GOP candidates shift focus to South Carolina

Strong showing NH puts John Kasich in spotlight

Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Bernie Sanders trounced their rivals in the New Hampshire primary, winning 35% and 60%, respectively, with nearly all votes counted Wednesday morning.

The key second place spot in the Republican contest went to Ohio Gov. John Kasich, who garnered 16% of the vote, as of early Wednesday. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who won Iowa and was seen as less likely to feature strongly in more moderate New Hampshire, captured third with 12%.

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Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush came in 4th with 11% and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio followed closely in 5th with 11%.

Kasich's surprisingly strong showing lands him in the spotlight but also raises questions about whether he has the money, base of support and campaign infrastructure necessary to secure the nomination. While he is taking his message next to South Carolina, which holds its Republican primary on February 20, Kasich is looking beyond to Michigan and other Midwestern primaries in March.

While he credited his positive campaigning with helping to propel him to second place, Kasich declared Wednesday, however, that he's ready for a fight.

"Somebody wants to mess with me, they're messing with the wrong guy,'' Kasich said on NBC's "Today." "I'm not gonna sit there and be a marshmallow and have somebody pound me. We're not just gonna sit back and take a pounding from anybody, but at the same time we're going to tell people what we're for, and I think people really, really like it."

His campaign said they were in it for the long game and that South Carolina wasn't a key stop for them.

"He doesn't have to go into South Carolina and do what he did here," Bruce Berke, a lobbyist who has been advising Kasich in New Hampshire, told CNN. "He needs to go into South Carolina and participate down there and participate reasonably well. But he doesn't have to go down there and be the story coming out South Carolina like he is tonight."

While Kasich got a boost on Tuesday night, the vote was a setback for Rubio, who last week seemed like he might be best-positioned to claim the establishment candidate mantle after a stronger-than-expected third-place finish in Iowa on February 1.

Rubio blamed his poor showing on negative media coverage of his performance in Saturday's debate.

"The last thing voters heard going into the booth yesterday was something bad happened on Saturday night. It made it very difficult for us to get any other message across," he said on Fox News' "Fox & Friends" Wednesday.

On the other hand, Bush, who did only fractionally better than Rubio, is seizing the results in New Hampshire as a sign of revival for his flagging campaign and looking to push an advantage in South Carolina.

The campaign circulated talking points to surrogates and supporters to drive the point home.

"As it often does, New Hampshire has reset the race. Jeb is the candidate coming out of the Granite State with momentum, a great national ground game and path forward," the memo obtained by CNN said.

And, it argued, "Jeb now heads to South Carolina where he has the strongest statewide organization, and the backing of Senator Lindsey Graham and much of his political network." The South Carolina senator endorsed Bush after abandoning his own hopes for the presidency in December.

The candidate will also be pulling out his brother, former president George W. Bush, as a surrogate on the trail in South Carolina.

The two will focus on national security issues in the important Southern state.

"They want a commander in chief that will have a steady hand and have a backbone and will support the troops and has detailed plans on how to keep us safe as it relates to Islamic terrorism," Bush said Wednesday on CNN's "New Day." "Here in South Carolina particularly, that's an important issue."

Meanwhile, candidates on both sides of the aisle were already busy trying to raise money off their showings in New Hampshire.

Sanders' campaign, for one, raised $2.6 million between polls closing in New Hampshire and 12:30 a.m ET, per a Sanders aide.

The primary's other winner likened himself to Sanders on the issue of trade on MSNBC Wednesday morning, but made the case that he could do better on the issue than the Vermont senator.

"That's the thing Bernie Sanders and myself have in common. We know about ... trade. But unfortunately, he can't do anything to fix it where as I will," Trump said. "The only thing he does know -- and he's right about -- is that we're being ripped off, and he says that constantly. And I guess he and I are the only two that are saying that."