gay fanpires are sure to flock to New Moon, but with questions lingering about author Stephanie Meyer and the cash she gives to the Mormon Church, Mike Albo wonders if we'd be better off tying a clove of garlic around our necks.


  • Youth Church Opens Doors for Homeless Gay Teens

    A church-turned-shelter for homeless youth in Queens, New York is a far cry from sleeping on the streets after a $200,000 renovation and a partnership with the Ali Forney Center for LGBT youth.

  • Music France's Latest Export

    He's opened for Britney and Katy Perry, kept Dita Von Teese company in the front row at Paris Fashion Week, and gets name-checked on Twitter by Lady Gaga, Miley Cyrus, and Sarah Silverman. So who the hell is Sliimy, anyway?

  • Marriage Equality Triumph in the Tar Heel State

    The loss of marriage equality in Maine was a major blow on Election Night, but down the coast in North Carolina there was an LGBT victory. Pam Spaulding talks to Chapel Hill's mayor-elect, Mark Kleinschmidt.

  • Theater Video Content Flag Puppet Masters

    When performance-art drag diva Joey Arias combines forces with master puppeteer Basil Twist, anything — no, seriously, anything — can happen.

  • News Softball With Oprah and Palin

     

    Dave White recaps as Oprah plays nice with Palin in her exclusive, personality-rehabbing interview. Topics include Katie Couric ("badgering"), Levi Johnston ("Ricky Hollywood"), and step class ("gee, it's fun").

  • News View From Washington: Frank Tells

    This week Congressman Barney Frank laid out a plan and a timetable for repealing "don't ask, don't tell..." and a reminder that he's been saying it would happen in 2010 from the beginning.

  • News Features Where's Mitrice?

     

    Mitrice Richardson is a 4.0 student, a former beauty pageant contestant, and a lesbian. She’s also been missing since September, and her family and girlfriend want answers. 


     

  • Theater Seat Filler

    The Advocate’s queen on the New York theater scene meets bisexual conjoined twins, pits Sienna Miller against Jude Law, tastes Cheyenne Jackson’s Rainbow, and saves up for a rainy day with Hugh Jackman.

  • Art Fairey Good 


    Controversial artist Shepard Fairey spends his creative capital to bring marriage equality back to California.

  • Film Crazy Like a Fox

    Hipster actor Jason Schwartzman gets schooled on his gay fans and the Hollywood closet and reveals why he’s never played a gay role.

  • Television Viki Victorious?

     

    Soap icon and six-time Emmy Award winner Erika Slezak talks about the trials and tribulation of playing Victoria Lord and her run for mayor, gay rights, and the sudden death that rocks Llanview.

  • Commentary Called to Serve

    The military continues to operate under the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy, which even the Pentagon says is unsubstantiated. As General McChrystal asks for more troops in Afghanistan, one gay Navy vet offers his service to his country in spite of the policy that would deny him.

  • News Features Marriage Foe Tied to Pro-Gay Companies

    Ford Motor Co. and Reynolds American, two companies that receive consistently high marks from the HRC, have ties with Schubert Flint Public Affairs, the firm that was instrumental in defeating marriage equality in California and Maine.

     

  • News Features A Few Good Men

    In honor of Veteran's Day, two of the most famous gay vets -- Frank Kameny and Dan Choi -- share their letters from Uncle Sam.

Most Popular Stories