thank you. [cheers and applause] [chanting "amy"] president trump: thank you. -- sen. klobuchar: thank you. thank you, new hampshire. thank you, new hampshire. we love you new hampshire. [cheers and applause] hello, america. i am amy klobuchar and i will beat donald trump. [cheers and applause] sen. klobuchar: my heart is full tonight. my heart is full tonight. there are still ballots left to count. we have beaten the odds every step of the way. [cheers and applause] sen. klobuchar: we have done it on the merit, we have done it with ideas, and we have done it with hard work. resilient and strong as the people of this great nation. [applause] sen. klobuchar: thank you to our incredible staff and our unstoppable volunteers. my wonderful husband john, our daughter. [cheers and applause] and the people of new hampshire. because of you we are taking this campaign to nevada. [cheers and applause] sen. klobuchar: we are going to south carolina. [cheers and applause] and we arehar: taking this message of unity to the country. we know and our hearts, that in a democracy, it is not about the loudest voice or the biggest bank account. it is about the best idea, and about the person who can turn those ideas into action. we know that we cannot win big by trying to out divide the divider in chief. know that we win by bringing people with us instead of shutting them out. nightmaremp's worst is that the people in the middle, the people who have had enough of the name-calling and the mudslinging have someone to vote for in november. [chanting] sen. klobuchar: i cannot wait to bring our green bus around the country. i cannot wait to win the nomination. wait to build a movement and win with a movement of fired up democrats, of independents and moderate republicans. that's even a selection as we do. we see it as an economic check on this president. ,e see it as a patriotism check and we see it as a decency check. we know that what unites us is so much bigger than what divides us. we know that we believe. many of us believe that the heart of america is bigger than the heart of this guy in the white house. [cheers and applause] tonight is about grit. and my story, like so many of yours, is one of resilience. i announced my candidacy in the middle of a minnesota blizzard. and there were a lot of people that predicted i would not even get through that speech. but not the people of my state, and not the people of new hampshire. except, then they predicted that we would not make it through the summer. we did. then they predicted we would not make it to the debate. man, were we at the debate in new hampshire. we have been steady, strong and we have never quit. i think that sounds pretty good for a president. but across the months and months and miles of this race, we redefine the word grit. you see it with our happy, .crappy campaign he sought an hour 10 county 30 hour tour in the middle of a nor'easter. you saw in our early-morning diner stops in our late night rallies, and you saw it in that debate stage -- on that debate stage. out like so many of you there, i know a little bit about resilience. my grandpa worked 1500 feet underground in the minds of inthern minnesota -- mines northern minnesota. he never graduated from high school because his parents were sick. he had nine brothers and sisters and had to help raise them. every day he would go down in carrying to the mine, a lunch bucket my grandmother would pack. his youngest sister was only eight years old when they put her in an orphanage. two years later he borrowed a car and he brought her home. grandma saved money and a coffee can in their basement to send my dad to a two-year community college. my dad then became a newspaper man. , she was born in milwaukee, the site of our next convention. [cheers and applause] and she came to minnesota and taught second-grade until she was 70 years old. sayi still me people that she was their favorite teacher. today asd before you the granddaughter of an iron or minor. andhe daughter of a teacher as a first woman elected to the u.s. senate from the state of minnesota, and a candidate for president of the united states. [chanting "amy"] sen. klobuchar: that is because we live in a country of shared dreams. that no matter where you come from, no matter who you know, no matter the color of your skin, a matter where you were ship, no matter who you love, you can make it in the united states of america. i did not have a perfect life. my dad struggled without the holism his whole life. by the time john and i got married he got his third dwi. then the judge said you have to decide jail or treatment. he was pursued bike race. i believe everyone in this country should have the opportunity to be pursued. when abigail was born we thought it would be this perfect thing, but she was really sick. she could not swallow and was in intensive care. back then the insurance companies had a rule and they kicked me out of the hospital even though she was in intensive care for 24 hours. a few months later, i went to the legislator, worked with a number of legislators, and we passed one of the first laws in the country guaranteeing new moms and their babies a 48-hour hospital stay. [cheers and applause] sen. klobuchar: that is how i do my work. elizabeth noted earlier tonight, people told me, just like they told her, that they did not think a woman could be elected. in my case, a was elected to the u.s. senate. no woman had ever done it before. but i came back, i defied expectations, and i won. [cheers and applause] sen. klobuchar: and i have done it over and over again in the redesist of red districts and te bluest of blue districts. in the gridlock of washington, d.c., i have passed over 100 bills as the lead democrat. and tonight in new hampshire, as everyone has counted us out, even a week ago, thank you pundits -- [laughter] sen. klobuchar: i came back and we delivered. [cheers and applause] we have been on quite a journey together. and you have learned this about me. i never give up. my story is nothing compared to the resilience that i have seen all over this country. who lostin california her child to gun violence. even through her grief and heartbreak, she has joined the fight to keep our children safe. the immigrant who works two jobs and still struggles to put food on the table, but is determined to raise her kids in america so that they have a better future. the farmer who is facing bankruptcy because of bad trump policies, but persists in working the land, just like his parents and his grandparents before him. america deserves a president who -- give up orup give him just because a decision is hard. america deserves a president who is as resilient as her people. [cheers and applause] america deserves a president who will take on the challenges of our time. climate change and affordable education and college, immigration reform, justice and democracy. and yes, bringing down the cost of health care. our country cannot take another four years of donald trump. the rule of cannot withstand another four years of a president who thinks that he is above it. sense of decency cannot handle another four years of a president who does not care about it. tolerateracy cannot another four years of a president who wants to bulldoze right through it. and our american dream cannot tolerate a president that thinks he can choose who lives it. the president might as well have a sign on his desk that says, "the buck stops anywhere but here." everyone.ly blames he blames barack obama. he blames the city of baltimore. he blames the head of the federal reserve that he appointed. he blames the energy secretary that he nominated. he blames the city of baltimore. he blames the entire kingdom of denmark. who does that? one, heavorite recent blames the prime minister of canada for cutting him out of the canadian version of h "home alone 2." that is donald trump. i think we can do better. the people of this country, when things go wrong they don't have anyone to blame. they just have to pick themselves up. i can promise you this. when i am behind that desk, i will take responsibility instead of passing it on. i will reach across the aisle and work with americans in good faith instead of picking a fight. i will bring this country together instead of tearing it apart. [cheers and applause] sen. klobuchar: some of you have heard the story about franklin delano roosevelt. he was beloved. when he died they put his body in a train and it went through the countryside to washington, d.c. people would spontaneously stand next to those rail tracks to show their respects. the story goes that one guy was standing there sobbing. a regular guy had his hat across his chest. sir,reporter says to him, did you know president roosevelt? , i did not says, no know president roosevelt, but he knew me. he knew me. that is what is lacking right now in the white house. ability of a