Or something like that.
Well, here are recent media examples to further illustrate the point:
1. John Kasich stuck to the formula again over the past three days.
Four more town-hall meetings — making 37 since July. A few private meet-and-greets. A short talk at a GOP Christmas party. Signing up supporters and planting seeds with those who aren’t quite there yet.
Presuming you have a good message and background, that’s the usual route to political success in New Hampshire.
...
Even those who haven’t made up their mind said they were taken with Kasich.
“I’m very performance-oriented,” Charlene Lovett, Claremont’s mayor-elect and a former Army intelligence officer, said after a meeting on Saturday with about 50 in her town’s community center. “I have to say I put a lot of weight behind somebody who’s actually done something.”
Bruce Perlo Sr., chairman of the Grafton County Republican Party in western New Hampshire, said Kasich has “an outstanding background” of experience in the private sector and state and federal government. But the lack of weight given to such qualifications is another quirk of this odd election.
“He has not seemed to have gained the traction among the faithful, if you know what I mean,” Perlo said.
The ultimate fate of Kasich — and Trump — in New Hampshire may come down to what unaffiliated voters decide in the state’s open primary on Feb. 9, Perlo said.
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