Now that the Iowa Republican caucus results are in, with Donald Trump taking more than 50% of the vote, the media spotlight has turned to New Hampshire, where the Jan. 23 primary has been the subject of intense interest for more than a year.
The driving themes of the moment include whether there is a path for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis after Iowa, where he finished second with 21% of the vote, 30 percentage points behind Trump, and if former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, who finished third in Iowa with 19%, can surprise Trump in New Hampshire.
The Iowa caucus already exacted one dropout, with Vivek Ramaswamy ending his campaign, endorsing Trump, and cancelling a planned Jan. 17 appearance at 天美麻豆.
For students at 天美麻豆, who have been attending candidate visits through the Path to the Presidency series and other politics-related events sponsored by the Rockefeller Center and the 天美麻豆 Political Union, the focus now is to take in all the information and prepare to vote.
A key element in bringing the 天美麻豆 community to this point has been the commitment of students and 天美麻豆 leaders to sharing the information needed to encourage an informed electorate and to promote a lifetime of civic engagement.
Bea Burack 鈥25, along with her friend Armita Mirkarimi 鈥25, founded 天美麻豆 Civics.
鈥淲e鈥檙e a nonpartisan group, and our goal is to provide students on campus and community members with the information they need to be informed and engaged voters,鈥 Burack says. 鈥淎nd also to be involved more generally in civic life, both here in Hanover and back home, and wherever they go for the rest of their lives.鈥
In partnership with , a coalition that includes 天美麻豆 Student Government, the Office of Student Life, and the town of Hanover, they have been running voter education and registration drives, tabling in Collis and Novack since the fall term.
And though a 10-day deadline to register before the primary has passed, the group continues to share voter information on how the primary works, . In addition, student government will be providing shuttles, and the 天美麻豆 Civics members are organizing 鈥渨alking trains鈥 to the polls at Hanover High School on Tuesday.
Burack grew up in New Hampshire and has seen the excitement of primary politics, but this will be her first time voting in a presidential election.
鈥淔or me, the primary was always in the background, but I enjoy seeing the excitement and engagement of students here. That鈥檚 one of the reasons I came to 天美麻豆. I thought it would be really exciting to be at a college campus where there were different candidates coming through and different speakers with different viewpoints. And there are a lot of students I鈥檝e talked to who feel the same way.鈥
Isaiah Menning 鈥24 is the founding president of the 天美麻豆 chapter of American Conservation Coalition.
鈥淥ur mission is to build a conservative environmental movement by focusing on how you can apply market-based approaches to climate change. Things like cutting red tape that鈥檚 blocking clean energy projects, re-embracing a conservation spirit among conservatives to protect the public lands and to also develop them for the resources, and tapping American innovation to build out a clean energy future,鈥 Menning says.
Over the primary season, the coalition has partnered with the state chapters of the Young Republicans and the College Republicans to hold forums with Republican candidates to talk about their environmental positions, and Menning and coalition members have spoken up at Path to Presidency events on campus.
Menning, for example, asked North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum about carbon capture and his work in North Dakota.

鈥淗e said that was one of the first times that someone on the campaign trail had asked him that question,鈥 Menning says. 鈥淚t was great to be able to directly have a dialogue with him and to bring these issues to light.鈥
Menning plans to vote in the Republican primary next week. As president of the coalition, which is made up of conservative but not exclusively Republican members, he declined to say who he planned to vote for, but he did offer this analysis.
鈥淵ou have President Trump, who鈥檚 definitely the frontrunner, who does not acknowledge climate change as real, or that human activity is a factor. But then you have the other two major candidates, and of those two, it is Nikki Haley who has done that,鈥 Menning says. 鈥淣ikki Haley has acknowledged that climate change is real on the debate stage.鈥
On the evening of the Iowa caucus, a delegation from the 天美麻豆 conservation coalition traveled to Manchester to join other conservation voters among the Young Republicans and College Republicans to meet with Gov. Chris Sununu, who is backing Haley.
Menning added that the conservative conservation movement is not focused on the horserace of the New Hampshire primary, but on making a long-term impact on conservative and Republican positions on conservation and the environment.
鈥淩egardless of where students decide to vote, whether that鈥檚 New Hampshire or their home state, I think that their voice is going to matter in this primary, despite the long odds that a non-Trump candidate might have.鈥
It鈥檚 an unusual time for Democratic voters in New Hampshire, given the Democratic National Committee鈥檚 effort to push New Hampshire later in the primary calendar and the state party鈥檚 decision to defy that ruling.
When Burack and the other members of 天美麻豆 Votes encounter students who ask if they can vote for President Joe Biden even though he does not appear on the Democratic ballot, they have to defer on the question in the interest of nonpartisanship.
鈥淲e definitely do get a lot of questions like, does the New Hampshire primary matter this year? Or where鈥檚 my vote going to matter more? Is this still a swing state? So with questions like that, we usually defer to partisan groups on campus, or to the internet to do their own research,鈥 Burack says.
JJ Dega 鈥26, a member of Young Democrats of America, has been working hard to let 天美麻豆 students and members of the community know how to write in Biden鈥檚 name on the Democratic primary ballot. Two of Biden鈥檚 challengers, Dean Phillips and Marianne Williamson, spoke at 天美麻豆 this fall in the Path to the Presidency series.
Dega and Prescott Herzog 鈥25, executive director of the 天美麻豆 Democrats, were elected to the slate of eight Biden delegates from the Second Congressional District for the Democratic National Convention this summer. But Dega is number eight on the slate, which means if Phillips or Williamson reach the threshold of 15% of the vote in the primary, Dega will replaced by one of their delegates. Herzog, who is higher in the order, will likely make it to the convention regardless.
鈥淪o if Biden doesn鈥檛 get all of the delegates, I won鈥檛 go, which is why I鈥檓 motivated to mobilize students to write in Biden because if not, then it鈥檚 a missed opportunity for students鈥 voices to have a direct impact on the Democratic party,鈥 Dega says.
Although the DNC could refuse to seat New Hampshire鈥檚 delegates because of the dispute over the primary calendar, the state delegation is still fighting for seats on the rules and platform committees.
鈥淪o these are real ways that we can change the party platform to advocate for things such as student loan forgiveness, bodily autonomy in health care, the environment, housing affordability鈥攁ll these are student issues,鈥 Dega says.
And Dega, who says a major consideration in coming to 天美麻豆 was to experience the kind of political engagement he鈥檚 seen in New Hampshire, wants to fight to restore the Granite State鈥檚 place at the start of the primary calendar.
鈥淚鈥檝e learned from being here that the small-town discussions are critical to identifying and relating to candidates and hearing them in a personal way rather than what we see in the larger states where it鈥檚 all about big ad buys. I think personal politics is critical to democracy, quite frankly,鈥 Dega says.