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Meanwhile, the Clinton campaign aggressively pre-spun the expected loss. Her aides say it should not be surprising he would win a state that neighbors Vermont and that is overwhelmingly white. Highlighting polls that have her down more than 20 points, Clinton’s team is laying the groundwork to spin a storyline that she exceeded expectations and closed the gap in the final days. They’ll also talk about how she’s running “a national campaign” and cite her decision to spend Sunday in Flint, Mich.

Sanders supporters see what the other side is doing, and they’re mad about it. Several told me they are nervous that the corporate media and pundit class will not give Bernie the credit he deserves for a victory. They are already frustrated that much of the coverage does not recall how far he’s come since getting into the race and by how many stories dismiss his plans as unrealistic.

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This mentality was prevalent after Sanders’ events. “It really has nothing to do with him being from next door,” said Kim Burkland-Ward, 46, a social worker in Nashua. “That’s such a smoke screen! They’ll look for any explanation they can.”

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A lot could also still go wrong for the democratic socialist. Bad weather might mess with the turnout models. Independents who are allowed to vote in either the Republican or Democratic primary may choose to take a ballot in the more competitive GOP contest. Hillary won a shocking upset over Barack Obama in the 2008 primary that way.

But it was surreal to watch Sanders act like a frontrunner on the trail yesterday. He's had Secret Service protection for the better part of a week, but it is still remarkable to watch the 74-year-old -- so often spotted alone around Capitol Hill -- get ferried around by a large motorcade—including two buses full of reporters and aggressive state troopers. While Hillary attacked him for hypocritically accepting money from the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, because it raises money from Wall Street, he carefully avoided mentioning her by name. (Clinton, of course, also accepted help from the DSCC during her eight years in the Senate.)

-- The Bernie play list is heavy on the revolution theme. Among the songs that play at his events: “Talkin’ Bout a Revolution” by Tracy Chapman, “The Revolution Starts Now” by Steve Earle, “Revolution” by Bob Marley & the Wailers, as well as “Revolution” by Flogging Molly. (John Wagner)

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-- By all accounts, Sanders has a strong ground game. Bloomberg’s Sasha Issenberg notes that the campaign is putting a lot more emphasis on face-to-face interactions than phone banking in its field program. Volunteers have gone to such remote places in search of votes that four different police departments have called the campaign to report panicked calls from residents who are not used to seeing canvassers.

-- Regardless of the spin, a decisive win tonight would erase doubts that the battle for the nomination will drag on for a long time. But many in Clinton World will still keep their cool, buying the talking points outlined above. The real barometer about whether to panic could come in Nevada, many in the former Secretary of State’s orbit believe. No state votes in a vacuum: If Hillary loses big today, her lead in the Silver State could potentially evaporate. The next state, like Iowa, is a lower-turnout caucus, which benefits the more liberal Sanders. But Clinton should have a lock because of the large Latino population, with whom she remains very popular. If she winds up blowing it in Nevada, the Democratic establishment and the Clinton orbit would really go into full-scale panic mode.

-- Will Hillary shake up her campaign after tonight? Politico reports that “Hillary and Bill Clinton are so dissatisfied with their campaign’s messaging and digital operations they are considering staffing and strategy changes.” From Glenn Thrush and Annie Karni: “At the heart of problem, [unnamed sources] say, is Clinton’s decision not to appoint a single empowered chief strategist … and disperse decision-making responsibility to a sprawling team with fuzzy lines of authority. The result is a muddled all-of-the-above messaging strategy that emphasizes different messages — and mountains of arcane policy proposals. … Several people close to the situation said Clinton would be loath to fire anyone outright and more inclined to add new staff.”

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The campaign's chairman pushed back on the story, and Hillary herself denied it.

Obama's 2008 strategist floated the notion that the campaign's problems may be more fundamental:

For veterans of the 2008 campaign, the Politico story brought a dose of déjà vu. On the eve of the primary eight years ago, there was also talk of a shake-up. But her surprise victory stopped it from happening until later.