president to put himself or herself in the shoes -- [cheers and applause] sen. klobuchar: what is lacking is that sacred trust between the people of this nation and the president of the united states. my friends, i will restore that trust. [cheers and applause] if you arehar: having trouble deciding between filling a prescription or filling your refrigerator with food, i know you and i will fight for you. if you cannot decide how you are going to stretch that paycheck to pay for your rent or pay your mortgage, i know you and i will fight for you. and if you are having trouble deciding how you are going to pay for the childcare for your kids and the long-term kid -- care for your parents, i know you and i will fight for you. [cheers and applause] want aobuchar: if you democratic nominee who can make our tent bigger, who can make our coalition wider and our coattails longer, i know you and i will fight for you. [cheers and applause] and, if you feel stuck in the extremes of our , and you are tired of the noise and the nonsense, you have a home with me. if you want to nominate who can on that to donald trump debate stage, which you will know i can do, i need your vote, yes. fori will need your votes the people in nevada. i will need the votes in south carolina and beyond. but most of all i need your hearts. i don't have that big bank account. i will have that big name of some of the other people that are in this race. i am not a newcomer with no political record. but what i do is get things done. what i have is your back. so i ask you to join us at amy klobuchar.com. [cheers and applause] sen. klobuchar: join our campaign. "amy"]ng sen. klobuchar: thank you. thank you, new hampshire. because the nevada best is yet to come. [cheers and applause] i want to thank a few people before we start the music and everything, who have been here with me in new hampshire from the very beginning. to have theirud help and support. it has meant the world. first of all, my great state director, scott merritt. right over here. [cheers and applause] and my campaign manager in our teen justin bowen. our team up her and all the incredible staff in new hampshire that beat the odds when everyone counted us out, you never did. and that i want to think the incredible group of endorsers, so many legislators and former legislators and mayors and local officials that i cannot name all of them. but i will name a few. deborah. thank you. she is so well respected and introduced me up today. jo foster, the former attorney general general of new hampshire right over there. jake and jean. thank you to both of you. former brigadier general, kevin ryan, as well as ambassador jim smith. leaders.ng state house thank you wherever you are. lucy weber and doug. mayors i wanted to mention because i saw them the last few days. and andrew,hester where are you andrew, of laconia . right over there. thank you. also, people who have been there and had given me so much guidance and advice. rich siegel, thank you so much. michael atkins. jim callahan. tom sylvia. and karen cornelius. i want to thank all of you. we are so excited. we are going to take this show on the road with all of this great new hampshire goodwill. the best is yet to come. let's get to work, everyone. thank you. "amy"]ng ♪ [cheers and applause] amy klobuchar with supporters in concord, new hampshire. successful night for her moving from fifth place in iowa to third place in new hampshire. c-span's coverage. let's take a look at the numbers. bernie sanders has the lead at 26.4%. 23.7%, a 4000. vote difference. 57% of the state is reporting. amy klobuchar at their place with just under 20%. 28,875 voters. elizabeth warren, a difficult night for the neighboring state .enator, 13,000 voters about 9.5% of those who have cast ballots. former vice president joe biden at a .4%. 12,000 -- 8.4%. 12,000 voters. tulsi gabbard's 3.2%. tomsteyer and andrew -- steyer at 3.5%. andrew yang has dropped out. michael bennet has ended his campaign along with andrew yang. they are the first to admiralty's of this primary. we are waiting for two important speakers. senator sanders and mayor pete to come out and set the stage for the next part of their campaign. speaking of setting the stage for the campaign, it here is a tweet about amy klobuchar from trent at politico who said after what appears to be a solid finish in new hampshire, they are planning to expand their staff in nevada and south carolina as super tuesday states. we are going to take your calls to get reactions to what has been happening so far in new hampshire. we have a special line for new hampshire voters at 202-748-8920. and a line for democrats and republicans. we will here for us from david in phoenix, a democrat. what do you think about what's happening in new hampshire? caller: i am very proud of amy klobuchar and her performances at these debates. tonight is so exciting and so invigorating. in phoenix fore five months, holding a sign in going to different busy intersections with just a very large sign that says klobuchar, 2020 for president. i am so proud of her. she was aand surrogate for barack obama in 2007. i worked with her for about four days in salem, oregon. she is such a vibrant, thoughtful person. i was so moved when she came out in the snow and everything else. i said, that is the tough grit. i had worked with her and saw the honesty in her every move. to when iarken back and the politicians literally had to serve the center of politics. the 60% to 70% of us in the center. not distinguishing the 20% on each of the wings. needs tohat america heal the wounds of division that we have had over these last 4-5 presidents. david wasserman is tweeting, it is looking like sanders margin over pete buttigieg will end up being smaller than pete buttigieg margin over klobuchar for second. next telephone call is for zachary in iowa, a democrat. you are on c-span. sorry. amy klobuchar speech. before, i was on her side until now. --m very excited to see will to see where she will go. sorry, i am watching myself right now. zachary, can you hit the mute button on the tv, because it's causing feedback? spoke, ite way she was very similar to pete would a judge. her, bernie and pete are very close. i cannot decide between the three of them. as has become very exciting to see. i was a supporter of warren in the beginning, but now she is falling back i cannot see myself supporting her anymore. host: what do you do? was working for a elizabeth warren in the iowa caucuses last week. student. i am a host: what are you studying? studying am currently -- i am a high school so i am not studying much of anything. host: thank you. great to see you involved in politics at this young age. president trump has been active on twitter tonight. there is one of his latest tweets. elizabeth warren, sometimes referred to as pocahontas, is having a bad night. i think she is sending signals she wants out. calling for unity is her way of going home and having a nice cold beer with her husband. from tylerhone call in claremont, new hampshire. who did you vote for today? caller: i voted for amy klobuchar. host: what do you think about her turnout tonight? caller: it is amazing. resonating ande why is she picking up this momentum in your state? her experience in the inate and her experience different counties. host: where do you see her going from here? caller: to be the democratic nominee. host: let's take a look at those results. now it's 60% of the state reporting. bernie sanders, 40,000 people 26%.g for him at p pete buttigieg at 3.9%. 1% --obuchar at 20% with 20.1%. elizabeth warren in fourth place, 9.5%. moving on to joe biden's 8.4% with 13,000. tom steyer with 3.5%. tulsi gabbard, 3.2% at 5000. and andrew yang at 2.8%. that is the current statistics with 60% of the votes counted in new hampshire. next up is brian, who is in manchester. who did you vote for today? caller: i voted for bernie sanders. host: why is he your candidate? caller: i am watching some really interesting coverage on twitch tv. it's really cool. it gives you a good rundown of what is going on in new hampshire. i decided to vote for burning today based on character more than policy. there are other people i agree with more on policy than bernie sanders, but what we need now is someone with integrity, someone that has been fighting for the rights of others for his whole career in politics and i think that's why i went for bernie sanders today. campaignnie sanders headquarter is in the southern new hampshire field house in manchester. you are looking at a live picture from the headquarters. we are awaiting the candidates remarks for his supporters. next up is david in milwaukee, a republican. what do you think of what's happening in new hampshire? has been a very interesting primary here in new hampshire. , would say that amy klobuchar as far as democrat candidates, she is my third