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Eighteen years to the date from Kobe Bryant’s 81-point performance for the Los Angeles Lakers on Jan. 22, 2006, Joel Embiid on Monday scored 70 points, becoming the ninth player to score at least 70 points in an NBA game.

Embiid’ previous scoring high was 59 points against Utah last season, and he is the third player in the past two seasons to reach 70. Before the 2022-23 season, Devin Booker’s 70-point performance in 2017 was the only game with a player scoring 70 since David Robinson did it in 1994.

Recalling the NBA’s top individual scoring performances reminds me of one of my favorite Bryant stories. While doing a story on Wilt Chamberlain’s 100-point performance, I asked Bryant about his interactions with Chamberlain.

‘I was like 7 or 8,’ Bryant said of his introduction to Chamberlain. ‘My father (former NBA player Joe Bryant) introduced me to him. It was in McGonigle Hall at Temple University. My father said, ‘Kobe, I want to introduce you to somebody. He’s one of the greatest players of all time.’ I just looked at him and I go, ‘Bombaata.’ He’s Bombaata in Conan the Destroyer. That’s the only thing I knew him as − Bombaata. He picks me up. It’s like the coolest thing ever. Wilt was a great sport about it.’

Here are the 14 times a players has scored at least 70 points in an NBA game:

Joel Embiid, 70 points, Jan. 22, 2024

In another MVP-caliber season for Embiid, the Philadelphia 76ers star became the latest to reach 70 points. The Spurs had no answers for Embiid in Philadelphia’s 133-123 victory. Embiid connected on 24-of-41 shots from the field and 21-of-23 free throws. In a throw-back game, he attempted just two 3-pointers, making one.

Devin Booker, 70 points, March 24, 2017

The Phoenix Suns star had 70 points in a 130-120 loss to Boston – 51 of those points came in the second half, including 28 in the fourth quarter.

Wilt Chamberlain, 70 points, March 10, 1963

This was the San Francisco Warriors’ Wilt Chamberlain’s final 70-point game of his career in a 163-148 loss to Syracuse. He went for 68 points four seasons later against Cincinnati where he was 30-for-40 from the field but just 8-for-22 on free throws.

Damian Lillard, 71 points, Feb. 26, 2023

Basketball has changed in so many ways, and the 3-point line is one of those game-shifting changes. In then-Portland star Lillard’s 71-point performance in a 131-114 victory against Houston, Lillard made 13 3-pointers, nine 2-pointers and 14 free throws.

Donovan Mitchell, 71 points, Jan. 2, 2023

Fantastic efficiency allowed Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell to score 71 against in a 145-134 victory against Chicago. Mitchell was 22-for-34 from the field, 7-for-15 on 3s and 20-for-25 from the free throw line.

David Robinson, 71 points, April 24, 1994

It was a 16-year gap between 70-point games in the NBA. After David Thompson’s 73 points in 1978, no one scored 70 or more until San Antonio Spurs Hall of Famer had 71 in a 112-97 victory against the Los Angeles Clippers. He made 27 of his 49 attempt from the field and 18 of 25 attempts from the free throw line.

Elgin Baylor, 71 points, Nov. 15, 1960

Los Angeles Lakers great Elgin Baylor was 28-for-48 from the field and 15-for-19 from free throw line in a 123-108 victory against the Knicks. Baylor also had 25 rebounds.

Wilt Chamberlain, 72 points, Nov. 3, 1962

In the first 20 games of the 1962-63 season, Chamberlain scored at least 50 points 14 times, including 72 in a 127-115 loss to the Los Angeles Lakers. Chamberlain, Jerry West (49 points) and Elgin Baylor (30 points) were just too much.

David Thompson, 73 points, April 9, 1978

By today’s standards, David Thompson had a short career – just nine seasons, seven with Denver and two with Seattle. But from ABA season to NBA seasons, Thompson was a bucket-getter. In this game, Thompson scored 73 against Detroit in the final game of the season as Thompson tried to edge San Antonio’s George Gervin for the regular-season season scoring title. Gervin scored 63 on the same day to win the scoring title 27.21 to 27.15.

Wilt Chamberlain, 73 points, Nov. 16, 1962

The Knicks were often on the receiving end of one of Chamberlain’s dominant performances – this time he had 73 points in a 127-111 victory.

