| February 5, 2008 Barack Obama wins Democratic primary in Georgia
|
WASHINGTON (AP) - Barack Obama won the Georgia primary Tuesday
night, the leading edge of a coast-to-coast struggle with Hillary
Rodham Clinton for delegates in the grueling Democratic
presidential campaign. Arizona Sen. John McCain challenged his
remaining rivals for control of the Republican race.
It was Obama's second straight Southern triumph, and like an
earlier victory in South Carolina, was built on a wave of black
votes.
The Associated Press made its call based on surveys of voters as
they left the polls.
The 87 delegates at stake in Georgia's primary were divided
between the two candidates in rough proportion to the votes.
After an early series of low-delegate, single-state contests,
Super Tuesday was anything but - its primaries and caucuses were
spread across nearly half the country in the most wide-open
presidential campaign in memory.
Clinton was winning only a slight edge among women and white
voters, both groups that she has won handily in earlier contests,
according to preliminary results from interviews with voters in 16
states leaving polling places. Obama was collecting the
overwhelming majority of votes cast by blacks, and Clinton was
gaining the votes of roughly six in 10 Hispanics.
In the GOP race, McCain had a small edge among voters calling
themselves Republicans, a group he had not won in any of the
earlier races. As usual, he was running strongly among
independents. Former Massachusetts
Gov. Mitt Romney was getting the
votes of about four in 10 people who described themselves as
conservative. McCain was wining about one-third of that group, and
former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee about one in five.
Democrats and Republicans alike said the economy was their most
important issue. Democrats said the war in Iraq ranked second and
health care third. Republican primary voters said immigration was
second most important after the economy, followed by immigration
and the war in Iraq.
The survey was conducted in 16 states by Edison Media Research
and Mitofsky International for The Associated Press and television
networks.
McCain was the Republican front-runner, all but unchallenged in
winner-take-all primaries in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.
He looked for a home-state win in Arizona, as well.
Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, struggling to sustain his
candidacy, concentrated on Missouri and California as well as
several caucus states.
Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee concentrated on a swath of
Southern and border states. Texas Rep. Ron Paul had the fourth spot
on the ballot.
In the first contest decided Tuesday, Huckabee won all 18
delegates at the West Virginia GOP convention after McCain's
supporters sided with him in a successful attempt to deprive Romney
of a victory.
Democrats Obama and Clinton conceded in advance that neither was
likely to emerge from the busiest day in primary history with
anything more than a relatively narrow edge in convention
delegates.
"Senator Clinton, I think, has to be the prohibitive favorite
going in given her name recognition, but we've been steadily
chipping away," said Obama, seeking to downplay expectations.
As she voted in Chappaqua, N.Y., Clinton said, "The stakes are
huge."
Her aides conceded in advance that Obama might win more Super
Tuesday delegates than the former first lady.
Already, both campaigns were looking ahead to Feb. 9 contests in
Louisiana, Nebraska and Washington state and Feb. 12 primaries in
Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia. And increasingly,
it looked like the Democrats' historic race between a woman and a
black man would go into early spring, possibly longer.
Democrats had 1,681 Super Tuesday delegates to allocate in
primaries in 15 states and caucuses in seven more plus American
Samoa.
Clinton led Obama in the delegate chase as the polls opened, 261
to 202, on the strength of so-called superdelegates. They are
members of Congress and other party leaders, not chosen by primary
voters or caucus-goers. It takes 2,025 delegates to win the
Democratic nomination.
Republicans had 1,023 delegates at stake in 15 primaries, six
caucuses and one state convention.
The evening began with McCain holding 102 delegates, to 93 for
Romney, 43 for Huckabee and four for Paul. It takes 1,191 to win
the Republican nomination.
The de facto national primary was the culmination of a
relentless campaign that moved into overdrive during Christmas
week.
After a brief rest for the holiday, the candidates flew back to
Iowa on Dec. 26 for a final stretch of campaigning before the
state's caucuses offered the first test of the election year. New
Hampshire's traditional first-in-the-nation primary followed a few
days later, then a seemingly endless series of campaign days
interspersed by debates and a handful of primaries and caucuses.
Along the way, the poorest performers dropped out: Democratic
Sens. Joe Biden and Chris Dodd, New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson and
Rep. Dennis Kucinich of Ohio; and Republican Reps. Duncan Hunter
and Tom Tancredo, and former Tennessee Sen. Fred Thompson.
Former Sen. John Edwards pulled out of the Democratic race last
week, and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani left the Republican
field.
Edwards offered no endorsement as he exited, instead leaving
Obama and Clinton to vie for help from his fundraisers and
supporters.
But Obama benefited from an endorsement by Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, who made a series of campaign appearances in California as
well as his home state of Massachusetts.
Giuliani quit the race and backed McCain in the same breath,
clearing the way for the Westerner in New York and New Jersey.
Giuliani's departure also made it possible for California Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger to back McCain. Schwarzenegger said he would
not have done so as long as the former mayor was in the race.
Obama and Clinton spent an estimated $20 million combined to
advertise on television in the Feb 5 states.
Obama spent $11 million, running ads in 18 of the 22 states with
Democratic contests. Clinton ran ads in 17, for a total of $9
million.
Neither advertised in Illinois, Obama's home state.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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