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Filing period opens for New Hampshire’s presidential primary

By Holly Ramer
Associated Press
CONCORD — If you think the Democratic presidential race is crowded now, wait until you see the New Hampshire primary ballot.

The collection of political gadflies and citizen-candidates who emerge every presidential election to join nationally recognized figures on the ballot began to take shape Wednesday with the start of the filing period for the state’s first-in-the-nation primary.

The date for the primary has not been set, but it’s expected to be held Feb. 11, eight days after the leadoff Iowa caucuses. Potential candidates have until Nov. 15 to add their names to the Democratic or Republican ballot, and dozens are expected to do in part because it’s relatively cheap and easy. Candidates need only meet the basic requirements to be president, fill out a one-page form and pay a $1,000 filing fee.

That means candidates running national campaigns share space on the ballot with unknowns such as Mark Stewart Greenstein, of West Hartford, Connecticut, who was the first to sign up for the 2016 primary. He was first this time, too, handing over a stack of $50 bills just after the secretary of state’s office opened at 8 a.m. He received 29 votes last time, according to results from that office.

Four years ago, he said his goal was to stop Hillary Clinton, who ended up winning the Democratic nomination. This time, he’s trying to generate momentum for a new party called EPIC, which stands for Every Politically Independent Citizen.

“This candidacy is an attempt to maybe plumb how voters really feel. When you’re only presented with a choice of a far-left, high-polling threesome — maybe four, with Mayor Pete — or a Republican that they paint as odious no matter who it is, it’s a tough choice for moderate Democrats. It’s a tough choice for independents,” he said. “We’d like to have other people running to make the choices easier.”

By “threesome,” Greenstein meant former Vice President Joe Biden, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren. The fourth, Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Indiana, arrived at the Statehouse a few hours after Greenstein, along with hundreds of supporters.

At a rally after filing his paperwork, Buttigieg said New Hampshire is going to “catapult” him to the nomination and presidency.

“What a treat to be lifted up by the voices of hundreds of people, or as you call it here in Concord, a quorum,” he said, referring to New Hampshire’s 424-member Legislature. “I am so honored to be part of this great tradition in New Hampshire. We’ve been at it for a good year or so, but this feels different. We are officially a candidate in the New Hampshire primary for president of the United States.”

Asked by a reporter earlier whether he will win the primary, Buttigieg said “We’re counting on it,” but he acknowledged the challenge.

“There’s no question I’ve got competitors with a near homefield advantage, but I also find that this is a very competitive state,” he said. “So many voters have said even if they do have a preferred candidate, they’re still keeping their options open. And to us, there’s a really clear space for us. What I’m offering is a way forward that is bold enough to get the job done and can unify Americans, and I think that’s going to continue to build our support here.”

This is the second time that candidates are signing up at the desk of the man who started New Hampshire’s tradition of holding the earliest presidential primary.

In 1913, Rep. Stephen Bullock traveled by horse and buggy from his Richmond farm to Concord to propose a bill creating the primary. The Legislature passed it that spring, and after some tweaking of the law two years later, the first presidential primary was a held in March 1916. New Hampshire wasn’t first that year, but it has been first every year since.

For the 2016 election, 58 candidates got on New Hampshire’s ballot. The all-time high was 1992, when 61 signed up.

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