favorite behind tulsi gabbard in first and andrew yang in second. that being said, at this point i am a pretty solid from supporter, but i do want to congratulate her for being the only went to raise her hand and say that she does not stand with socialism. she is willing to stand up and say that that is a bad policy for america. furthermore, i think -- i do thegree that trump is divider in chief. different media sources on both sides of the political spectrum, except for c-span. whether you are talking about cnn or fox news, they are the ones who are more responsible for dividing the nation. i think trump is trying to fight against that that sort of dishonesty. he is a little bit crass about -- i am quite the whosite of the last caller picked character over policy. i choose policies over character. what is most important is who can best lead this country. who has been best serve to serve the people as president. even if he gets a little bit out of line on twitter. i think that what he is doing for the economy and our first and second amendment rights is far more important. host: let me jump in. thank you for your call, from milwaukee. let's take a call from denise watching us in berlin. a democrat. i have to say hats off to the new hampshire people that got out and voted, and for the big turnout that they had. and i respect all the people that are running, because it is a hard job to try to be president for all people. that trump issee for all people. he is only for the rich. i want to try to emphasize on the latinos and the colored people to go out and vote, and the women, especially if amy gets to be the delegate for the democrats. please go out and support the women in the world, which he has degraded, and fondled and made a , putting his hands were he is not supposed to. another thing i noticed in trump's last night in new hampshire is, promises made, promises kept. well, have you asked his three wives that? yesterday ands on said he was going to vote for a republican because the democrats lie. googled and seen how many trends -- how many times trump has lied? host: thank you so much. it's take a quick look at the results. two people we are still waiting to hear from. bernie sanders with 61% of the , 26%.ounted pete buttigieg at 23.9%. neither man coming out to speak to their supporters. but we are going to do while we are waiting to hear from both of them is australia elizabeth warren's remarks from earlier tonight. a disappointing remarks for the neighboring state senator but she has vowing to fight on. let's listen to what she had to say. [cheers and applause] sen. warren: hello, new hampshire. [cheers and applause] the results are still coming in from across the state, the right now it is clear. senator sanders and mayor buttigieg had strong rights. congratulate my friend and colleague amy klobuchar for showing just how wrong dependence can be when they count a woman out. [cheers and applause] we are here tonight, among family and friends, i also want to be honest with ourselves as democrats. another be headed for one of those long primary fights that lasts for months. , with 55o states in states and territories to go. we still have 98% of our delegates from her nomination of for grabs, and americans in every part of the country are going to make their voices heard. [cheers and applause] the question for us democrats is whether it will be a long, bitter rehash of the same old divides in our party, or whether we can find another way. senator sanders and mayor buttigieg are great people. either one of them would be a far better president than donald trump. i respect them both. [cheers and applause] but the fight between factions in our party has taken a sharp turn in recent weeks. marking other candidates that were supporters of some candidates, shouting curses at other democratic candidates. work harsh tactics might if you are willing to burn down the rest of the party in order to be the last man standing. they might work if you worry about leaving our party and our politics worse off than how you found it. and it might work if you think only you have all the answers, and only you are the solution to all of our problems. but if we are going to beat donald trump in november, we are going to need huge turnouts in our party. to get that turnout, we will need a nominee that has the broadest coalition of our party that feels like they can get kind. [cheers and applause] [chanting warren] we cannot afford to fall into factions, we cannot afford to squander our collective power. we win when we come together. [cheers and applause] reverend jesse jackson once said it takes two wings to fly. and i think he is right. to campaign is disposition -- best positioned to beat donald trump in november because we can unite our party. [cheers and applause] unite this party and this country by mobilizing people behind ideas that are not only popular, with huge majorities of the american people, but that also accomplish structural change for our broken government , and our rigged economy. people around the wealth tax on the very richest american so we can invest in education. [cheers and applause] we can unite people around ending corruption in washington. ending the corruption that has left stagnant wages, rising costs, and a tighter and tighter squeeze on the middle class. we can do that. corruption that leaves more and more working families with less and less hope for a better future. and that has crushed people of color even harder. ending the corruption that has shortchanged our kids, our schools, and the very survival of the planets they will inherit -- planet they will inherit. families in america today are running out of time. decades ofed shrinking opportunity, decades of rising inequality. decades of a widening racial wealth gap. biz biz -- big businesses serve its own interests at the expense of smaller businesses and the expense of the american people. i believe in markets, but markets without rules are best. they perpetuate racial discrimination. for too long the rules have been rigged against people who just want a level playing field. time to change who makes the rules. [cheers and applause] it was never my plan to run for office of any time -- any kind. >> we are glad you did. host: well, good -- sen. warren: well, good. [cheers and applause] i want to fight for working families for decades. i fight credit card companies. own banking regulators to hold them accountable during the financial crash. build a new federal agency to protect consumers from predatory finance. [cheers and applause] and i got in this fight and ran for office because i saw that families were being squeezed harder than ever, and too many politicians were not getting enough done. i am here to get big things done. [cheers and applause] here is the thing about politicians. whether they are offering vague platitude -- platitudes, they face the same tests, actually getting anything done in a washington that is badly broken. politicalfrom all backgrounds don't need a bunch of flowery words to explain this. they know deep down exactly why government does not work. , and we need to call it out for what it is. [cheers and applause] the corruption that gives lobbyists a voice in voting. the corruption that lets big companies pay nothing in taxes while small businesses pay full rate. the corruption that ensures that nothing evident -- nothing ever changes on gun violence, climate policy or drug crisis. even though nearly everyone in america wants change. let's be specific here. prosecutorsn career showed more backbone than almost every republican senators standing up to this president, americans of all political stripes are gravely concerned about the corruption of a trump justice department. tot abandons the rule of our give sweetheart deals to criminals who commit their crimes on behalf of donald trump. and yes, roger stone, i am looking at you. [cheers and applause] tonight. tonight i have a message for our party and for this nation. our best chance of beating donald trump is with a candidate who can do the work. and i mean the hard, disciplined work. a candidate who can build a campaign to unite our party. and a candidate who can build a movement that is ready to take on corruption and win. [cheers and applause] [chanting warren] host: you guys -- sen. warren: you guys are great. the only time we can take on corruption in washington is if we are not a holden to it. let's just checked the facts. amy and i are the only candidates in this race were not either billionaires were supported by the super pac's. [cheers and applause] and a mic other candidates, i don't run my campaign by spending time behind closed doors, sucking up to wealthy donors. movement is powered by you. it is powered by people. and over the past year i have had the chance to shake hands or ,ug it away over 100,000 people in more than 220 town halls, in 29 