Barack Obama easily won South Carolina’s bitterly contested Democratic presidential primary with the help of heavy black support on Saturday, dealing a setback to rival Hillary Clinton after a week of political brawling.
Obama, an Illinois senator who would be the first black United States president, routed Clinton in the latest showdown in a back-and-forth fight for the right to represent the Democratic Party in November’s presidential election.
John Edwards finished third in a state he won during his failed 2004 race, casting fresh doubt on the future of his campaign.
With nearly all the votes counted, Obama had doubled Clinton’s vote total, winning 55% to her 27%. Edwards had 18%.
The win for Obama after two consecutive losses to Clinton, in New Hampshire and Nevada, gave him new momentum heading into February 5 ”Super Tuesday” Democratic contests in 22 states. Obama won the first contest in Iowa.
”Tonight, the cynics who believed that what began in the snows of Iowa was just an illusion were told a different story by the good people of South Carolina,” Obama told a cheering crowd in Columbia, the state capital.
”In nine short days, nearly half the nation will have the chance to join us in saying that we are tired of business-as-usual in Washington, we are hungry for change, and we are ready to believe again,” he said.
Clinton called Obama to congratulate him and headed from South Carolina to Tennessee, a February 5 state, as the results began to roll in.
”Now the eyes of the country turn to Tennessee and the other states that will be voting on February 5,” she said in Nashville. ”Millions and millions of Americans will have the chance to have their voices heard and their votes counted.”
The high stakes in South Carolina fueled a week of angry accusations and increasingly personal jabs between the two candidates, capped by a volley of attacks on Obama from Clinton’s husband, former president Bill Clinton, and questions about the role of race.
Exit polls showed Obama won four of every five black voters, who made up more than half of the primary electorate. He also won one-quarter of white votes, higher than many had predicted. Edwards and Clinton split the remaining white vote.
Bill Clinton’s effect
Bill Clinton’s aggressive attacks on Obama appeared to hurt his wife, exit polls showed. About six of every 10 primary voters said his campaigning was important to their votes, and Obama won 47% of those. Hillary Clinton won 38%.
Obama also won more than half of the voters who decided in the last 24 hours, the exit polls showed.
Edwards, a former North Carolina senator and the 2004 Democratic vice presidential nominee, had chastised his two rivals for their squabbling and portrayed himself as the grown-up in the contests, but he was beaten badly in the state of his birth.
It was his third consecutive third-place finish after a second-place showing in Iowa, but he said he would push on to the next round of voting.
”Now the three of us move on to February 5 where millions of Americans will cast their vote and help shape the future of this party and help shape the future of America,” Edwards told supporters in Columbia.
A record-smashing turnout of more than 500 000 people cast ballots in the first Democratic primary in the South.
Clinton, once seen as the inevitable nominee and the leader in South Carolina polls until recently, had left the state for two days during the week, leaving her husband to carry the campaign load here.
The Republican presidential contenders, who held their primary in South Carolina last week, focused on Florida’s Tuesday primary.
Arizona Senator John McCain and former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney are in a tight race in Florida, polls show, after splitting contests last week — McCain won South Carolina and Romney won Michigan.
McCain won the backing of Florida Governor Charlie Crist on Saturday and turned the debate back to the Iraq war, accusing Romney of backing a timetable to pull US troops out — a charge Romney angrily denied.
Former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani is desperately seeking a good showing that could get him back in the race. Giuliani, who once led the Republican field in national polls, has slipped after he essentially pulled out of the early voting states to concentrate on Florida. – Reuters
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Tales from the Trail: 2008