-- Did Bill go off the reservation with his attacks on Sanders? Or is he being strategic? We think the latter. Or, as Marco Rubio put it in a different context: Let’s dispel with the fiction that Bill Clinton doesn’t know what he’s doing. He knows exactly what he’s doing.

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1. His seemingly off-the-cuff attacks got intense coverage yesterday, enough so that he did not need to repeat the lines of attack and could show restraint. “The hotter this election gets, the more I wish I was just a former president and, just for a few months, not the spouse of the next one,” he said. “I have to be careful what I say.”

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2. WJC accomplished his goal of signaling to pro-Clinton outside groups that they should start throwing the kitchen sink. David Brock, whose outside group coordinates directly with the Clinton campaign, called Bill’s comments “a strong call to arms.” As Brock told Politico, “Senator Sanders is trying to live in the purity bubble, and it needs to be burst.”

Last night, when Bill introduced Hillary, he sounded liberated. “Finally, the dam broke in the polarization of the campaign, and we are finally free” to have a discussion of whose ideas are better, he said in Hudson.

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-- The risk remains that Bill's remarks are covered as an outburst akin to his anti-Obama temper tantrums before the South Carolina primary in 2008.

For now, the campaign is doing nothing to distance itself. In fact, Bill "took over" Hillary's Instagram account, posting a bunch of shots like this one yesterday:

WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING:

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-- In D.C., today's expected snowstorm turned into rain. So the federal government is open, though telework and unscheduled leave are options. A list of area delays and closings is here. There is still a winter weather advisory for west and north of the District into Baltimore, but snow isn't sticking inside the city because of warmer-than-expected temps, the Capital Weather Gang reports. There is snow in New Hampshire, however, which theoretically could dampen turnout some. Though, folks up north are heartier and better in bad weather than down in D.C.

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-- Kasich and Sanders won early voting in Dixville Notch. From The Union Leader: “Despite being closed since 2011, the tradition of early voting at The Balsams Resort in New Hampshire's first-in-the-nation presidential primary continued on Tuesday morning, just a stroke past midnight. Nine votes were cast, with the Ohio governor getting three votes to Donald Trump's two for the Republican presidential nomination while Sanders captured all four Democratic votes cast.”

“Dixville was one of three Granite State locations voting at midnight,” the Union Leader notes. “In Hart’s Location, a town with a population of 43 that claims to have originated the midnight voting tradition in 1952 to accommodate the schedules of railroad workers, Kasich also edged out Trump, 5 votes to 4, with Christie gathering 2 votes. Bush, Carson and Rubio got one vote each. Sanders beat Clinton 12-7. In Millsfield, a small township just south of Dixville, Clinton got two votes and Sanders got one. And Cruz won with 9 votes, followed by Trump with 3 and Bush, Christie, Kasich, Rubio, Fiorina and Paul with one vote each.”

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-- A Trump supporter called Cruz a "pussy" for not supporting waterboarding, and Trump repeated the word from the podium. Jenna Johnson reports from the frontrunner's rally in Manchester that the crowd of thousands roared with approval.

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Watch the full exchange:

-- The feud between Trump and Bush continued to get more personal. Bush tweeted at Trump, “you aren’t just a loser, you are a liar and a whiner." Trump called into CNN, “Jeb is having some kind of a breakdown I think. And, look, he's an embarrassment to his family. He has to bring his mother out and lug his mother around at 90-years-old. I think it's a very sad situation ... He's a desperate person. He's a sad and, you know, he's a pathetic person. He doesn't even use his last name in his ads. He's a sad person who has gone absolutely crazy. I mean, this guy is a nervous wreck." After Jeb attacked him on eminent domain during Saturday's debate, Trump attacked the Bush family for profiting from using eminent domain to get the land to build the Texas Rangers stadium, Jose A. DelReal reports.