Wilt Chamberlain, 73 points, Jan. 13, 1962

Chamberlain was on a tear that season, and his 73 points in the Philadelphia Warriors’ 135-117 victory against the Chicago Packers was one of 15 games that season where he scored at least 60 points.

Wilt Chamberlain, 78 points, Dec. 8, 1961

Just a few months before Chamberlain scored 100 points, he tagged the Lakers for 78 in a 151-147 triple-overtime loss. At the moment, it was the most points scored by a player in an NBA game. He also had 43 rebounds and played all 63 minutes.

Kobe Bryant, 81 points, Jan. 22, 2006

Lakers guard Kobe Bryant dropped 81 points on the Toronto Raptors – the closest anyone has come to Chamberlain’s record. Bryant played 42 of 48 minutes and had he played all 48 and attempted and made a few more shots (he was 28-for-46 from the field, 7-for-13 on 3-pointers and 18-for-20 on free throws), maybe he could’ve made a run at 100. In 2012, Bryant told USA TODAY Sports he had never watched a replay of the game. ‘There’s nothing I could have learned from that game,’ Bryant said. ‘It was just pure fluke, a freak of nature-type thing,’ and added, ‘If I did watch it, it would only (upset me) if I saw I really could have had 100.’ However, in 2013, he watched a replay and Tweeted, ‘Watching the game now, the easy shots I missed, I could of had 100 pts! #countonkobe.’

Wilt Chamberlain, 100 points, March 2, 1962

In what is considered one of more unbreakable records in sports, Philadelphia Warriors center Wilt Chamberlain scored 100 points in a 169-147 victory against the New York Knicks. Chamberlain connected on 36-for-63 shots from the field and the notoriously average free throw shooter made 28-of-32 from the line. There is the famous photo of Chamberlain holding the hastily made ‘100’ sign but there is no known video available from the game played in Hershey, Pennsylvania. There is an audio recording from the radio broadcast.

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People who hate puppies. Anyone who plays videos or takes calls in public without using headphones. The folks who put the milk back in the refrigerator even though there’s only five drops left in the carton.

And now, the San Francisco 49ers.  

Yes, the NFC’s No. 1 seed has joined the list of the universally hated this week. The 49ers’ great sin? Besides their stadium? They happen to be playing the Detroit Lions, who’ve become America’s new favorite team after decades of futility, in the NFC championship on Sunday.

‘It’s harsh winters, right? Auto industry. Blue collar. Things aren’t always easy. That’s what we’re about. You want something the city can be proud of. You can look at those guys and say, ‘I can back that guy. I can back that team. I can resonate with this group of guys.’ They’re kind of salty. They don’t quit. They play hard,’ Lions coach Dan Campbell said.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

‘These guys, they have a kinship with this city and this area. They love it.’

You don’t have to be from Detroit or Michigan to fall for this scrappy team, which only a few years ago only the most diehard Lions fans would claim.

The Lions weren’t just bad, they were historically bad. The first NFL team to go 0-16, in 2008, and one of just five in league history to have a winless season. Playoff appearances were both sporadic − Detroit is in the postseason for only the fifth time in the last 27 years − and short.

As for the Super Bowl, please, that was a pipe dream. The Lions, who’ve been around for 90-plus years, have never played in one. The only other teams that haven’t are the Jacksonville Jaguars, who didn’t even exist until 1995; and the Houston Texans and Cleveland Browns, which are also quasi-expansion teams.

The Lions also had two of the best players the game has seen in Barry Sanders and Calvin Johnson, and both retired because of broken hearts. OK, that wasn’t the official reason. But it might as well have been, each of them walking away because they knew the Lions weren’t going anywhere anytime soon and it was futile to stick around any longer.

Now Campbell embodies the toughness of the city, talking at his introductory news conference about biting kneecaps and ingesting caffeine like a 1969 Chevy Camaro SS guzzled gas. His players are equally gritty. Sure, Jared Goff was the first pick of the 2016 NFL draft, but the Los Angeles Rams tossed him aside as soon as they could get somebody better. Amon-Ra St. Brown had a career season this year and got snubbed for the NFL’s personality contest, err, Pro Bowl.

The 49ers, meanwhile, might as well be NFL royalty. They have five Super Bowl titles, one fewer than the New England Patriots and the Pittsburgh Steelers. Granted, their last one came in the 1990s, but they’ve at least gotten to the NFL’s biggest stage this century.

