Former New Hampshire U.S. Senator John E. Sununu and former Massachusetts U.S. Senator Scott Brown debated at the Victoria Inn in Hampton, N.H., on Wednesday. For GOP primary voters, it was their first chance to see the two Senate candidates side by side, and several hundred turned out to take their measure.

โ€œI want a plain-spoken guy,โ€ Sam Steele said before the candidates took the stage. A lawyer from North Hampton, N.H., Steele said he moved to New Hampshire from Washington, D.C., 15 years ago. That was back when Brown represented Massachusetts in the Senate, and Sununu advised a major DC-lobbying firm after losing his Senate seat to Jeanne Shaheen in 2008.

Steele, who wore a Make America Great Again hat, said he likes Brown but had never seen Sununu.

โ€œIs that him over there?โ€ he said, pointing to Sununu. โ€œHeโ€™s got no presence. He looks like a loser to me.โ€

Steele said he was unaware that President Trump had endorsed Sununu over Brown.

โ€œReally? I did not know about that.โ€ Steele said.

Trumpโ€™s backing of Sununu, who supported neither of Trumpโ€™s presidential bids, and once wrote an op-ed headlined, โ€œDonald Trump is a Loser,โ€ hung over the debate.

Sununu never mentioned having Trumpโ€™s support, but Brown repeatedly argued that Trumpโ€™s endorsement compromised Sununuโ€™s independence. Brown had himself sought Trumpโ€™s backing, but argued that not winning it would allow him to prioritize New Hampshireโ€™s best interests.

โ€œIf there’s something that the president wants, respectfully, that affects New Hampshire in a negative manner, I’m the guy that can actually say ‘no, sir,’ because I didnโ€™t get his endorsement,โ€ Brown said. โ€œI support 95% of what he does, but respectfully, he’s not right all the time.โ€

Sununu, meanwhile, stressed his own record in Washington, which included writing legislation to ban internet taxes and pushing to limit the reach of laws that implicated personal privacy, including REAL ID and the Patriot Act.

โ€œThatโ€™s what consistency and conservatism is all about,” Sununu said.

Sununu also emphasized his backing by top local Republicans, including state Senate President Sharon Carson, and every Republican on the Executive Council. But he also acknowledged receiving financial support from โ€œall over the country,โ€ which he said Brown was wrong to criticize.

โ€œNobody’s contribution makes any difference,โ€ Sununu said. โ€œFor someone to stand up and say, ‘Well, yes, it does,’ that makes me question where they’re coming from, because it doesn’t make a difference to me. And to go around accusing others of having that influence is just wrong. Itโ€™s just wrong, and not New Hampshire.โ€

Iran was another point of friction. Sununu and Brown both oppose the $300 billion reconstruction fund included in President Trumpโ€™s proposed Iran deal. But Sununu also recently told WMUR that he disagreed with Trumpโ€™s decision to attack Iran in the first place, which Brown noted is a stance Sununu shares with U.S. Rep. Chris Pappas, who is seeking the Democratic nomination for Senate.

โ€œJohn and Chris (Pappas) said they wouldnโ€™t move forward with what the president is doing. I respectfully disagree,โ€ Brown said.

Sununu didnโ€™t respond.

Brown twice told the crowd that if he lost the primary, he would give Sununu his full support. Sununu didnโ€™t reciprocate the offer.

On other issues, there was largely agreement. Sununu and Brown both said they favor eliminating birthright citizenship, would support federal legislation to require proof of citizenship to register to vote, and oppose allowing transgender girls to compete on womenโ€™s sports teams.

Brown and Sununu also said they backed the policies in President Trumpโ€™s โ€œBig Beautiful Bill,โ€ which extended tax cuts and reduced future funding for Medicaid and clean energy initiatives.

Throughout the debate, the two Republicans also took repeated aim at Chris Pappas.

Sununu described him as โ€œthe worstโ€ and a โ€œlegislative zero.โ€

โ€œI am running to send Chris Pappas back to bussing tables at his familyโ€™s chicken restaurant,” Sununu said to cheers.

Brown was also critical, accusing Pappas of leading on โ€œopen borders, sanctuary cities, men in women and girls sports, defund the police, no military.โ€ But Brown also seemed to acknowledge that beating Pappas, who has been on the ballot in New Hampshire in every state election since 2002 and lost only once, could be tough to beat.

โ€œI got into this race to make sure that Jeanne Shaheen didnโ€™t run, but also more importantly to make sure that Chris Pappas is not our Senator for 30 or 40 years,โ€ Brown said.

After the debate, Sununu shook a few hands and headed out. Brown worked the crowd at length.

Ellen Hyatt, of Hampton, wore a t-shirt that read โ€œPeace, Love, Republican.โ€ She said she hadnโ€™t sorted out who to vote for, but said the debate reassured her sheโ€™d probably be fine with either Sununu or Brown.

โ€œTheir personalities are very distinct if you know what I mean, Hyatt said. โ€œI am a pragmatist and I think both are preferable to Pappas. But which can actually win?โ€

Thatโ€™s a question for GOP voters across New Hampshire to weigh.

These articles are being shared by partners in The Granite State News Collaborative. For more information, visit collaborativenh.org.