New York: Former US vice president Joe Biden ended up a disappointing fifth in the party election for the Democrats' presidential nominee in the first state to hold a secret ballot, New Hampshire where Senator Bernie Sanders emerged as the leader.
The insurgent Pete Buttigieg came second in the primary held on Tuesday and Senator Klobuchar emerged third showing a quick rise due to a strong performance in the candidates' debate last week.
Amid questions within the party over the electability of a leftist in the national election, the New Hampshire voting showed a tilt to the center in the state as the centrists, Buttigieg, a small-town mayor, and Klobuchar together out-polled the self-styled socialist Sanders and the left-leaning Senator Elizabeth Warren.
In the Republican Party primary, US President Donald Trump roundly trounced former Massachusetts Governor William Weld who said he would vote in the national election for a moderate Democrat rather than for Trump.
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The results of the first two Democratic Party elections - an open vote called a caucus in Iowa last week and the secret ballot primary in New Hampshire on Tuesday - have muddled the initial expectations with the rise of Buttigieg who came second in popular votes, and the fall of Biden.
But the two predominantly white states do not reflect the nation's demographics and the national polls paint a different picture.
Establishment candidate Biden's fifth-place finish in New Hampshire followed a fourth-place finish last week in Iowa, leading some to question his viability.
"Cable TV talkers, tell them 'It ain't over,'" he said at a rally in South Carolina where he flew from New Hampshire without waiting for the results.
And he has justification for saying that because he is still second in national polls of Democratic Party members with 20.4 percent support, trailing only Sanders who has 23 percent in the aggregation of polls by RealClear Politics.
Billionaire Michael Bloomberg, the owner of the news and financial information service that bears his name and a former New York mayor, has emerged third with 13.6 percent, even though he has not run in the two elections so far or participated in the party's televised debates but has blanketed the nation with ads paid for by himself.
The ad blitz has sideswiped Biden with old clips of former President Barack Obama praising Bloomberg giving the impression he is endorsing the former mayor instead of his vice president.
The small states of Iowa which is 85.3 percent white and New Hampshire which is 90 percent white do not reflect the US with a white population of only 60.4 percent.
South Carolina with 63.7 percent white population better reflects the US and the next primary scheduled there on February 29 may be a better trend indicator.