This is their third consecutive appearance in the NFC championship, and fourth in five years.

It isn’t just the franchise with a sterling pedigree, either. San Francisco coach Kyle Shanahan’s father is Mike Shanahan, who coached the Denver Broncos to two Super Bowl titles. Niners running back Christian McCaffrey’s father, Ed, was one of top playmakers on those Broncos teams.

And when both the Pro Bowl and All-Pro teams were announced this season, they could have been mistaken for the 49ers depth chart.

McCaffrey; fullback Kyle Juszczyk; tight end George Kittle; tackle Trent Williams; and linebacker Fred Warner were first-team All-Pro. Quarterback Brock Purdy; defensive end Nick Bosa; cornerback Charvarius Ward joined them as starters on the NFC’s Pro Bowl roster.  

So, yeah, the choice of who to root for Sunday is an easy one. The team with seemingly everything? Or the team that’s clawed its way up from nothing?

There’s nothing wrong with the 49ers. They’re not cheaters, they’re exciting to watch and their players are actually quite likeable. But they’re not the Lions, and that now makes them the bad guys.

San Francisco might be the No. 1 seed, but Detroit is the people’s NFC champion.

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

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Ichiro Suzuki and CC Sabathia are the top players set to debut on the 2025 Baseball Hall of Fame ballot, with both longtime stars likely to immediately earn enough votes to earn induction.

Suzuki and Sabathia each debuted in 2001, putting together remarkable MLB careers that lasted nearly 20 years. Suzuki racked up 3,089 hits in Major League Baseball after totaling 1,278 in Japan. Sabathia, the 2007 AL Cy Young winner, won 252 games and helped the New York Yankees win the 2009 World Series.

Suzuki and Sabathia join top holdovers Billy Wagner (73.8%), Andruw Jones (61.6%) and Carlos Beltran (57.1%) as candidates for induction in 2025. Wagner, who missed out by just five votes for 2024, will be making his 10th and final appearance on the ballot.

The players who will be eligible for next year’s Baseball Hall of Fame ballot retired after the 2019 season:

2025 Baseball Hall of Fame ballot

CC Sabathia (62.3 WAR): 251 wins, 2007 AL Cy Young, six-time All-StarIchiro Suzuki (60 WAR): 3,089 hits, 2001 AL MVP, 10-time All-StarIan Kinsler (54.1 WAR): Four-time All-Star second basemanDustin Pedroia (51.9 WAR): 2008 AL MVP, four-time All-StarFélix Hernández (49.7 WAR): 2010 AL Cy Young, six-time All-StarCurtis Granderson (47.2 WAR): Three-time All-Star outfielder, 344 home runs, 153 stealsTroy Tulowitzki (44.5 WAR): Five-time All-Star shortstopBen Zobrist (44.5 WAR): Three-time All-Star utilityman, 2016 World Series MVPRussell Martin (38.8 WAR): Four-time All-Star catcherHanley Ramirez (38 WAR): Three-time All-Star infielder, 271 HR, 281 stealsAdam Jones (32.6 WAR): Five-time All-Star outfielder, four Gold GlovesBrian McCann (32 WAR): Seven-time All-Star catcherReturning from 2024: Billy Wagner, Andruw Jones, Carlos Beltran, Alex Rodriguez, Manny Ramirez, Chase Utley, Omar Vizquel, Bobby Abreu, Jimmy Rollins, Andy Pettitte, Mark Buehrle, Francisco Rodriguez, Torii Hunter, David Wright

HOT STOVE UPDATES: MLB free agency: Ranking and tracking the top players available.

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Rosters for the 2024 McDonald’s All American Game, an annual exhibition featuring the top high school players from across the nation, were unveiled on Tuesday.

The list features 24/7’s No. 1-ranked basketball recruit Cooper Flagg, who committed to Duke, and espnW 100’s No. 1 basketball recruit Sarah Strong, who has not committed to a college yet. The rosters also includes some famous offspring — Me’Arah O’Neal, the youngest daughter of Basketball Hall of Famer Shaquille O’Neal, and Mackenly Randolph, the daughter of former NBA All-Star Zach Randolph.

