2020 United States presidential election in New Hampshire
2020 United States presidential election in New Hampshire Turnout 73.5%[ 1]
County results
Municipality results
Precinct results
Biden
40–50%
50–60%
60–70%
70–80%
80–90%
90–100%
Trump
40–50%
50–60%
60–70%
70–80%
Tie/No data
40–50%
The 2020 United States presidential election in New Hampshire was held on Tuesday, November 3, 2020, as part of the 2020 United States presidential election in which all 50 states and the District of Columbia participated.[ 2] New Hampshire voters chose electors to represent them in the Electoral College via a popular vote, pitting the Republican Party 's nominees, incumbent President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence , against the Democratic Party 's nominees, former Vice President Joe Biden and his running mate, Senator Kamala Harris . New Hampshire has four electoral votes in the Electoral College.[ 3]
New Hampshire is by far the most fiscally conservative state in New England , and its population has a strong disdain for taxes , historically giving Republicans an edge in its state office elections. However, like the rest of the region, it is very liberal on social issues like abortion and gay rights , and thus the Democratic Party has dominated in its federal elections in recent years. Although the state came extremely close to voting for Trump in 2016, polls throughout the 2020 campaign showed a clear Biden lead, and prior to election day, all 14 news organizations considered New Hampshire a state that Biden was favored to win.
Per exit polls by the Associated Press , Biden prevailed in the state by garnering the votes of 58% of white women , and 69% of unmarried women.[ 4] Biden carried voters prioritizing healthcare policy with 73% campaigning on protecting coverage for pre-existing conditions ,[ 4] a resonant issue in a state plagued by the opioid crisis .
Corresponding Democratic victories in the Senate election and both House elections reaffirmed the Democrats' strength in what used to be a heavily contested battleground. Contrary to earlier projections however, New Hampshire Republicans took control of both the executive and legislative branches of the New Hampshire government. Republicans flipped the previously Democrat-held New Hampshire state Senate and House of Representatives. Republicans also gained control of the state's Executive Council, and Republican Gov. Chris Sununu was reelected for a third term with 65% of the vote.[ 5] Biden's best margin was in the socially liberal Connecticut River Valley , which had overwhelmingly favored Bernie Sanders in the Democratic primary , while Trump's strength came in the rural Great North Woods Region . Biden was the first Democrat to ever win the White House without Coös County .
Primary elections
The New Hampshire primary , traditionally the first, was held on February 11, 2020, roughly a week after the Iowa caucuses .[ 6]
Republican primary
The New Hampshire Republican primary took place on February 11, 2020. Incumbent president Donald Trump won the Republican primary with 85.6 percent of the vote, clinching all of the state's 22 pledged delegates to the 2020 Republican National Convention .[ 7]
Typically, the top candidates of the other major party receive a large number of write-in votes.
County won by these popular vote results:
Trump—85–90%
Trump—80–85%
Congressional district won by these popular vote results:
Trump—80–85%
Democratic primary
Bernie Sanders won the Democratic primary with 25.6 percent of the vote, ahead of second-place Pete Buttigieg , who received 24.3 percent of the vote. Both Sanders and Buttigieg received nine delegates to the 2020 Democratic National Convention . Amy Klobuchar finished in third place with 19.7 percent of the vote and earned six delegates. Elizabeth Warren and Joe Biden finished in fourth and fifth place, respectively, and each received zero delegates.[ 10]
Popular vote share by county
Sanders—<30%
Sanders—30–40%
Buttigieg—<30%
Popular vote share by congressional district
Sanders—25–30%
2020 New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary[ 11] [ 12]
Candidate
Votes
%
Delegates[ 13] [ 14]
Bernie Sanders
76,384
25.60
9
Pete Buttigieg
72,454
24.28
9
Amy Klobuchar
58,714
19.68
6
Elizabeth Warren
27,429
9.19
Joe Biden
24,944
8.36
Tom Steyer
10,732
3.60
Tulsi Gabbard
9,755
3.27
Andrew Yang
8,312
2.79
Michael Bloomberg (write-in) [ 12] [ 15]
4,675
1.57
Deval Patrick
1,271
0.43
Michael Bennet
952
0.32
Cory Booker (withdrawn)
157
0.05
Joe Sestak (withdrawn)
152
0.05
Kamala Harris (withdrawn)
129
0.04
Marianne Williamson (withdrawn)
99
0.03
Julian Castro (withdrawn)
83
0.03
John Delaney (withdrawn)
83
0.03
Steve Bullock (withdrawn)
64
0.02
Henry Hewes
43
0.01
Ben Gleib (withdrawn)
31
0.01
Other candidates / Write-in
[ a] 665
0.22
Donald Trump (write-in Republican )[ 12]
1,217
0.41
Bill Weld (write-in Republican )[ 12]
17
0.01
Mitt Romney (write-in Republican)[ 12]
10
0.00
Other write-in Republicans
5
0.00
Total
298,377
100%
24
Libertarian primary
Mail-in ballots were due by January 11, at the state convention. The primary was tabulated using Bucklin voting . Percentages shown are percentage of ballots cast.[ 16] [ 17]
2020 New Hampshire Libertarian presidential primary[ 18] [ 19]
Candidate
1st
2nd
3rd
Total
Percentage
Vermin Supreme
10
3
13
26
17.3%
Kim Ruff
6
9
7
22
14.7%
Jo Jorgensen
5
8
4
17
11.3%
None of the Above (NOTA)
4
6
3
13
8.7%
Dan "Taxation Is Theft" Behrman
0
6
7
13
8.7%
Jacob Hornberger (write-in)
9
0
0
9
6.0%
Sam Robb
1
2
5
8
5.3%
Mark Whitney (write-in)
4
0
2
6
4.0%
Arvin Vohra
1
0
5
6
4.0%
Ken Armstrong
0
2
3
5
3.3%
Lincoln Chafee (write-in)
1
2
1
4
2.7%
Justin Amash (write-in)
1
1
1
3
2.0%
Keenan Wallace Dunham
0
0
2
2
1.3%
Max Abramson
1
0
0
1
nil
Straw Poll (write-in)
1
0
0
1
nil
Joe Bishop-Henchman (write-in)
0
0
1
1
nil
Thomas Knapp (write-in)
0
0
1
1
nil
Adam Kokesh (write-in)
0
0
1
1
nil
Nicholas Sarwark (write-in)
0
0
1
1
nil
Exhausted Ballots/Undervotes
0
5
5
10
Total
44
44
62
150
2020 New Hampshire Libertarian vice presidential primary[ 18] [ 19]
Candidate
1st
2nd
Total
Percentage
John Phillips
15
6
21
63.6%
None of the Above
9
6
15
45.5%
Spike Cohen (write-in)
2
0
2
6.1%
Larry Sharpe (write-in)
2
0
2
6.1%
Ron Paul (write-in)
1
1
2
6.1%
Darryl W Perry (write-in)
1
0
1
3.0%
Straw Poll (write-in)
1
0
1
3.0%
Nicolas Sarwark (write-in)
1
0
1
3.0%
Mark Whitney (write-in)
1
0
1
3.0%
Exhausted Ballots/Undervotes
11
20
31
Total
44
33
77
General election
Final predictions
Polling
Graphical summary
Aggregate polls
Polls
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ c]
Marginof error
Donald Trump Republican
Joe Biden Democratic