-- The final batch of polling shows a fluid race for second on the Republican side. The CNN/WMUR tracking poll puts Trump at 31 percent, followed by Rubio at 17, Cruz at 14, Kasich at 10, Bush at 7, Fiorina at 5 and Christie at 4. A University of Massachusetts/7News tracking survey completed Friday through Sunday had Trump at 34, Rubio and Cruz at 13, Kasich and Bush at 10 and Christie at 5. A Monmouth University poll in the field Thursday through Saturday, before the debate, put Trump at 30, Rubio at 13, Kasich at 14, Bush at 13, Cruz at 12 and Christie at 6. Reflecting this jumbled field, Dan Balz and Philip Rucker write that the campaign trail Monday "was like a game of political billiards, with attacks flying fast and in all directions." Here is how the candidates have done in an average of the most recent credible polls:

-- Rubio delivered his closing argument last night -- and gave his opponents more fodder to attack him as robotic in the process. "Appearing in Nashua at his final campaign rally, the Florida senator made a point that he often makes on the campaign trail about instilling values in children. Then, he made it again, using nearly identical words," Sean Sullivan reports.

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Critics of Rubio quickly circulated this video:

Rubio's gaffe is breaking through beyond the Acela Corridor. Last night, Trevor Noah mocked him for repeating himself on "The Daily Show":

So did Jimmy Fallon, pretending that Rubio said "Peyton knew exactly what he was doing" three times in a row when asked to react to the Broncos Super Bowl win:

And Stephen Colbert:

-- The fact that every major TV comedian riffed on this last night reflects the degree to which Rubio has been defined the last few days. He could very well finish second in New Hampshire and may soon be widely considered the front-runner for the nomination. That does not change the reality that he’s now, more than ever, susceptible to being attacked by his rivals as "The Republican Obama," a first-term senator who can give a great speech but may not be ready yet for the Herculean burdens of the presidency. If anything, the last few days have shown that – while immensely talented – Rubio doesn’t have quite as much raw political skill as the president did at this point in 2008.

Where’s the beef? Broader questions about Rubio’s depth will dog him going forward. He has insisted so many times that he knows more about foreign policy than anyone else in the GOP field that a lot of gullible reporters just repeat it as a given, especially on TV. Expect rivals to more explicitly challenge his core credentials and competency. Sitting on a committee for five years does not actually make one a foreign policy expert, they will note. Assuming Jeb goes on to fight in South Carolina no matter how he does in New Hampshire, you’ll hear that message from Sen. Lindsey Graham.

Ted Cruz is also laying the predicate to go after Rubio in South Carolina over women in the armed forces. The Palmetto State, which votes Feb. 20, is more socially conservative and has a huge military population. Yesterday, in Barrington, Cruz said his rivals who refuse to rule out a military draft for women are “nuts.”

-- On a related note, Chris Christie has been defined by his attacks on Rubio. Here's a word cloud of every Christie mention online since Saturday. Tonight will demonstrate whether the New Jersey governor elevated himself with his attacks on the Floridian.

THE NARRATIVE, as Granite Staters head to the polls:

-- Tonight’s primary will probably knock at least one of the governors out of the race. Christie is the likeliest candidate, even if he does not drop tonight.

-- “Something has clicked for Jeb in the last few days,” writes Ed O’Keefe, who has followed him around the country for months. “What has transpired by no means guarantees him a top-tier finish (tonight), but the crowds turning out to see him are bigger, his delivery on the stump is crisper and some of his key rivals have stumbled. At the least, the developments have mostly silenced talk of a hasty exit and skittish donors. Across Bush World — including his famous family members, senior aides, well-heeled donors and Florida loyalists braving a blizzard — there’s a growing sense of relief. Finally, after enduring months of bad news reports, tepid debate performances and two rounds of campaign budget cuts, some believe they’re on the verge of a good night.”