states importer rico. know, there are a lot of differences among us. we come from different backgrounds. different religions, languages and experiences. we have different dreams and aspirations. feel the urgency in this moment in different ways. but with all those glorious differences, for the most part, we want the same thing. we want an america where decisions in washington are not bought and paid for by lobbyists and big donors. where everymerica person has a voice in our democracy. [cheers and applause] we want an america where fossil fuel companies don't have a -- on our planet. and america can breathe the air and drink the water. [cheers and applause] an america where every chil d can dream big and actually have a chance to make it. because no matter the color of your skin, who you love, how you worship or what zip code you live in, you deserve an america where you are safe, and your opportunities are just as good as anyone else's. [cheers and applause] i can see that america. that america is within our reach. and if you can imagine that america, if you think it is worth fighting for, then join us. go to elizabeth warren.com right now. pitch in a few bucks. sign up to volunteer. get involved in our campaign. this moment will not come our way again. [cheers and applause] tonight -- [chanting warren] tonight, i am here to say, thank you. thank you to every volunteer. thank you to every organizer, , every donorocker for every five dollars donation. thank you for helping build a movement to take back our democracy and rebuild it from the ground up. and while i am thinking everyone, i want to take a nk my sweetie, bruce. [cheers and applause] and i also want to think the good boys who pose for one selfie after another. the fight we are in, the fight to save our democracy is an uphill battle, but our campaign is built for the long haul. and we are just getting started. [cheers and applause] sen. warren: i am grateful down to my toes for what our campaign has been able to accomplish so far. my plans for this country have been influenced by letters pressed into my palms by little girls. my will to fight has been strengthened by the people who have whispered their dreams in my ears. my determination to lead a movement has been forged by the tens of thousands of people who have said they are ready to fight for an america they know we can be. thatse if we have the hope , if weith dreaming big have the courage to fight hard, we are going to win. thank you. [cheers and applause] ♪ host: elizabeth warren at about 8:20 this evening. her 9% into context, showing in new hampshire tonight, vowing to move onto the next set of primaries. here are the dates for those primaries. the nevada caucus is 11 days away on february 22. south carolina primary on saturday, february 29. tuesday, whenuper one third of all delegates is at stake including the big state of texas with 228 delegates in california with 415 are at stake. any successful nominee to claim you nomination for the democratic party will have to have 1991 votes at the convention this summer. on the republican side, the results are overwhelming for the president. 85.8% of the vote was 74,000 plus of those voting in the republican primary. former governor bill weld at 7865 voting for him. at his headquarters today, a reporter tweeted this. bill weld thanks staff and supporters and says it is now onto super tuesday, so he is staying in the race. and we are staying with you tonight, taking your calls and reaction while we're waiting for the two candidates battling it out for the number one position in the state to come to the podium. the race is pretty close. about two percentage points apart. no one has taken the stage yet. in fact we have learned a little bit about what bernie sanders is doing while he is waiting for the numbers to continue to tally. aids say he is currently in a gym next to where his election night rally is being held watching his grandkids play basketball. a family way to by the time before we know the exact results in new hatcher. we're going to back to your spunk -- to your phone calls. we have a special line for those in new hampshire who voted today. first up is bill in arlington heights, illinois, republican. caller: good evening. this is a link republican talking. a midwesterner from birth. lake amy klobuchar. klobuchar. i think senator warren's speech, the first few minutes sounded like a speech supporting senator klobuchar, talking about someone who can unite the party, someone with ideas. again, this is a republican talking. she has such a lincoln-esque qualities, a working-class background, honesty, sincerity, and a sense of humor. she, like lincoln, i believe can unite the people of her party, the democratic party. rivals, bringing in others who oppose you, others who were critical of you, that is that -- that is what lincoln did. lincoln talked about better -- bringing out the better angels of our nature. we have not had that for a while. this woman can do it, or should i say, candidate. we do not need to say woman. the midwest is crucial to the election. lincoln knew it, klobuchar knows it. wisconsin, pennsylvania, michigan. lincoln looked to those states were support. klobuchar will need those states to get the nomination. she has so much going for her. this race is not a simple one. the bookarathon, like published in the post-1976 election. people want a positive image and vision for their country. klobuchar, listen to her speech and then listen to what c-span put on afterwards. warren at senator times was making us look to a higher level. and yet at other times, the constant criticism. that is trump-like in my opinion. put down, put down. we don't want to hear that. we the voters of both parties, we are looking for someone who is going to make us smile, feel good about america, and believe things can get done. and if you look at senator klobuchar, she is that person. she is the one, when you listen to her speech tonight, you did not hear criticism of other candidates. directly or indirectly. she truly is, trying to bring out the better angels of our nature. i think if lincoln was here today he would say that. persond say here is a that supports the working class. here is a person that comes from the working class. here is a person who has a sense of humor. here is a person who will listen to others. and so i believe since she got in the race, i believed from the beginning, she will be one tough customer. i do not know what the debates would be like but i believed all along she would be on the ticket one way or the other. without the midwest, the democrats cannot win this election. host: thank you for your call. we have not been reporting results from deval patrick, former governor of massachusetts. his numbers were in the hundreds in the state, less than 1%. twitter from stephen sanchez, who says deval patrick is expected to suspend his potential campaign wednesday. a source familiar we announcement confirmed to cbs news. it will mike -- you will likely be made in an email to supporters. next is troy watching us from arena value -- watching us from california, a democrat. please during -- please turn down the volume on your tv and then go ahead. what is on your mind? caller: i like all the democrats. elizabeth warren and everybody else. i hope they win the election. i hope they beat donald trump. host: thank you for your call. next is paul, watching us from jacksonville, independent. caller: thank you for taking my call. i wanted to say i like all the candidates out here. i like what i'm seeing from amy klobuchar. in 2016 i voted for bernie sanders. my vote is fluid. i feel like a lot of the candidates are adopting some of his policies, medicare for all, things of that nature. but i am open, i like what i'm seeing from all the democratic candidates and i hope they can be trump. host: thank you for your call. next is joe from a town with a great name, accident, maryland. a democrat. welcome. caller: yeah. here is the thing. none of these democrats really understand what they are about to go up against. they are going to go up against a tsunami. these people that are asking for medicare for all, they don't understand that they are going to go up against a billion-dollar campaign by president trump. they are going to go up against probably about $800 million from the health insurance industry. million another $800 from the pharmaceutical industry. and no matter what they say, they are going to be overspent. and what is going to happen is the same thing that almost happened to obamacare. those three groups of people are going to take medicare for all, make it the most important issue. you are going to have 180 million people who have private and employer-based insurance who are going to be scared to death that they are going to lose their insurance. now, whether that happens, we do not know. what will happen is the