Jo Jorgensen Libertarian
Other
Undecided
SurveyMonkey /Axios [ 36]
Oct 20 – Nov 2, 2020
1,013 (LV)
± 4.5%
45%[ d]
54%
-
–
–
American Research Group [ 37]
Oct 26–28, 2020
600 (LV)
± 4%
39%
58%
1%
–
2%
University of New Hampshire [ 38]
Oct 24–28, 2020
864 (LV)
± 3.3%
45%
53%
1%
1%
1%
SurveyMonkey /Axios [ 36]
Oct 1–28, 2020
1,791 (LV)
–
44%
55%
-
–
–
Saint Anselm College [ 39]
Oct 23–26, 2020
1,018 (LV)
± 3.1%
44%
52%
2%
–
2%
YouGov /UMass Amherst [ 40]
Oct 16–26, 2020
757 (LV)
± 4.5%
43%
53%
2%
1%[ e]
2%
University of New Hampshire [ 41]
Oct 9–12, 2020
899 (LV)
± 3.3%
43%
55%
0%
0%[ f]
2%
Suffolk University /Boston Globe [ 42]
Oct 8–12, 2020
500 (LV)
± 4.4%
41%
51%
2%
3%[ g]
5%
Saint Anselm College [ 43]
Oct 1–4, 2020
1,147 (LV)
± 2.9%
41%
53%
-
4%[ h]
2%
Emerson College [ 44]
Sep 30 – Oct 1, 2020
700 (LV)
± 3.6%
45%[ i]
53%
-
2%[ j]
–
SurveyMonkey /Axios [ 36]
Sep 1–30, 2020
637 (LV)
–
43%
55%
-
–
2%
American Research Group [ 45]
Sep 25–28, 2020
600 (LV)
± 4%
44%
53%
1%
–
2%
University of New Hampshire [ 46]
Sep 24–28, 2020
972 (LV)
± 3.1%
44%
53%
1%
0%[ f]
3%
Pulse Opinion Research /Center for American Greatness [ 47] [ A]
Sep 23–25, 2020
850 (LV)
± 4%
42%[ i]
56%
-
1%[ k]
1%
YouGov /UMass Lowell [ 48]
Sep 17–25, 2020
657 (LV)
± 4.6%
44%[ l]
52%
1%
2%[ m]
1%
44%[ n]
53%
-
0%[ f]
1%
Siena College /NYT Upshot [ 49]
Sep 8–11, 2020
445 (LV)
± 5.5%
42%
45%
4%
2%[ o]
7%[ p]
SurveyMonkey /Axios [ 36]
Aug 1–31, 2020
444 (LV)
–
39%
60%
-
–
1%
Saint Anselm College [ 50]
Aug 15–17, 2020
1,042 (RV)
± 3.0%
43%
51%
-
4%[ h]
2%
SurveyMonkey /Axios [ 36]
Jul 1–31, 2020
574 (LV)
–
39%
60%
-
–
2%
University of New Hampshire [ 51]
Jul 16–28, 2020
1,893 (LV)
± 2.3%
40%
53%
-
4%[ q]
3%
SurveyMonkey /Axios [ 36]
Jun 8–30, 2020
191 (LV)
–
39%
61%
-
–
1%
University of New Hampshire [ 51]
Jun 18–22, 2020
936 (LV)
–
39%
52%
-
6%[ r]
3%
Saint Anselm College [ 52]
Jun 13–16, 2020
1,072 (RV)
± 3%
42%
49%
-
5%
3%
University of New Hampshire [ 51]
May 14–18, 2020
790 (LV)
–
46%
44%
-
5%[ s]
5%
Saint Anselm College [ 53]
Apr 23–27, 2020
820 (RV)
± 3.4%
42%
50%
-
2%
7%
University of New Hampshire [ 54]
Feb 19–25, 2020
569 (LV)
± 4.1%
46%
44%
-
8%[ t]
2%
AtlasIntel [ 55]
Feb 8–10, 2020
1,100 (RV)
± 3%
46%
44%
-
11%
–
McLaughlin & Associates /NH Journal [ 56] [2]
Feb 4–5, 2020
400 (LV)
± 4.9%
49% [ u]
45%
-
–[ v]
–[ v]
Marist College /NBC News [ 57]
Jan 20–23, 2020
2,223 (RV)
± 2.6%
43%
51%
-
2%
5%
Emerson College [ 58]
Nov 23–26, 2019
637 (RV)
± 3.8%
48%
52%
-
–
–
547 (RV)
± 4.1%
42%
46%
-
–
13%
Saint Anselm College [ 59]
Nov 13–18, 2019
512 (RV)
± 4.3%
43%
51%
-
–
6%
Emerson College [ 60]
Sep 6–9, 2019
1,041 (RV)
± 3.0%
45%
55%
-
–
–
Gravis Marketing [ 61]
Aug 2–6, 2019
505 (RV)
± 4.4%
40%
53%
-
–
7%
Emerson College [ 62]
Feb 21–22, 2019
910 (RV)
± 3.2%
45%
55%
-
–
–
American Research Group [ 63]
Mar 21–27, 2018
1,365 (RV)
± 3.0%
39%
53%
-
–
8%
Former candidates
Donald Trump vs. Bernie Sanders
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ c]
Marginof error
Donald Trump (R)
Bernie Sanders (D)
Other
Undecided
University of New Hampshire [ 54]
Feb 19–25, 2020
571 (LV)
± 4.1%
46%
46%
6%
1%
AtlasIntel [ 55]
Feb 8–10, 2020
1,100 (RV)
± 3%
47%
44%
9%
–
McLaughlin & Associates /NH Journal [ 56] [3]
Feb 4–5, 2020
400 (LV)
± 4.9%
48% [ u]
45%
–[ v]
–[ v]
Marist College /NBC News [ 57]
Jan 20–23, 2020
2,223 (RV)