The 2024 McDonald’s All American Game will take place on April 2 at the Toyota Center in Houston.

Here’s the complete roster for the boys and girls 2024 McDonald’s All American Game, broken down by the player, position, high school and college they are committed to:

2024 McDonald’s All American Games Boys Roster

East

Jalil Bethea (G): Archbishop Wood High School (Pennsylvania), Miami (Fla.)John Bol (C): Overtime Elite Academy (Georgia), Ole MissIsaiah Evans (F): North Mecklenburg High School (N.C.), DukeCooper Flagg (F): Montverde Academy (Florida), DukeJohnuel Fland (G): Archbishop Stepinac High School (N.Y.), KentuckyIan Jackson (F): Our Saviour Lutheran School (N.Y.), North CarolinaLiam McNeeley (F): Montverde Academy (Florida), IndianaTahaad Pettiford (G): Hudson Catholic Regional High School (N.J.), AuburnDrake Powell (G): Northwood High School (N.C.), North CarolinaJayden Quaintance (F): Word of God Christian Academy (N.C.), KentuckyDerik Queen (C): Montverde Academy (Florida), UncommittedBryson Tucker (F): Bishop O’Connell High School (Virginia), Uncommitted

Boys East Head Coach: Sharman White, Pace Academy (Georgia) 

Boys East Asst. Coach: Johnathan Robinson, Pace Academy (Georgia); James Hartry, Tucker High School (Georgia)

West

Airious Bailey (F): McEachern High School (Georgia), RutgersFlory Bidunga (C): Kokomo High School (Indiana), KansasCarter Bryant (F): Centennial High School (California), ArizonaVazoumana Diallo (G): Prolific Prep of Napa Christian (California), WashingtonValdez Edgecombe, Jr. (G): Long Island Lutheran High School (N.Y.), BaylorDonavan Freeman (F): IMG Academy (Florida), SyracuseDylan Harper (G): Don Bosco Preparatory High School (N.J.), RutgersRichard Johnson (G): Link Academy (Missouri), TexasKarter Knox (G): Overtime Elite Academy (Georgia), UncommittedTrent Perry (G): Harvard-Westlake School (California), Southern CaliforniaDerrion Reid (F): Prolific Prep of Napa Christian (California), AlabamaAiden Sherrell (C): Prolific Prep of Napa Christian (California), Alabama

Boys West Head Coach: Tommy Brakel, North Crowley High School (Texas)

Boys West Asst. Coach: James Manthe, North Crowley High School (Texas);Ethan Anderson, North Crowley High School (Texas)

2024 McDonald’s All American Games Girls Roster

East

Mikayla Blakes (G): Rutgers Preparatory School (N.J.), VanderbiltKendall Dudley (G): Sidwell Friends School (Washington D.C.), UCLAJoyce Edwards (F): Camden High School (S.C.), South CarolinaKayleigh Heckel (G): Long Island Lutheran High School (N.Y.), Southern CaliforniaZamareya Jones (G): North Pitt High School (N.C.), NC StateKateryna Koval (C): Long Island Lutheran High School (N.Y.), Notre DameMadisen McDaniel (G): Bishop McNamara High School (Maryland), South CarolinaOlivia Olson (G): Benilde-St. Margaret’s (Minnesota), MichiganZania Socka-Nguemen (F): Sidwell Friends School (Washington D.C.), UCLASarah Strong (F): Grace Christian School (N.C.), UncommittedSyla Swords (W): Long Island Lutheran High School (N.Y.), MichiganBerry Wallace (W): Pickerington High School Central (Ohio), Illinois

Girls East Head Coach: Fran Burbidge, Westtown School (Pennsylvania) 

Girls East Asst. Coach: Fanny Burbidge, Springfield High School (Pennsylvania); Kylynn McNichol, Springfield High School (Pennsylvnia)

West

Imari Berry (G): Clarksville High School (Tennessee), ClemsonJaloni Cambridge (G): Montverde Academy (Florida), Ohio StateJustice Carlton (F): Seven Lakes High School (Texas), Texas,Morgan Cheli (G): Archbishop Mitty High School (California), UConnAvery Howell (G): Boise High School (Idaho), Southern CaliforniaJordan Lee (W): Saint Mary’s High School (California), TexasAlivia McGill (G): Hopkins High School (Minnesota), FloridaMe’Arah O’Neal (C): Episcopal High School (Texas), FloridaMackenly Randolph (F): Sierra Canyon School (California), UncommittedArianna Roberson (F): Clark High School (Texas), DukeKennedy Smith (W): Etiwanda High School (California), Southern CaliforniaAllie Ziebell (G): Neenah High School (Wisconsin), UConn