advertising, the promotion, all of the wording that is going to come out against whoever gets this nomination, probably vice president biden, all of these losee are going to advertising, promotion, misinformation that is going to destroy them. second of all, none of these people really understand what the voters are looking for. we really do not want to hear about policy. policy this year is not that important. what is most important is if them, iople, any one of don't care if it is pete or bernie or joe, they want to make sure that donald trump, under all circumstances, is beat. they are not going to do it. unfortunately, they do not understand advertising. i own an advertising agency and have done quite a bit of work in the political field. here is the problem. they are so missed come bob elated with their messages. discombobulated with their messages. in my citypeople wearing make america great again hats. one said he has seen more black people, more african-americans come up and hug him because he was wearing this hat. he is in business, he wears it to sales calls. i said you are crazy for doing this. the problem is these democrats that they are trying to nominate have no idea. they do not understand what the voters are looking for. host: you have made your point and we appreciate it. we are going to say goodbye to you for now, and we are going to continue taking calls. we have information from the bernie sanders campaign and it is what you would expect. bernie sanders and his family and the cochairs are in the building at southern new hampshire university. we are told by the campaign he will probably wait, quote, until a call is made before he hits the stage. let's look at the results. 49,176 at 68%. 23.9%.ttigieg, 44,870 at some of the precincts not yet tabulated are in the southern tier of the state. so they are important to the results. we are now being told that mayor pete will be out in about three minutes. let's listen to what is being said at the podium. >> i am honored to serve with other members of my team up here tonight. i am really honored to serve with all of you come all the members of team pete. because without you, where would we be? we are here tonight. [cheers and applause] a six wife, a mother, term city counselor of lebanon, new hampshire, former mayor, and i'm a paramedic. and that is where i found my call to service. so i want to talk about mayor pete's call to service because that is why we are here tonight. agoave all heard many years -- not that many years ago, south bend was considered a dying city. at that point if you read his book, and i have read it twice -- three times. in the book you will find a section that talks about when this news came out, it talked about where south bend was at. a facebook page was started, a community conversation took place. folks were talking about their dissatisfaction at what they wanted to do. and a classmate of pete buttigieg said, hey, if you don't like what you are hearing, stand up and let's fix it. that was a call to action. that was pete's call to service. so now here we are as a nation. and once again, pete buttigieg is being called to service. [cheers and applause] i think it is important to remember that we cannot minimize the importance of our cities and our towns. the backbone, the fabric of america. we are made up of cities and towns. and what is important to us is important to everybody. clean water warning -- running from our taps. publicly well-funded and functioning school systems. economic development. does this sound like a familiar theme? mobilizing the cultural economy. these are the kind of things that have happened in south bend. these are the kind of things happening in my city. these of the kind of things important to us on the ground in our cities and towns and we cannot minimize the importance of that. this is why it is time for a leader in washington dc that understands how important this is to all of us. [cheers and applause] so, once again, new hampshire has played an important role. w showed the natione what it means to be part of a family. for all of us to be welcomed here on team pete. without further ado i would like to introduce my next cochair, sheriff eli rivera. go team pete. [cheers and applause] i don't know about you, but i am so pumped up. [cheers and applause] do you remember this? are you fired up? who when my? -- who am i? i am so humbled to be part of pete's campaign. to thank the volunteers who gave their time to canvass neighborhoods. and make the thousands and thousands of phone calls over the campaign. my wife turned to me and said, have you heard about this guy pete buttigieg? -- i said, who? here, check out this video. and i have not stopped campaigning since. [cheers and applause] veteran, this conversation about belonging and a sense of purpose spoke directly to me. and i mean immediately. was steppingeader into the arena to lead our country, just like barack obama did in 2007, now we have pete buttigieg. pete, on day one we will have a president who understands the power of belonging, and offer young people an opportunity to serve their country and find a sense of purpose that too many are missing with this national service plan. with the i will results and -- the iowa results and the momentum here in new hampshire, we are on track to take pete buttigieg straight to the white house. [cheers and applause] [chanting "president pete"] ready to bring back to the white house, dignity? respect? integrity? we still have work to do. sleeves,roll up our continue to knock on doors, make those phone calls, and elect pete buttigieg as our next president of the united states. thank you. [cheers and applause] [chanting "president pete"] >> good evening new hampshire! how are we doing tonight? know we have a lot of energy in here. sullivan, and i was in portsmouth. let's hear it for portsmouth. that's great. i am a united states marine. [cheers and applause] war veteran. proud alumni of president obama's administration. this is such an incredible night for all of us, and i have to say i have been hearing from veterans from all around our states. from kean, from hanover, hampton, portsmouth, manchester, concord. and i know i speak for all of us here, and for veterans from all around the country, when i say that we are so unbelievably proud, and it is with so much hope in our hearts that we look to send the first post-9/11 iraw tond afghanistan war veteran the white house as our next president of the united states. [cheers and applause] i know i speak on behalf of my fellow iraq and afghanistan veterans and veterans of all era, that p is one of us. pete is one of us. they are part of our military community and our family and they have embraced all of us. and we are going to get them to the white house. [cheers and applause] we all know that this is not momentum coming out of iowa and new hampshire. this is not momentum, this is a movement. this is a movement. this is a movement that started a year ago with 50 people here in new hampshire, and over the last weekend we had close to 10,000 people that came out to see pete. movement where integrity matters. decency matters. values matter. how we treat one another matters. the rules of the road that guide us matters. movement that, whoever you are and wherever you live and whatever you look like and whoever you happen to love, you belong. [cheers and applause] and we have all been working so hard, and it is all of you granite stators, all of us who have made it possible. but our work is just beginning. we have to keep making those phone calls and knocking on doors, and our movement will continue. and we are coming out of here feeling great, and it is onto nevada and onto south carolina and onto the white house. thank you. [cheers and applause] ♪ please welcome to the stage, pete buttigieg. [cheers and applause] mr. buttigieg: thank you, new hampshire. thank you so much. phenomenalme for our new hampshire state co-chairs. thank you for your leadership and thank you for your commitment. extraordinaryur national cochair, congresswoman, who knows how to raise the roof and how to get out the vote. and thank you to chest and -- chaston, the love of my life, who keeps me grounded. i want to congratulate my competitors and their supporters on their campaigns here in new hampshire. i admired senator sanders when i was a high school student. i respect him greatly to this day. and i congratulate him on his strong showing tonight. and i want to congratulate senator klobuchar, senator warren, vice president biden, and all of our democratic candidates and supporters. and i know that we all share the spirit that we heard from some of our volunteers at a poll site earlier today who welcomed a competing candidate with chants of vote blue no matter who. we are on the same team. [cheers and applause] over the past year, some two dozen campaigns have crisscrossed this