± 2.6%
43%
51%
2%
4%
Emerson College [ 58]
Nov 23–26, 2019
637 (RV)
± 3.8%
48%
52%
–
–
547 (RV)
± 4.1%
42%
49%
–
9%
Saint Anselm College [ 59]
Nov 13–18, 2019
512 (RV)
± 4.3%
46%
49%
–
6%
Emerson College [ 60]
Sep 6–9, 2019
1,041 (RV)
± 3.0%
48%
53%
–
–
Gravis Marketing [ 61]
Aug 2–6, 2019
505 (RV)
± 4.4%
41%
51%
–
8%
Emerson College [ 62]
Feb 21–22, 2019
910 (RV)
± 3.2%
45%
55%
–
–
Praecones Analytica [ 64]
Jan 16–21, 2019
593 (RV)
± 5.3%
41%
54%
–
5%
American Research Group [ 63]
Mar 21–27, 2018
1,365 (RV)
± 3.0%
49%
45%
–
5%
Donald Trump vs. Elizabeth Warren
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ c]
Marginof error
Donald Trump (R)
Elizabeth Warren (D)
Other
Undecided
AtlasIntel [ 55]
Feb 8–10, 2020
1,100 (RV)
± 3%
46.8%
40.5%
–
12.7%
Marist College /NBC News [ 57]
Jan 20–23, 2020
2,223 (RV)
± 2.6%
44%
48%
2%
5%
Inside Sources [ 65]
Jan 16–21, 2020
593 (RV)
–
41%
54%
–
5%
Emerson College [ 58]
Nov 23–26, 2019
637 (RV)
± 3.8%
51%
49%
–
–
Emerson College [ 58]
Nov 23–26, 2019
547 (RV)
± 4.1%
43%
47%
–
10%
Saint Anselm College [ 59]
Nov 13–18, 2019
512 (RV)
± 4.3%
46%
47%
–
7%
Emerson College [ 60]
Sep 6–9, 2019
1,041 (RV)
± 3.0%
51%
49%
–
–
Gravis Marketing [ 61]
Aug 2–6, 2019
505 (RV)
± 4.4%
44%
49%
–
7%
Emerson College [ 62]
Feb 21–22, 2019
910 (RV)
± 3.2%
48%
52%
–
–
Praecones Analytica [ 64]
Jan 16–21, 2019
593 (RV)
± 5.3%
41%
54%
–
5%
American Research Group [ 63]
Mar 21–27, 2018
1,365 (RV)
± 3.0%
50%
42%
–
9%
Donald Trump vs. Michael Bloomberg
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ c]
Marginof error
Donald Trump (R)
Michael Bloomberg (D)
Other
Undecided
University of New Hampshire [ 54]
Feb 19–25, 2020
561 (LV)
± 4.1%
47%
33%
16%
5%
Donald Trump vs. Pete Buttigieg
Donald Trump vs. Andrew Yang
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ c]
Marginof error
Donald Trump (R)
Andrew Yang (D)
Undecided
Emerson College [ 58]
November 23–26, 2019
637 (RV)
± 3.8%
51%
49%
–
Emerson College [ 58]
November 23–26, 2019
547 (RV)
± 4.1%
42%
46%
12%
Emerson College [ 60]
September 6–9, 2019
1,041 (RV)
± 3.0%
46%
54%
–
Donald Trump vs. Cory Booker
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ c]
Marginof error
Donald Trump (R)
Cory Booker (D)
Undecided
Emerson College [ 62]
Feb 21–22, 2019
910
± 3.2%
49%
51%
–
Donald Trump vs. Kamala Harris
Donald Trump vs. Beto O'Rourke
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ c]
Marginof error
Donald Trump (R)
Beto O'Rourke (D)
Undecided
Praecones Analytica [ 64]
Jan 16–21, 2019
593 (RV)
± 5.3%
41%
48%
12%
Hypothetical polling
with Donald Trump, Bernie Sanders, and Howard Schultz
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ c]
Marginof error
Donald Trump (R)
Bernie Sanders (D)
Howard Schultz (I)
Undecided
Emerson College [ 62]
Feb 21–22, 2019
910 (RV)
± 3.2%
42%
48%
10%
–
with Donald Trump, Elizabeth Warren, and Howard Schultz
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ c]
Marginof error
Donald Trump (R)
Elizabeth Warren (D)
Howard Schultz (I)
Undecided
Emerson College [ 62]
Feb 21–22, 2019
910 (RV)
± 3.2%
45%
44%
12%
–
with John Kasich and Joe Biden
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ c]
Marginof error
John Kasich (R)
Joe Biden (D)
Undecided
American Research Group [ 63]
Mar 21–27, 2018
1,365 (RV)
± 3.0%
45%
46%
8%
with John Kasich and Elizabeth Warren