Girls West Head Coach: Ann Fritz, Blue Valley North High School (Kansas) 

Girls West Asst. Coach: Mike Hilbert, Blue Valley North High School (Kansas);  Mark Spigarelli, Blue Springs High School (Missouri)

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Two top White House advisers are headed to President Biden’s re-election campaign, where they’ll play key roles in the effort to secure a second term for Biden, Fox News has confirmed.

Strategists Jen O’Malley Dillon and Mike Donilon will leave their posts in the White House in the coming weeks, as the Biden campaign begins to ramp up for a likely general election rematch with former President Donald Trump.

The move comes amid grumblings for months among many top Democrats about the way the Biden re-election effort was being run, with decisions being made at the White House and carried out by campaign officials based in Wilmington, Delaware.

O’Malley Dillon, who steered Biden’s 2020 presidential campaign and is currently White House deputy chief of staff, will steer the organizing and execution of the 2024 campaign’s path to the 270 electoral votes needed to secure re-election.

Donilon, a senior White House adviser and longtime Biden aide, is expected to play a central role in the campaign’s messaging and paid media strategy.

Current Biden re-election campaign manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez is expected to maintain her role. 

The moves, first reported earlier Tuesday by the New York Times, are seen as an effort to bolster the campaign with the general election campaign soon to commence.

‘Mike and Jen were essential members of the senior team that helped President Biden and Vice President Harris earn the most votes in American history in 2020, and we’re thrilled to have their leadership and strategic prowess focused full-time on sending them back to the White House for four more years,’ Chavez Rodriguez said in a statement.

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FIRST ON FOX — Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., is urging the Supreme Court not to buy into arguments from Big Tech platforms that they should have First Amendment freedom to censor user content while simultaneously demanding legal protection from content posted on their platforms. 

Next month, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in a set of cases that question whether state laws that limit Big Tech companies’ ability to moderate content on their platforms curbs the companies’ First Amendment liberties.

The Missouri Republican filed a brief in the cases Tuesday, arguing the platforms want to keep liability protections granted by Congress for content on their sites, while simultaneously asking for unfettered ability to censor content, citing their First Amendment liberties.

The court ‘should not bless the platforms’ contradictory positions, much less constitutionalize them,’ Hawley argued, adding that ‘doing so would effectively immunize the platforms from both civil liability in tort and regulatory oversight by legislators.’

The cases before the high court originate from separate laws that passed in Florida and Texas that would require large Big Tech companies like X, formerly Twitter, and Facebook to host third-party communications but prevent those businesses from blocking or removing users’ posts based on political viewpoints. 

A federal appeals court had ruled for the tech industry in the Florida case, saying, as private entities, those companies were ‘engaged in constitutionally protected expressive activity when they moderate and curate the content that they disseminate on their platforms.’ But the Fifth Circuit ruled in favor of a similar law in Texas, creating a circuit split on the issue ripe for the nine justices to take up. 

Hawley in his brief explains that, in the 1990s, following the advent of the internet, Congress and the courts needed to square the longstanding principle in American publication law that ‘individuals who play an active role in disseminating others’ speech are liable for any unlawful harm that speech causes.’

The result was Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which broadly insulates platforms from civil liability for hosting user-generated content. 

‘At the time, Section 230 was justified on the theory that platforms could not exercise publisher-level control over the speech generated by third-party users,’ Hawley said.

‘Despite decades arguing for this position, today the tech platforms take precisely the opposite line. They claim that their content hosting and curation decisions are in fact expressive — expressive enough that they enjoy First Amendment protection,’ the lawmaker’s brief states. 

In an interview with Fox News Digital, Hawley charged that the social media giants ‘always have some excuse as to why the law doesn’t apply to them.’

‘It doesn’t matter that they’ve made exactly opposing arguments in court. They don’t care about that. All they care about is preserving their ability to control speech and censor at will,’ he said. 