state, each laying claim to the ability to bring people together, turn out the vote, and move americans toward a brighter future. that is to. -- is who. and here in a state that goes by free or- a motto, live die, you have made up your own mind. [cheers and applause] that famous independent streak. and thanks to you, a campaign that some said should not be here at all, has shown that we are here to stay. [cheers and applause] [chanting "president pete"] so many of you turned out. diehard democrats. independents unwilling to stay on the sidelines. and even some newly former republicans, ready to vote for something new. ready to vote for a politics inined by how many we call instead of who we push out. so many of you chose to meet a new era of challenge with a new generation of leadership. so many of you decided that a middle-class mayor and a veteran from the industrial midwest was the right choice to take on this president, not in spite of that is periods -- of that experience, but because of it. [cheers and applause] now our campaign moves on to nevada, to south carolina, to communities across our country. and we will welcome new allies to our movement at every step. we will go forward thanks to the work of our extraordinary team of staff and organizers and volunteers. i may be biased on this but i am also right we have the finest team in politics today. and i want you to know that you did not just represent me well, sayinspire me, and i cannot enough how thankful i am to our extraordinary team. thank you. know that team stretches across the country. forward fueled by hundreds of thousands of grassroots supporters. a woman in monday soda who donated in honor of the wife she lost a lung cancer, to the veteran from connecticut who sent $19 and $.68 in honor of the war he fought in vietnam. this campaign belongs to them. and if our campaign moves you, i hope you will go to ineforamerica.com and chip whatever you can. forward knowing that this is our chance, our only chance. of just to end the era donald trump, but to launch the era we know must come next. and the stakes could not be higher. theannot afford to miss mark or to miss this moment. we must get this right. with americans living under an unaccountable president who will cut taxes for corporations, and then cut, medicare, medicaid, and social security for the rest of us, we must get this right. when people of color fear for their own place in their own country, while infants or torn from their parents at the border, we must get this right. and when a commander-in-chief hardens war criminals and punishes war heroes, while systematically demolishing the credibility of our country in the eyes of the world, we dare not risk for more years of this presidency. we must get this right. [cheers and applause] [chanting "president pete"] we are clear-eyed about the challenge before us, and we must be equally clear about the choice at hand. my competitors and i share the same fundamental goals, bringing balance to the economy, guaranteeing health care to every american, combating a climate crisis and a rising tide of gun violence. but we deal -- differ in what we believe it will take to make that happen. in this election season we have been told by some that you must either be for a revolution or you are for the status quo. but where does that leave the rest of us? most americans do not see where they fit in that polarized the mission, and we cannot defeat the most divisive president in modern american history by tearing down anyone who does not agree with us 100% of the time. [cheers and applause] americans want the freedom to make choices for themselves on health care on any other issue, not to have washington decide them. and a politics of my way or the highway is a road to reelecting donald trump. vulnerable americans do not have the luxury of pursuing ideological purity over an inclusive victory. we also -- we know this. we also know better than to try to defeat such a disruptive president by relying on the same washington framework and mindset. after all, if today's washington was to serve america well, a guy like donald trump would have never come within cheating distance of the oval office in the first place. [cheers and applause] govern, we need to bring new voices to our capital. we need to get washington starting to work more like our best run cities and towns rather than the best way -- rather than the other way around. know that when you talk this way, you might get dismissed as a naive newcomer. outlook is what makes new beginnings possible. it is how we build a new majority. and election after election has shown us that putting forward a new perspective is how democrats win the white house, and we will win the white house. [cheers and applause] [chanting "president pete"] so as we take this campaign through the rest of the country, let's welcome that debate, let's have that debate. let's debate what the best way forward is. the best way to earn the white house and the best way to unify this country. they lie in as, vision that brings americans together not only in the knowledge of what we must stand against, but the confidence of knowing what we are for. majority wepowerful are gathering together. from davenport to dover, from carson city to columbia. it is a coalition of addition, not subtraction. [cheers and applause] movement reaching into church basements and barbershops, into universities and union halls, carrying the same values with us everywhere we go. we saw that coalition awakening. we saw it tonight in cities and suburbs, from the seacoast to those industrial towns too often left behind. and together, we are building a future where there will be no such things as an uninsured american or an unaffordable prescription. that is what we can deliver with a plan those americans can get behind. medicare for all who want it, ensuring care for all americans, but trusting you to choose when you want it and where you want. -- want it. together, we will stop enabling empoweringreed -- records and making good on the idea that one job ought to be enough. [chanting "president pete"] host: at this point we are going to leave pete buttigieg. bernie sanders is coming out to talk to his supporters, claiming victory in the new hampshire primary. let's listen in. ♪ [cheers and applause] sen. sanders: thank you! thank you. ntthank you. [cheers and applause] [laughter] thank you. thank you. thank you. thank you, new hampshire. thank you, new hampshire. let me take this opportunity to thank the people of new [cheers and applause] and let me thank the thousands of volunteers in new hampshire. thank you. knocked on doors in the rain and the snow and the cold. the reason that we won tonight in new hampshire, we won last week in iowa -- [cheers and applause] is because of the hard work of so many volunteers. and let me say tonight, that this victory here is the beginning of the end for donald trump. [cheers and applause] with victories behind us, the popular vote in iowa and the victory here tonight, we are going to nevada, we are going to south carolina, we are going to win those states as well. and tonight, i want to take the myortunity to express appreciation and respect for all of the democratic candidates we ran against. amy klobuchar, elizabeth warren, joe biden. and what i can tell you, with absolute certainty, and i know i speak for every one of the democratic candidates, is that no matter who win -- and we certainly hope it is going to be us -- we are going to unite together. we are going to unite together and defeat the most dangerous president in modern history of this country. [cheers and applause] and the reason i believe we are going to win is that we have an unprecedented grass-roots movement, from coast-to-coast, of millions of people. reason that we are going to win is that we are putting together an unprecedented, multigenerational, multiracial political movement. [cheers and applause] movement from coast-to-coast, which is demanding that we finally have an economy and a government that works for all of us, not wealthy campaign contributors. [cheers and applause] and i want to thank all of those people who have worked and contributed to our campaign. but make the point that at this point in the campaign, we are taking on billionaires, and we are taking on candidates funded by billionaires. but we are going to win, because we have the agenda that speaks to the needs of working people throughout this country. health care is a human right, not a privilege. [cheers and applause] the wealthy and powerful will start paying their fair share of taxes. we will make public colleges and andersities tuition-free, cancel all student debt. [cheers and applause] we knowdonald trump, that climate change is very real, and an existential crisis for our planet. we are prepared to tell the fossil fuel industry that their short-term profits are not