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ c]
Marginof error
John Kasich (R)
Elizabeth Warren (D)
Undecided
American Research Group [ 63]
Mar 21–27, 2018
1,365 (RV)
± 3.0%
52%
37%
11%
with Donald Trump and generic Democrat
with Donald Trump, generic Democrat, and generic third party
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ c]
Marginof error
Donald Trump (R)
Generic Democrat
Generic third party
Undecided
Suffolk University [ 69]
Apr 25–28, 2019
800 (LV)
± 3.5%
40%
43%
6%
11%
with Donald Trump and Generic Opponent
Results
By county
County
Joe Biden Democratic
Donald Trump Republican
Various candidates Other parties
Margin
Total votes cast
#
%
#
%
#
%
#
%
Belknap
16,894
43.90%
20,899
54.31%
686
1.79%
-4,005
-10.41%
38,479
Carroll
16,649
50.00%
16,150
48.50%
498
1.50%
499
1.50%
33,297
Cheshire
25,522
57.52%
17,898
40.34%
950
2.14%
7,624
17.18%
44,370
Coos
7,640
46.18%
8,617
52.09%
287
1.73%
-977
-5.91%
16,544
Grafton
33,180
61.29%
19,905
36.77%
1,047
1.94%
13,275
24.52%
54,132
Hillsborough
122,344
52.81%
104,625
45.16%
4,690
2.03%
17,719
7.65%
231,659
Merrimack
48,533
53.85%
39,711
44.06%
1,889
2.09%
8,822
9.79%
90,133
Rockingham
100,064
50.20%
95,858
48.09%
3,420
1.71%
4,206
2.11%
199,342
Strafford
41,721
56.53%
30,489
41.31%
1,595
2.16%
11,232
15.22%
73,805
Sullivan
12,390
50.69%
11,508
47.08%
546
2.23%
882
3.61%
24,444
Totals
424,937
52.71%
365,660
45.36%
15,608
1.93%
59,277
7.35%
806,205
Swing by county
Democratic — +7.5–10%
Democratic — +5–7.5%
Democratic — +2.5–5%
Democratic — +0–2.5%
Republican — +0–2.5%
Republican — +2.5–5%
Trend relative to the state by county
Democratic — +7.5–10%
Democratic — +5–7.5%
Democratic — +2.5–5%
Democratic — +0–2.5%
Republican — +0–2.5%
Republican — +2.5–5%
County flips
Democratic
Hold
Gain from Republican
Republican
Hold
Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic
By congressional district
Analysis
Edison exit polls
2020 presidential election in New Hampshire by demographic subgroup (Edison exit polling)[ 74] [ 75]
Demographic subgroup
Biden
Trump
% of
total vote
Total vote
52.71
45.36
100
Ideology
Liberals
93
7
24
Moderates
64
33
44
Conservatives
9
91
32
Party
Democrats
94
6
23
Republicans
10
90
31
Independents
62
35
46
Gender
Men
47
52
47
Women
58
40
53
Race/ethnicity
White
52
46
92
Non-white
56
41
8
Age
18–24 years old
50
48
9
25–29 years old
58
35
8
30–39 years old
54
42
14
40–49 years old
50
49
15
50–64 years old
51
49
31
65 and older
56
43
23
Sexual orientation
LGBT
–
–
7
Not LGBT
50
48
93
Education
High school or less
43
53
20
Some college education
45
54
26
Associate degree
44
54
13
Bachelor's degree
63
36
25
Postgraduate degree
68
30
17
Income
Under $30,000
71
28
12
$30,000–49,999
45
51
18
$50,000–99,999
54
44
30
Over $100,000
53
46
40
Issue regarded as most important
Racial inequality
87
10
14
Coronavirus
95
5
21
Economy
12
87
33
Crime and safety
15
83
10
Health care
89
8
13
Region
Seacoast
60
38
17
Manchester /Concord
57
42
24
Southwest/Connecticut Valley
57
41
20
Southeast
44
54
21
North
47
52
18
Area type
Urban
67
31
9
Suburban
50
48
60
Rural
54
45
31
Family's financial situation today
Better than four years ago
19
80
43
Worse than four years ago
82
12
19
About the same
79
20
38
See also
Notes
^ Including 157 write-in votes
^ Calculated by taking the difference of 100% and all other candidates combined.
