Inside the arena, the roar was deafening when Hillary Rodham Clinton took the stage at the annual convention of the New Hampshire Democratic Party, with thousands jumping to their feet to welcome the party's presidential front-runner.
Outside the hall, a far less joyous conversation was taking place.
"She kind of turns me off," said Marsha Campaniello, a 63-year-old real estate appraiser from Concord. "But I'd rather have a Democrat in there as opposed to a Republican."
At ice cream shops and book stores, at summer fairs and fall festivals, Clinton is running into voters such as Campaniello. They're Democrats, and some independents, too, weighing a desire to keep control of the White House against the deep ambivalence they feel toward Clinton.
The Associated Press interviewed nearly 70 Democratic and independent voters in the past two weeks, all at places where Clinton has campaigned in Iowa and New Hampshire, the states which hold the first nominating contests in 2016.
Those voters expressed a litany of concerns. Many said they simply feel they lack a connection with Clinton, often for reasons they cannot seem to articulate.
"She certainly could manage the country," said Jim Gallagher, a 61-year-old real estate investor from Manchester. "But she just rubs me the wrong way. But, hey, you don't have to like her, right?"
Such tepid reactions have led Clinton, once a commanding favorite for the nomination, into a fall campaign in which she will have competition, be it from Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders or the possible late entry of Vice President Joe Biden.
Clinton is still the odds-on favorite to win the nomination, although Sanders has been drawing the largest crowds and leads in New Hampshire polls. No candidate in either the Democratic or Republican field has as sophisticated a campaign operation or depth of support from the party establishment as Cllinton.
But the unenthusiastic reaction her candidacy receives from some Democratic voters underscores a central issue facing her campaign:
Despite her decades on the public stage, Clinton struggles to inspire the kind of personal passion that catapulted Barack Obama into the White House.
"I like Hillary. I fell in love with Obama," said Sabrina Chen, 47, from Pelham.
Clinton appeared to acknowledge the challenge in a recent interview with the comedian Lena Dunham, saying of voting in presidential elections, "if you can't get excited, be pragmatic."
The public's opinion on Clinton has steadily grown more negative since she returned to partisan politics, after a period of high ratings while she was secretary of state.
Most Democratic voters say they would back Clinton in the general election. But some said Clinton is trying to co-opt Sanders' message, hoping to woo liberal voters by focusing on issues such as campaign finance and wage inequality.
"It just seems like the longer the campaign goes on the more she tries to emulate the popular things that Bernie is going for," said Spencer Jackson, 25, from Sunapee.
Aides stress the fundamentals of Clinton's campaign - steady fundraising, detailed policy positions and a national organising strategy - are strong.
"Things don't happen overnight in the New Hampshire primary, but we will have done all the important groundwork," said Mike Vlacich, Clinton's New Hampshire state director.
For some, the rebranding has been convincing. Few doubt her competence, with many citing her extensive experience in Washington as an asset.
"I think in 2008 she was more standoffish and this time around I think she's very warm, very engaged," said Marilyn Lieto, 75, from Groton.
Voters do say that Clinton's handling of her use of a private email account and server have undermined her message, as have months of Republican attacks casting her as untrustworthy.
"People get stuck on the past and they don't want to give her a chance to move on," said supporter Marta Morse in Des Moines, Iowa.
This month will offer Clinton a series of high-profile opportunities to confront those issues, first at the opening Democratic presidential debate on Oct. 13 and then nine days later in public testimony before the House committee investigating the deadly 2012 attack that killed four Americans at a US diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya.
In spite of their doubts, Democrats believe Clinton remains the best candidate their party has when it comes to winning next November.
"She's going to make a fine president," said retiree Susan Richards, 65, walking out of a Portsmouth bookstore, where Clinton greeted voters just two weeks earlier. "I don't think she's ideal, but I think she'll be good."
A candidate to like, if not love!
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