more important than the future of our planet. [cheers and applause] we are going to end a racist and broken criminal justice system. we are going to pass comprehensive immigration reform. our gun safety policies will be determined by the american people, not the nra. and under our administration, it will be women, not the government, who control their own lives. [cheers and applause] campaign is not just about beating trump. it is about transforming this country. it is about having the courage to take on wall street, the insurance companies, the drug companies, the fossil fuel industry, the military-industrial complex. [cheers and applause] tonight, i want to thank the people of new hampshire for this great victory, thank our volunteers, and urge all americans to join our effort to transform this country at bernie sanders.com. [cheers and applause] [chanting "bernie"] it is ontonevada, south carolina, it is on to win the democratic nomination. and together, i have no doubt that we will defeat donald trump. thank you all very much. [cheers and applause] ♪ [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2020] [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. visit ncicap.org] host: senator bernie sanders as he did in 2016, claiming victory in the new hampshire primary. last time around 60% of the vote was a much smaller race against hillary clinton at 38%. about one point 7% separates him from pete buttigieg. david axelrod has this tweet about tonight's result, former clinton campaign advisor. who would have predicted six months ago that the race in new hampshire would end with a fight to the finish between bernie sanders and pete buttigieg? the former south bend mayor is having another big night. about 10 minutes or so, we are going to take calls until the bottom of the hour. we want to hear about what you think about the results in the new hampshire primary 2020 and where you think this all goes next. we are going to start with a call from mark from connecticut. go ahead, please. mark, you are on the air. go ahead, please. all right, moving on to lou in texas, a republican. caller: greetings. say a sign of mental instability of being crazy is repeating the same thing over and over and expecting a different result. hasar senator sanders succeeded in doing the same thing twice. so he is crazy anyway. that is all i have to say. host: thank you. on the phone with us is stephen sheppard, the senior political campaigns and elections editor and chief polling analyst for politico. he will help us understand what happened tonight and what it all means. what are the top three takeaways from the results in new hampshire? is a greatainly this night for the top three candidates, all of whom are at or near the 20% mark. 60% of the vote bernie sanders got in 2016, obviously it was a one-on-one race. now with all these other candidates he got 26%. voters wasalition of enough for him to carry him over the top. if you look at the youngest voters, voters under age 30, he won 56% of them. won voters under age 45, he 43% of them. he continued to struggle among older voters. however, that core coalition was enough to put him over the top. the same thing when it comes to ideology with the roughly -- he won a large chunk. a lot more than elizabeth warren with 18%. even though he struggled among more moderate voters, in this splintered field, particularly with the moderate voters moving between pete buttigieg and amy klobuchar, it was enough to put him over the top. my final take away is where we go from here. non-sanders candidates left standing after tonight, at least in good standing after tonight, pete and amy klobuchar, thus far have not performed well either in the next two states to come, nevada and south carolina, or the voters defined in those states. nevada has a significant latino population, and a somewhat significant african-american population. south carolina, the majority will be african-american. neither of those candidates has demonstrated the ability that say, joe biden has, to appeal to those voters. with joe biden collapsing into fifth place and really bleeding support from his core coalition in the run-up to this primary, it will be interesting to see what the voters who have been behind him do. who they go to tom steyer, is essentially a nonfactor in new hampshire? or did they at some neighbor candidates? whether it is bernie sanders, who has decent numbers among nonwhite voters. or do they go to warm on -- one of the new moderates in pete buttigieg or amy klobuchar, as opposed to those who have lost their momentum like joe biden. host: if you resort the results in a different way, because there seems to be a battle going on in the democratic party between the centerleft and the progressive left, let's just describe them that way. and look at the results of the candidates that fall into those lanes, what do you get? what are democratic voters saying about the ideology that is more favorable to them? there isthink significant divide with the people coming out to vote in these democratic contests of thus far. especially in new hampshire, where voters who are not registered in either voters can choose which primary they will participate in. with the lack of a competitive competitive -- competitive republic and primary, i am sure a majority went with the democrats. only 6% of voters identified as liberal. -- 60% identified as liberal. obviously bernie sanders did much better with those liberal voters. when you have the vote divided as it was tonight, 26% for sanders, 24% for buttigieg, roughly 20% for klobuchar, you will find the divides playing out here. the one advantage for sanders withs that was -- elizabeth warren finishing third and fourth, she has lost a lot of steam. that essentially leaves him as the main more liberal, more progressive option in the field. whereas i think the centerleft lane you're talking about is still divided, even if it is not necessarily divided among candidates where if you masked a month ago who were the key moderates in the race, joe biden would have been the first name i would have mentioned. i am not sure that is the case anymore. having said that, i do not think that lane is well-defined. there are multiple candidates and as long as they split that vote, that would be enough for someone to win a major primary, as we saw tonight, with only slightly more than a quarter of the vote. host: i know you have a lot more work to do to put the numbers together for your readers. thank you for spending time to help us understand what happened in new hampshire tonight. speaking of numbers, i want to put one more in front of you. there has been some speculation about how enthusiastic new hampshire voters would be. per is a tweet that says the decision headquarters turnout in new hampshire hit 250,000, which was the 2016 democratic total, with 83% precinct reporting. so it is likely to surpass what happened in 2016. time for some more calls. tim, in oregon, a democrat. welcome. tim, go ahead please. to raleigh,oving on north carolina, democrat. caller: hi. yes. so, i'm a student at nc state university. i am honestly relieved that bernie won new hampshire. i truly believe he is the candidate that represents everyday americans. we all agree on the same things. we all want a good affordable education and health care and whatnot. i personally believe the other candidates have qualification, no doubt. someone like buttigieg or worn becomes the nominee, i personally would vote for them, because a moderate can be a unifying figure as well. there is no doubt the democrats need to unite behind the nominee no matter who it will be. host: thank you for your call. chris is up next from texas, a democrat. caller: i was just calling to see what you had going on about tonie sanders and him trying help out people of our age, as far as into the 22-year-old demographic. support, just to at different perspective that we have going on into that horizon? and trying to get out to that sunset and the peace beyond of american nation. we have lost you, so we are going to go to dan in detroit, a democrat. caller: hi. so i think most people in the media pundits are missing the story. all they do is talk about biden and warren and klobuchar and these folks, but the real story is that bernie is running away with one side, but no one is talking about bloomberg. you thinkand warren, the moderate lien of the democratic party will put their chips on one of those? it sounds like an awfully risky proposition. you are going to see this come down to sanders and bloomberg, who has the infrastructure in place in these later states, hundreds of staff, significant voter outreach. it is going to be that debate. and you are not going to hear many pundits talk about that. but mark my words, that is what it will come down to. host: we will see how that comes down to in super tuesday, which is the first