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Key: A – all adults RV – registered voters LV – likely voters V – unclear
^ Overlapping sample with the previous SurveyMonkey/Axios poll, but more information available regarding sample size
^ "Another candidate" with 1%
^ a b c "Another candidate" with 0%
^ "Refused" with 2%; "Other" with 1%
^ a b "Someone else" with 4%
^ a b With voters who lean towards a given candidate
^ "Someone else" with 2%
^ "Some other candidate" with 1%
^ Standard VI response
^ Hawkins (G) with 2%; "Another candidate" with 0%
^ With only Biden, Trump and "Another candidate" as options
^ "Someone else" and would not vote with 1%
^ Includes "Refused"
^ "Another candidate" with 4%
^ "Another candidate" with 6%
^ "Another candidate" with 5%
^ "Another candidate" with 8%
^ a b Data sourced from FiveThirtyEight
^ a b c d Data not yet released
^ "Someone else" with 9%
^ Would vote for a candidate other than Trump
^ Would not vote with 2%
Partisan clients
^ The Center for American Greatness is a pro-Trump organization
References
^ DiStaso, John (November 6, 2020). "More than 73 percent of NH's voting age population cast ballots, resulting in record turnout" . WMUR . Retrieved February 16, 2021 .
^ Kelly, Ben (August 13, 2018). "US elections key dates: When are the 2018 midterms and the 2020 presidential campaign?" . The Independent . Archived from the original on August 2, 2018. Retrieved January 3, 2019 .
^ "Distribution of Electoral Votes" . National Archives and Records Administration . Retrieved January 3, 2019 .
^ a b "New Hampshire Voter Surveys: How Different Groups Voted" . The New York Times . November 3, 2020. ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved November 9, 2020 .
^ "Republicans unexpectedly gain control of N.H. State government" .
^ Alex Seitz-Wald (December 9, 2018). "2020 Democratic primary: California and Texas look to become the new Iowa and New Hampshire" . NBC News . Retrieved December 10, 2018 .
^ Steve Peoples; Kathleen Ronayne; Hunter Woodall (February 11, 2020). "President Trump wins GOP primary with more votes than any incumbent president in history" . KRCR. Associated Press.
^ "2020 Presidential Primary - Republican Write-Ins - NHSOS" . sos.nh.gov . Retrieved February 17, 2020 .
^ "Content - NHSOS" . sos.nh.gov . Retrieved February 17, 2020 .
^ "Results: New Hampshire 2020 Presidential Primary - Democratic President" . New Hampshire Secretary of State . Retrieved February 13, 2020 .
^ "2020 Presidential Primary - Democratic" . New Hampshire Secretary of State . March 23, 2020. Retrieved March 29, 2022 .
^ a b c d e "2020 Presidential Primary - Democratic Write-Ins" . New Hampshire Secretary of State . March 23, 2020. Retrieved March 29, 2022 .
^ "Live Results: New Hampshire Primary" . The New York Times . February 11, 2020. Archived from the original on February 14, 2020. Retrieved February 12, 2020 .
^ "New Hampshire Democratic Delegation 2020" . The Green Papers. March 31, 2019. Archived from the original on April 12, 2019. Retrieved April 12, 2019 .
^ Marc Fortier (February 13, 2020). "Bloomberg Beat 2 Well-Known Democrats in the NH Primary. He Wasn't Even on the Ballot" . NBC Boston (WBTS-CD) . Retrieved February 13, 2020 .