-- Kasich’s outreach to moderates appears to be paying off: He’s staying positive and presenting himself as a unifying figure. “You have to have some people in the other party. You’re an American. You’re not a Democrat or Republican,” he said at a town hall, complaining that foreigners “look at these goofballs across the ocean. We’ve got to get our act together.” In a sign that he’s doing well, the Bush campaign attacked him yesterday in a video that touched on everything from his past support for gun control to expanding Medicaid.

-- We’ve noticed a steady uptick in Kasich buzz on the Internet. There’s been more than 255,000 Kasich mentions on social, broadcast and online media over the past five days, according to our analytics partners at Zignal Labs report. That's up from 156,000 the week before. It was his biggest week of the campaign, by far, in terms of mentions. This word cloud from the last two weeks illustrates how much tonight is make-or-break for the Ohio governor’s hopes:

-- Cruz is NOT resonating in the Granite State. David Weigel writes after following him all over the state: "Just hours before the Iowa caucuses, the Texas senator told a last-minute rally at a Cedar Rapids-area church that an Iowa win could give him Reagan-like momentum going into New Hampshire. He would not, he said, turn out like Mike Huckabee or Rick Santorum, who took the caucuses but then hit a granite wall in 2008 and 2012.” But Cruz's crowds have not grown noticeably since before his Iowa win. “Iowan or Southern audience often cheered and clapped along to Cruz's closing theme song, ‘When the Stars and Stripes and the Eagle Fly.’ New Hampshire audiences stayed seated or milled around.” Lucky for Cruz, the expectations are low.

GET SMART FAST:

Obama administration asked Congress for an emergency $1.8 billion appropriation to respond to the Zika virus abroad and prepare for it at home, and the CDC announced that its emergency operations center in Atlanta is on its highest level of alert. “More than 300 CDC staff are working in the command center to monitor and coordinate the Zika response,” Theasked Congress for an emergency $1.8 billion appropriation to respond to theabroad and prepare for it at home, and theannounced that its emergency operations center in Atlanta is on its highest level of alert. “More than 300 CDC staff are working in the command center to monitor and coordinate the Zika response,” per Steven Mufson and Lena H. Sun Oregon wildlife refuge standoff posted a series of YouTube videos mocking the FBI and depicting themselves taking joyrides in government vehicles. ( The four remaining armed occupiers in theposted a series of YouTube videos mocking theand depicting themselves taking joyrides in government vehicles. ( AP drone operators in the U.S. than there are registered planes, the FAA announced. Officials launched a drone-registration program just before Christmas, which requires operators to register their unmanned aircraft. ( There are now more registeredin the U.S. than there are registered planes, theannounced. Officials launched a drone-registration program just before Christmas, which requires operators to register their unmanned aircraft. ( AP Hong Kong protesters clashed with police overnight in what is being called the "Fishball revolution." Rioters, incited by the government's eviction of local food vendors, set fires and threw bricks at police, who responded by firing warning shots into the crowd. ( clashed with police overnight in what is being called the "Fishball revolution." Rioters, incited by the government's eviction of local food vendors, set fires and threw bricks at police, who responded by firing warning shots into the crowd. ( CNN Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced his country will suspend its airstrikes in Syria by Feb. 22. Following through on a campaign promise, he said his forces will instead pursue a “non-combat mission” to rebuild the war-torn region and train local forces. ( announced his country will suspend its airstrikes inby Feb. 22. Following through on a campaign promise, he said his forces will instead pursue a “non-combat mission” to rebuild the war-torn region and train local forces. ( Charmaine Noronha Egypt’s foreign minister, in Washington, said the international community should not intervene against Islamic State expansion in Libya until a new government is formed and requests assistance. He said the fight against terrorism “should be a Libyan-led process.” ( , in Washingtonsaid the international community should not intervene against Islamic State expansion in Libya until a new government is formed and requests assistance. He said the fight against terrorism “should be a Libyan-led process.” ( Karen DeYoung Virginia Tech student David Eisenhauer, and said the two were “dating.” ( The teenage girl slain in Blacksburg told friends she planned to run away with her alleged killer, 18-year-oldstudent David Eisenhauer, and said the two were “dating.” ( Justin Jouvenal, T. Rees Shapiro and Moriah Balingit 26-year-old U.S. aid worker Kayla Mueller hostage prior to her murder in Syria was charged in federal court. ( The Iraqi woman accused of holdinghostage prior to her murder in Syria was charged in federal court. ( Matt Zapotosky and Adam Goldman Germany, killing four and injuring at least forty others. Rescue teams are still working to free passengers from the wreckage. ( Two passenger trains collided in Bavaria,, killing four and injuring at least forty others. Rescue teams are still working to free passengers from the wreckage. ( BBC NARAL Pro-Choice America will send an open letter to PBS today asking that moderators ask the Democratic candidates about abortion during Thursday night’s debate in Milwaukee. During the first five Democratic debates, there were no questions about the issue. ( will send an open letter totoday asking that moderators ask the Democratic candidates aboutduring Thursday night’s debate in Milwaukee. During the first five Democratic debates, there were no questions about the issue. ( See the letter.