contest he will be competing with. robert, vero beach, florida, republican. caller: i have to agree with the previous caller from illinois. is really turning the tables, i think. being a republican all my life and growing up that way, i would have to go with that. i think she is the real deal. she gets the heart of america going. the only thing i have a gripe about would be the obamacare. i goat goes forward, and do my taxes and i get deducted make lessth, and i than $30,000 a year, i got a problem with that. other than that, i am actually leaning towards her. i think she would be a great candidate. host: did you vote for donald trump in 2016? caller: yes i did. host: thank you for your call. next up is connor from western virginia, caller: i've been watching the new hampshire primaries and i have to say with bernie leading so strongly in the polls, it surprises me to see the other candidates call for unity without really rallying behind him. even warren, who has said her policies are closer to his than the moderates, she still seems to call for party unity while still staying in the race without dropping out and giving her voters to the clear candidate who will have policies that in act her vision for -- that enact her vision for america viewed -- america. host: next is dana in ohio. caller: i am happy with any democrat that is running, that i feel that donald trump is very dangerous for this country, and any of the candidates running would be better than he is, but i am hoping and praying there will be a biden-bernie coalition so that we can go ahead and get the votes we need to get this dangerous president out of office so that he can stop creating policies that are harmful to us as americans and that place us at risk. there's no reason why we should have a candidate in office that proves, based on his actions, that he has a dislike for this country, and i would even dare to say, a hatred for the americans in this country. host: here is a tweet from politico. in the space of 18 minutes as the network called new hampshire for sanders, $400,000 flowed through the small donor site. we don't know how much goes to sanders, but likely a lot. 18 minutes. that is a lot of money and much more likely in the coming hours. connor in olympia, washington, republican. you, i definitely am supporting amy for this race. i think she had a good showing in new hampshire and a great influence of energy in our country. i think for republican voters as well, she is someone who could be seen as leaning more toward the middle versus the other candidates. i think that is what is needed to rally us together. host: thank you for your call. i wanted to share with you a series of tweets, some interesting statistics, from a website called fact base, doing an ongoing project since donald trump took office, analyzing every word he has spoken or tweeted. here is a series of three. penchant for has a developing nicknames for opponents, and here is what fact base says. donald trump has nicknames for democratic candidates and mentors them often. one candidate about whom he said almost nothing, amy klobuchar. two mentions. sanders,ison, bernie 823, joe biden, 450 five, elizabeth warren, 225, mike bloomberg, 27, and pete buttigieg 33. twicetioned amy klobuchar 2018.hank her in also to say she looked like a snowman. it will be interesting to see if this changes after her third place finish in new hampshire. mark fromcall from chicago, a democrat. welcome. caller: good evening. i wanted to comment on tonight's primaries for new hampshire. it is evident the democratic party still has a long way to go in uniting in this race, however, it is impressive how mayor pete buttigieg made a showing in the first week and a half. i think that breathes new life into the democratic party. tothe same time, i want agree with another caller about be some typeds to of progressive-moderate ticket when it comes to getting the present administration. hopefully tonight does not scare other democrats that haven't decided yet. and are thinking about coming over to join donald trump. thank you. host: thank you. andrew yang was the first of the casualties on primary night and new hampshire. at 11:30 eastern time, he tweeted simply, "we will be back." tom steyer put out a statement, he has about 4% showing in the new hampshire primary. it is a long statement and the crux of it is this, "tonight's result from new hampshire show the race for the democratic nomination is wide open. until nevada and south carolina have a chance to vote, we won't know which candidates can build a diverse and unified coalition we need to win in november." tom steyer continuing in the race. were going to go back to phone calls. next, mike from north carolina, a democrat. caller: good evening. current to say that the democratic primary, it is exciting to see bernie sanders continuing this march that began four years ago. people who supported him them, but there are plenty of people that have aged up and are able to vote. what i saw during canvassing, there were people who started in high school who were not old enough to vote who will participating in the selection for the first time this year. it will be incredibly exciting to see how mature the constituency of bernie sanders -- thank you. host: earlier in the program we reported a tweet from cbs that deval patrick was going to be emailing supporters tomorrow to pull out of the race. a spokesperson for his campaign was not happy with cbs about that and said the governor is still evaluating and will make a decision about the future of his campaign tomorrow. let's hear next from david, in st. paul, minnesota. a republican. i am so excited about how well amy klobuchar is doing. she is the kind of candidate who can bring out the moderate republicans and pry them away from donald trump, and that is a real path for victory for democrats. dividedw, with their moderate votes, they are divided, but if you look at pete and amy, that is the base of the party. they are giving it to bernie sanders. they are giving it to bernie sanders. what will happen when it is bernie versus trump? when amy klobuchar can pull from the center and the right and hold that energy from donald trump. that's what i want to see, amy klobuchar is a winner. you have to consider that. host: just to put your comets in context, you called on the republican line. who did you vote for in 2016? caller: i could not vote for donald trump and 2016, so it was a right in response and i will keep that to myself. under no circumstances could i vote for that. host: but you are a republican? caller: absolutely. .ost: thank you last voice goes to antonia from california, a democrat. thank you. caller: thank you. i was disappointed in the democrats in 2016 when they treated bernie so badly with hillary. i don't think it was right. i really don't. it might be kind of a cosmic thing right now for him to be ahead, because so many people care for him and did not think it was fair. older, but hebe is sharp. what i like about bernie is that he has been consistent all his life. he is an authentic person. always the same person. he does not flip around and he has a lot of experience working with politics. i really think if he teams up with somebody really good, i think he is the one who can beat trump. host: thank you for your call. there will be lots more conversation about the results on c-span as the week progresses. let's take a last look at our results, which come from the associated press, at 82% of the state reporting. 7%nie sanders at 25 point with 66,595. pete buttigieg at 24.4 percent with 63,171. at 51,170 3, next 19 .8%. withbeth warren far behind 24,009 .4% -- 20 4000, 9 .4%. let me tell you about what is coming up. tomorrow morning on "washington journal" at 7:00 a.m., we will continue talking about the results, understanding what happened in new hampshire and what lies ahead in south carolina and nevada. speaking of nevada, i want to tell you about an event on february 15. the clark county, nevada democrats dinner will be live on c-span starting at 10:00 p.m. eastern time, and we will have live coverage of that, you will hear the candidates presenting themselves to the voters in nevada in advance of their caucus. a queue being with us tonight. -- thank you for being with us tonight. on c-span.org, we have all of the speeches from the candidates and all of the results precinct by precinct viewed if you are a political junkie and want to see how candidates did in rural versus urban, there's lots of data. thank you for being with us. >> c-span, your unfiltered view of government. created by cable in 1979 and brought to you today by your television provider. senator amy klobuchar thanked her supporters for helping her make the top three in the new hampshire primary. she spoke at her primary headquarters in concord and urged voters to donate as her campaign moves to nevada and ut