The platforms told the Supreme Court state laws in Florida and Texas ‘openly abridge’ their ‘First Amendment right to exercise editorial judgment over what content to disseminate on their websites via requirements that are speaker-based, content-based, and viewpoint-discriminatory.’

But Hawley says the platforms’ argument ‘completely undercuts the logic of Section 230,’ which the platforms have long sought to keep in place despite bipartisan pressure to repeal all if not some of that statute. 

‘Extending an historical blanket immunity to this sector will have real-world consequences. To invoke a frighteningly realistic hypothetical, nothing could stop a web platform’s algorithm from promoting content designed to addict and harm young people,’ Hawley wrote in his brief. 

‘Take, as an example, content promoting eating disorders (a shockingly common phenomenon on modern social media). Companies could choose to affirmatively undermine the mental and physical health of America’s youth, while enjoying the protections of Section 230. While teens starved and parents looked on, no private action would lie. And then, when the government stepped in, the platforms could simply invoke their First Amendment immunity. Promoting eating disorders could be, after all, an editorial choice,’ he argues. 

‘Nestled in a comfortable fissure between legal doctrines, the platforms could look on as their algorithms — or affirmative curation decisions — devastated a generation,’ he added. 

The court will hear arguments in the cases, Moody v. NetChoice, LLC and NetChoice LLC v. Paxton Feb. 26. 

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President Biden will win the New Hampshire primary Tuesday night, the Fox News Decision Desk projects.

Biden will claim victory solely from write-in-ballots after failing to file in the state last year.

No delegates will be allocated Tuesday night as the primary is unsanctioned, but the Democratic National Committee is expected to review the matter down the line.

Biden is projected to defeat his Democrat rivals, including Rep. Dean Phillips of Minnesota, who is likely to finish in double digits, and self-help author Marianne Williamson.

Phillips entered the race calling for a ‘new generation of leaders.’ 

Biden’s victory is a symbolic one. Because of the dispute between the DNC and New Hampshire over which states should vote first, there will be no delegates on the line tonight.

Democrats in the state launched a write-in campaign in an attempt to prevent an electoral embarrassment for the president as he runs for a second term in the White House.

Biden, last year, proposed a nominating calendar for the 2024 election cycle that would move New Hampshire from its first-in-the-nation standing and replace it with South Carolina — a much more diverse state that Biden won in a landslide in 2020. That win ultimately catapulted him to the Democrat nomination and eventually the White House.

In the 2020 New Hampshire Primary, though, Biden came in fifth place.

But New Hampshire ignored the proposal and moved its primary up, in accordance with a state law that mandates its presidential primary be held seven days ahead of a similar contest.

That move put the state out of compliance with the Democratic National Committee, which resulted in Biden’s move to not file to place his name on the ballot.

Fox News’ Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report.

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The New Hampshire primary has wrapped and former president Donald Trump is the winner.

With our Fox News Voter Analysis election survey, we’ve been talking with more than 1,800 N.H. Republican primary voters.

Let’s start by looking at some of the groups where Trump did the best.

Half of N.H. Republican primary voters describe themselves as MAGA supporters, and 87% of them voted for Trump. He also did well with conservative voters, folks without a college degree, and rural voters. 

This is similar to what we saw in Iowa last week.

When did primary voters decide who they were voting for? Six-in-10 decided more than a month ago. 

And 69% of this group goes for Trump, only a quarter for Haley.

What do Republican primary voters think about how the country is run? About three-in-10 voters say they want complete and total upheaval — and 82% of them go for Trump. 

This is even more than in Iowa, where 70% of these caucus goers went for Trump.

One more thing, about winning in November: 74% say it’s very important for the Republican nominee to be able to win in November. Over six-in-10 of these voters go for Trump.

Numbers may change a point or two as results update.

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Former GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy blasted former United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley and called former President Trump’s win in New Hampshire a ‘victory over America last.’

‘What we saw tonight is America first defeating America last,’ Ramaswamy told the audience at Trump’s election headquarters on Tuesday night after his victory over Haley. ‘That’s what we saw tonight. If you want America last, you can go to Joe Biden. You’ve got another candidate still apparently in the Republican primary. Cut your social security to fork over more money to Ukraine so some kleptocrats can buy a bigger house, go to Nikki Haley.’

‘You know who delivered a double-digit victory tonight? It is a double-digit victory as of right now, this man, Donald J. Trump, the leader of America first and that means something. USA and Donald Trump America first.’