^ "Results – 2020 Libertarian Presidential Preference Primary" . Libertarian Party of New Hampshire . January 14, 2020. Archived from the original on February 27, 2020. Retrieved January 14, 2020 .
^ Dance, George J. (January 14, 2020). "Strange doings in New Hampshire" . The Nolan Chart . Archived from the original on January 15, 2020. Retrieved January 14, 2020 .
^ a b "Congrats to Vermin Supreme for winning the LPNH Presidential Preference Primary!" . Libertarian Party of New Hampshire . January 11, 2020. Retrieved January 11, 2020 – via Facebook.com.
^ a b "Results – 2020 Libertarian Presidential Preference Primary" . Libertarian Party of New Hampshire . January 14, 2020. Archived from the original on February 27, 2020. Retrieved January 15, 2020 .
^ "2020 POTUS Race ratings" (PDF) . The Cook Political Report . Retrieved May 21, 2019 .
^ "POTUS Ratings | Inside Elections" . insideelections.com . Retrieved May 21, 2019 .
^ "Larry J. Sabato's Crystal Ball » 2020 President" . crystalball.centerforpolitics.org . Retrieved May 21, 2019 .
^ "2020 Election Forecast" . Politico . November 19, 2019.
^ "Battle for White House" . RCP . April 19, 2019.
^ 2020 Bitecofer Model Electoral College Predictions Archived April 23, 2020, at the Wayback Machine , Niskanen Center , March 24, 2020, retrieved: April 19, 2020.
^ David Chalian; Terence Burlij (June 11, 2020). "Road to 270: CNN's debut Electoral College map for 2020" . CNN . Retrieved June 16, 2020 .
^ "Forecasting the US elections" . The Economist . Retrieved July 7, 2020 .
^ "2020 Election Battleground Tracker" . CBS News . July 12, 2020. Retrieved July 13, 2020 .
^ "2020 Presidential Election Interactive Map" . 270 to Win .
^ "ABC News Race Ratings" . CBS News . July 24, 2020. Retrieved July 24, 2020 .
^ Montanaro, Domenico (August 3, 2020). "2020 Electoral Map Ratings: Trump Slides, Biden Advantage Expands Over 270 Votes" . NPR . Retrieved August 3, 2020 .
^ "Biden dominates the electoral map, but here's how the race could tighten" . NBC News . August 6, 2020. Retrieved August 6, 2020 .
^ "2020 Election Forecast" . FiveThirtyEight . August 12, 2020. Retrieved August 14, 2020 .
^ 270 to Win
^ FiveThirtyEight
^ a b c d e f SurveyMonkey/Axios
^ American Research Group
^ University of New Hampshire
^ Saint Anselm College
^ YouGov/UMass Amherst
^ University of New Hampshire
^ Suffolk University/Boston Globe
^ Saint Anselm College
^ Emerson College
^ American Research Group
^ University of New Hampshire
^ Pulse Opinion Research/Center for American Greatness
^ YouGov/UMass Lowell
^ Siena College/NYT Upshot
^ Saint Anselm College
^ a b c University of New Hampshire
^ Saint Anselm College
^ Saint Anselm College
^ a b c d University of New Hampshire
^ a b c d AtlasIntel
^ a b McLaughlin & Associates/NH Journal
^ a b c d Marist College/NBC News
^ a b c d e f g h Emerson College
^ a b c d Saint Anselm College
^ a b c d e Emerson College
^ a b c d e Gravis Marketing
^ a b c d e f g Emerson College Archived February 23, 2019, at the Wayback Machine
^ a b c d e American Research Group
^ a b c Praecones Analytica
^ Inside Sources
^ RKM Research and Communications Inc./Boston Herald/FPU/NBC10
^ [1]
^ Praecones Analytica
^ Suffolk University
^ University of New Hampshire/CNN
^ "President and Vice-President of the United States - excel" . sos.nh.gov/ . Retrieved November 24, 2020 .
^ "President Write-ins - pdf" . sos.nh.gov/ . Retrieved November 24, 2020 .
^ a b c d "Counties that flipped from Donald Trump to Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election" . The Republican . March 17, 2021. Archived from the original on January 4, 2025.
^ "New Hampshire 2020 President exit polls" . www.cnn.com . Retrieved December 28, 2020 .
^ "New Hampshire Exit Polls: How Different Groups Voted" . www.nytimes.com . Retrieved December 28, 2020 .
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