Donald Trump, who has never run for office before, just won the first official primary in the presidential race. Surprisingly, John Kasich is in second. Even more surprisingly, Jeb! is in third. Not all of the votes have been counted, obviously, but these early results indicate there's still no clear anti-Trump candidate. Neither Cruz nor Rubio are doing well in New Hampshire, as they did in Iowa. The Republican field is just as chaotic and crowded as it was a week ago.
"We thought we were going to get clarity tonight, but I think it just got more muddled," Jake Tapper just said on CNN.
Meanwhile, in the Democratic race, Bernie Sanders has a commanding lead over Hillary Clinton—57 percent to 41 percent (with only 14 percent of the votes counted).
I'll update this post as the numbers come in.
6:12 pm: Hillary is congratulating Bernie Sanders; Bernie Sanders is shooting hoops.
To @BernieSanders, congratulations. To New Hampshire, thank you. And to our volunteers: I’m so grateful for what you built. Now, onward. -H
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) February 10, 2016
Bernie Sanders in the low post https://t.co/7WYQRITIrE pic.twitter.com/3rMdkodUen
— BuzzFeed News (@BuzzFeedNews) February 10, 2016
Meanwhile, Jeb! keeps falling out of third place and then regaining third place. He is neck-and-neck with Cruz:
All eyes are watching the close race for second place in the Republican vote https://t.co/5HRZWj5ROv #NHprimary pic.twitter.com/escOeQrpxD
— Guardian US (@GuardianUS) February 10, 2016
Hillary Clinton just said in her concession speech: "I know I have some work to do, particularly with young people."
7:01 pm: Watch Bernie's victory speech.
7:10 pm: Paging Yoko Ono. Trump is using the Beatles song "Revolution" at his New Hampshire rally. Watch Trump's victory speech here.
Meanwhile, in robot news...
RUBIO: "I did not do well on Saturday night. That will never happen again."
— Michael Barbaro (@mikiebarb) February 10, 2016
Overall numbers so far:
The latest numbers from the New Hampshire primary https://t.co/GiNc9sTGUA pic.twitter.com/Rduxvz9nle
— The New York Times (@nytimes) February 10, 2016