Ramaswamy added that Haley continuing to stay in this race represents the ‘ugly underbelly of American politics, where the mega-donors are trying to do one thing when we the people say another.’

‘And it’s up to us, to we the people to at long last say, hell no, we the people create a government that is accountable to us and we the people have said tonight we want again, as we did in Iowa, Donald J. Trump.’

‘I’m very honored by the result,’ Trump told Fox News Digital in a statement after he was declared the winner of the New Hampshire primary for a record third time.

Haley said in a speech to supporters in Concord, New Hampshire after the race was called that ‘I want to congratulate Donald Trump on his victory tonight. He earned it and I want to acknowledge that.’

‘Now you’ve all heard the chatter among the political class. They’re falling all over themselves saying this race is over. Well, I have news for all of them: New Hampshire is first in the nation. It is not last in the nation. This race is far from over.’

The focus of the race now turns to South Carolina where they will hold their primary next month. Trump currently holds a 30 point lead over Haley in the Palmetto State, according to the Real Clear Politics average of polls. 

Fox News Digital’s Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report

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Democrats reacted to former President Trump winning the New Hampshire GOP primary election over former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley, calling his supporters the ‘anti-freedom MAGA movement.’

Trump defeated Haley Tuesday night, winning the New Hampshire Republican primary as he vies for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination.

Fox News Decision Desk projected Trump’s victory just minutes after the final polls closed in the Granite State.

While some Republicans celebrated Trump’s victory, Democrats shared their hot takes on social media, taking aim at Trump’s victory.

Biden’s campaign manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez released a statement on Trump’s win in New Hampshire, saying Tuesday night’s ‘results confirm Donald Trump has all but locked up the GOP nomination, and the election denying, anti-freedom MAGA movement has completed its takeover of the Republican Party.’

‘Trump is offering Americans the same extreme agenda that has cost Republicans election after election: promising to undermine American democracy, reward the wealthy on the backs of the middle class, and ban abortion nationwide,’ Chavez Rodriguez said.

‘Joe Biden sees things differently. He’s fighting to grow our economy for the middle-class, strengthen our democracy, and protect the rights of every single American,’ she continued. ‘While we work toward November 2024, one thing is increasingly clear today: Donald Trump is headed straight into a general election matchup where he’ll face the only person to have ever beaten him at the ballot box: Joe Biden.’

Censured California Rep. Adam Schiff, a Democrat running for Senate, tweeted that Tuesday night brought another ‘primary night, another win by Donald Trump.’

‘We all know he will be the Republican nominee. And we know how important the fight ahead is to stop him,’ Schiff wrote.

‘For our democracy. For our families. And for our future,’ he added.

‘While Donald Trump barely squeaked out a win tonight in tonight’s Republican New Hampshire primary, President Biden just crushed the Democratic primary — as a write-in candidate,’ Occupy Democrats tweeted.

Former New York state Senator Anna Kaplan tweeted that Trump’s ‘win tonight makes clear that the threat to our democracy is just as real today as it was on January 6, 2021.’

‘We cannot let him win in November. We must mobilize and work to reelect President Biden,’ she wrote.

Trump won the New Hampshire GOP primary on Tuesday night after the race whittled down to just two major candidates: him and Haley.

The race was called quickly as Trump took the Granite State contest over his former United Nations ambassador.

On the other side of the aisle, Biden took the Democratic primary in the Granite State after mounting a write-in campaign when he was not included on the ballot.

Rep. Dean Phillips, D-Minn., says he will remain in the Democratic presidential primary race, despite losing to President Biden in the New Hampshire primary.

‘Congratulations to President Biden, who absolutely won tonight, but by no means in a way that a strong incumbent president should,’ he said.

Phillips said voters deserved ‘options’ and also praised GOP candidate Nikki Haley for remaining in the race despite her defeat in the Republican primary to former President Donald Trump.

‘This country deserves options, this country should not have coronations. And I know I know the exhausted majority of this country, center right and center, left Americans. I know they’d much rather see a Nikki Haley-Dean Phillips matchup this November, and we’re going to try to get that done,’ he said.

Fox News Digital reached out to the Trump campaign for comment.

Fox News Digital’s Adam Shaw contributed reporting.

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