POWER PLAYERS IN THE NEWS:

Michael Bloomberg confirmed he is still considering a White House bid. He told Former New York City mayorconfirmed he is still considering a White House bid. He told the Financial Times that he is “looking at all the options,” said the public deserves “a lot better” and noted that he’d need to start putting his name on ballots at the beginning of March. “I find the level of discourse and discussion distressingly banal and an outrage and an insult to the voters,” he told the paper. Randy Forbes (R-Va.) is switching districts in Virginia to improve his reelection chances, running for the more Republican-leaning seat that opened with the retirement of his colleague Scott Rigell. ( Rep.(R-Va.) is switching districts in Virginia to improve his reelection chances, running for the more Republican-leaning seat that opened with the retirement of his colleague. ( The Hill Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), defending Rubio’s debate performance, called Christie “a lot overweight.” ( Rep.(R-Calif.), defending Rubio’s debate performance, called“a lot overweight.” ( Buzzfeed Sikh actor Waris Ahluwalia staged a sit-in in at a Mexico City airport after officials refused to let him board his flight to New York unless he removed his turban. (Peter Holley) actorstaged a sit-in in at a Mexico City airport after officials refused to let him board his flight to New York unless he removed his Johnny Manziel’s ex-girlfriend said the Cleveland Browns quarterback hit her so hard during a January fight that her eardrum ruptured. Dallas authorities have reopened the criminal investigation into his alleged behavior that night. ( An attorney forex-girlfriend said the Cleveland Browns quarterback hit her so hard during a January fight that her eardrum ruptured. Dallas authorities have reopened the criminal investigation into his alleged behavior that night. ( Des Bieler

-- Breanne Deppisch contributed to this report.

OBAMA'S FINAL BUDGET LANDS TODAY:

It will get little attention because of New Hampshire, and it is already dead-on-arrival in Congress. If it weren't clear enough, Republican budget leaders snubbed OMB Director Shaun Donovan and did not invite him to deliver the administration's usual testimony to Congress this week.

-- Meanwhile, Republicans have their own budget headaches to worry about. From Kelsey Snell: Speaker Paul Ryan is "facing another conservative uprising over spending that is threatening to derail the two-year budget compromise crafted last year with Obama and congressional Democrats ... in a reprise of past budget battles, the same group of conservative rabble-rousers that have held GOP leaders hostage to their demands in past Congresses is threatening to rebel over a $30 million spending increase approved as part of then-Speaker John Boehner’s last act."

-- Four notable elements in Obama's proposal:

-- Bigger picture, Politico calls it a "go-for-broke budget." “He may be a lame duck, but his aggressively liberal final budget request will show he’s far from a mute one," writes Timothy Noah. "Lame-duck presidential budget requests nearly always receive catcalls from Congress, especially when it’s controlled by the opposite party … Where Obama’s lame-duck policy agenda differs, suggests Michael Beschloss, is in the scope of its ambition.”

WAPO HIGHLIGHTS:

-- “Zika prompts urgent debate about abortion in Latin America,” by Dom Phillips, Nick Miroff and Julia Symmes Cobb: “In the face of the Zika outbreak across Latin America … women who wish to terminate their pregnancies have few legal options, and encounter some of the most restrictive abortion laws in the world. In El Salvador, where abortions are banned under all circumstances, including rape and risks to the mother’s life, women convicted of having the procedure can be sentenced to decades in prison … But as U.N. health officials have projected as many as 4 million infections in the Americas this year, activists are pressing lawmakers to act as swiftly as possible to ease rigid restrictions. … Several governments in Latin American nations have responded to the crisis by urging women to postpone pregnancy. But the availability of contraceptives is limited, especially in rural Latin America, and church authorities in the heavily Roman Catholic region oppose their use.”

-- “The movie that foretold the rise of Trump,” by Marc Fisher: “Trump’s rule-smashing romp may have no precedent in the annals of presidential campaigns, but the template for his remarkable rise — and the potential for a hard fall — was laid out in a little-known film masterwork half a century ago. ‘A Face in the Crowd,’ a 1957 movie written by Budd Schulberg, and stars Andy Griffith as Larry ‘Lonesome’ Rhodes, a folksy, charming traveler who soars to the pinnacle of American celebrity and political power … is a revealing and cautionary portrait of what happens when a non-politician captures the American imagination, expresses the frustrations and aspirations of the people.”

-- “An unprecedented experiment in mass forgiveness,” by Rob Kuznia: “In California, voters and lawmakers are now adopting laws that have released tens of thousands of inmates and are preventing even more from going to prison in the first place. Gov. Jerry Brown (D) has approved parole for roughly 2,300 lifers convicted of murder … And more reforms could be in store. Last month, Brown unveiled a ballot measure that, if approved by voters in November, would grant early release to nonviolent felons who complete rehab programs and demonstrate good behavior. But with crime in some of California’s largest cities ticking up after years of sustained decline, many law enforcement leaders and victims’ advocates say the state has gone too far.”

SOCIAL MEDIA SPEED READ:

A very pregnant Ivanka Trump arrived in New Hampshire:

And enjoyed a dinner with the whole family:

Model and actress Emily Ratajkowski is feeling the Bern, but how is she not cold?

The Sanders campaign posted images like this one on Twitter:

There were two press busses following Bernie around the state yesterday. A lot of people were amused but not surprised by this:

There were lots of young faces in Bernie's crowds:

Spotted: a "Cruz missile" in Barrington.

The weather was bad across New England yesterday:

GOOD READS FROM ELSEWHERE:

-- NBC News, “FBI formally confirms its investigation of Hillary Clinton’s email server,” by Pete Williams: “In a letter disclosed Monday in a federal court filing, the FBI confirms one of the world’s worst-kept secrets: It is looking into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server. Why say this at all, since it was widely known to be true? Because in August in response to a judge’s direction, the State Department asked the FBI for information about what it was up to. Sorry, the FBI said at the time, we can neither confirm nor deny the existence of any investigation. Now, in a letter dated February 2 and filed in court Monday, the FBI’s general counsel, James Baker, notes that in public statements and congressional testimony, the FBI ‘has acknowledged generally that it is working on matters related to former Secretary Clinton’s use of a private email server.’ Baker says the FBI has not, however, ‘publicly acknowledged the specific focus, scope or potential targets of any such proceedings.’ He ends the one-paragraph letter by saying that the FBI cannot say more ‘without adversely affecting on-going law enforcement efforts.’”

-- Politico, "What Clinton said in her paid speeches," by Ben White: "When Hillary Clinton spoke to Goldman Sachs executives and technology titans at a summit in Arizona in October of 2013, she spoke glowingly of the work the bank was doing raising capital and helping create jobs, according to people who saw her remarks ... 'It’s so far from what she sounds like as a candidate now. It was like a rah-rah speech. She sounded more like a Goldman Sachs managing director'" said one person who watched the speech. "At another speech to Goldman and its big asset management clients in New York in 2013, Clinton spoke about how it wasn’t just the banks that caused the financial crisis and said that it was worth looking at the landmark 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform law to see what was working and what wasn’t. 'It was mostly basic stuff, small talk, chit chat,' one person who attended that speech said. 'But in this environment, it could be made to look really bad.'"

-- Boston Globe, “A N.H. city that’s notably good at picking winners,” by James Pindell: “Since 2000, Laconia has proven to be a near-perfect reflection of the statewide vote in the presidential primaries for both parties … picking not only the winners in recent New Hampshire primaries, but its results mimic second and third place finishers for both parties statewide … Even more telling: Laconia’s results came within five percentage points of the statewide results in every competitive primary since 2000. ‘You have a mix of everywhere here,’ said Patrick Hynes, a Republican consultant who lives in Laconia. … So which candidates does Laconia prefer in this election? Like much of the rest of New Hampshire, voters were still making up their minds."

HOT ON THE LEFT Gay voter to Rubio: 'Why do you want to put me back in the closet?' From Sean Sullivan: A gay man confronted Rubio at a diner in Manchester over his opposition to same-sex marriage, pointedly asking, "Why do you want to put me back in the closet?'" "I don’t," Rubio replied. "You can live any way you want." Rubio walked away, and the man yelled after him that he is a "typical politician." HOT ON THE RIGHT "Only a barbaric nation drafts its mothers and daughters into combat." From National Review: "The most disappointing moment of Saturday night’s debate came when Bush, Christie and Rubio each embraced the idea that women should register with the selective service, making it possible for America to draft women into ground combat ... Men should protect women. They should not shelter behind mothers and daughters ... When we order women into ground combat, we are ordering them into situations where men larger and stronger than they will show no mercy."

DAYBOOK:

On the campaign trail: Here's the rundown for primary day in New Hampshire.

Clinton: Manchester

Sanders: Concord

Trump: Manchester

Kasich: Manchester, Nashua, Concord

Bush: Manchester

Christie: Manchester, Bedford, Derry, Salem, Londonderry, Nashua

Carson: Nashua

Cruz: Hollis

Fiorina: Manchester

Gilmore: Manchester

Rubio: Manchester

At the White House: It's Budget Day -- senior administration officials discuss the White House's 2017 budget around 1 p.m. President Obama meets with Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, Chuck Schumer and Steve Israel at 3:35 p.m.

On Capitol Hill: The Senate meets at 11 a.m., with a confirmation vote slated for 2:15 pm. The House meets at 2 p.m. for legislative business, with 12 suspension votes slated for 6:30 p.m.

QUOTE OF THE DAY: Jeb said he’d “eliminate” the Citizens United ruling if he could. “This is a ridiculous system we have now where you have campaigns that struggle to raise money directly and they can't be held accountable for the spending of the super PAC that's their affiliate,” he complained to CNN. Talk about a pot calling the kettle black…

NEWS YOU CAN USE IF YOU LIVE IN D.C.:

-- The Federal Transit Administration warned that Metro could lose millions in transportation funding if it doesn’t get its act together on safety within a year. (Luz Lazo and Ashley Halsey III)

-- A Virginia rock climber pleaded guilty to killing the climber who was his mentor for 20 years, by hitting the man on the head with a claw hammer. David DiPaolo, 33, will likely be sentenced to 10 to 15 years in prison, in accordance with the plea agreement, Julie Zauzmer reports.

VIDEOS OF THE DAY:

Here's the 1983 music video for the Styx song "Mr. Roboto," which a lot of folks have now had stuck in their heads since Rubio came across as a robot on Saturday:

Rubio's campaign released a more positive video of his kids:

Watch Bill help a voter take a selfie as Hillary speaks: