Now, with Romney all but doomed, if Obama can make up the difference and sink Hillary we will have a real chance of hope for this country.
Source: CNN: McCain wins New Hampshire GOP primary - CNN.comMcCain wins New Hampshire GOP primary
MANCHESTER, New Hampshire (CNN) -- Sen. John McCain will win the New Hampshire GOP primary, CNN projects.
"Tonight, we sure showed them what a comeback looks like," the Arizona senator said as supporters shouted, "Mac is back."
Among Democrats, Sen. Hillary Clinton holds a narrow lead over Sen. Barack Obama, early results show.
With 32 percent of precincts counted, Clinton had 40 percent of the vote to Iowa caucus winner Obama's 36 percent. Former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards had 17 percent. New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson had 5 percent, and Ohio Rep. Dennis Kucinich had 1 percent.
Edwards will finish third, CNN projects.
With 31 percent of Republican precincts reporting, McCain had 38 percent of the vote. Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney was second with 29 percent, and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, the winner of last week's Iowa GOP caucuses followed with 12 percent.
Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani had 9 percent and Texas Rep. Ron Paul had 8 percent.
Romney and Huckabee called McCain to congratulate him.
"I'll fight to be back in this state and others," Romney told supporters.
Huckabee, who earlier said a third-place finish would be "huge" for him, also promised to return to New Hampshire.
"After we secure the nomination, we've got to come back here and make sure we carry New Hampshire."
Voters who supported McCain and those who supported projected runner-up Romney differed significantly on what issues they feel are most important, exit polling shows.
Forty-six percent of those who supported McCain ranked the war in Iraq the most important. Meanwhile, voters who supported Romney overwhelmingly felt immigration was the most important issue.
McCain has been a staunch supporter of the war in Iraq, but co-sponsored comprehensive immigration reform legislation that drew the ire of many conservatives in his party. The legislation failed to pass Congress. Romney has been taking a tough stance on immigration.
Now, with Romney all but doomed, if Obama can make up the difference and sink Hillary we will have a real chance of hope for this country.
Back to back defeats all but doom him becuase its obvious his message has not caught on. America has rejected his type of campaigning to the lowest common denominator. After Bush, Republicans and Americans et al. want inspiration not more negativity. McCain, Huckabee, Obama are all talking about the future. Romney and Clinton are talking about how bad the others are.
Actually, he's won as many states as McCain or Huckabee, and placed second in the rest. He's at least as viable as Huckabee, and considering how unpredictable the races have been so far, I'd pretty much say it's too close to call between the three top Republicans.
I enjoy being wrong too much to change my mind.
He has won Wyoming and went in to today with half the delegates Huckabee had. With tonights projected results Huckabee will have 32, Romney will have 20, and McCain will have 8-10. More importantly Romney has now lost both the big opening battles for delegates despite his money and attack ads.
Clinton and McCain the comeback kids - CNN.comClinton and McCain the comeback kids
MANCHESTER, New Hampshire (CNN) -- Sens. Hillary Clinton and John McCain received much-needed boosts from New Hampshire Tuesday.
Clinton, coming off a disappointing third-place finish in Iowa, rebounded to overcome rival Sen. Barack Obama in the state's Democratic primary.
Supporters at her headquarters chanted "comeback kid" as the results came in.
Clinton trailed Obama by 9 points in recent polls.
On the Republican side, McCain easily won his party's primary.
The results mark a resurgence for the Arizona senator, whose campaign was all but written off this summer.
Clinton and McCain embraced their comeback positions in addressing supporters Tuesday night.
"Over the last week, I listened to you, and in the process I found my own voice," Clinton said to a crowd of young supporters.
"Now together, let's give America the kind of comeback that New Hampshire has just given me."
McCain, a 71-year-old, four-term senator, was met by a crowd shouting, "Mac is back."
"I'm past the age when I can claim the noun 'kid,' no matter what adjective precedes it, but we sure showed them what a comeback looks like," he said.
McCain pinned his win on "one strategy" -- telling the people of New Hampshire what he believes.
"When the pundits declared us finished, I told them, 'I'm going to New Hampshire, where the voters don't let you make their decisions for them,' " he said. " 'I'm going to New Hampshire, and I'm going to tell people the truth.' "
Female voters and older voters helped hand Clinton the Democratic win, according to exit polls.
In Iowa, Clinton lost out to Obama among women 35 percent to 30 percent. In New Hampshire, however, 45 percent of female Democratic primary voters picked Clinton, compared to 36 percent who went for Obama.
Older voters also overwhelmingly outnumbered younger voters, a proportion that benefited Clinton. Sixty-seven percent of Democratic primary voters were over the age of 40, and they were breaking heavily for Clinton over Obama.
Voters who supported McCain and those who supported projected runner-up former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney differed significantly on what issues they feel are most important, exit polling showed.
Forty-six percent of those who supported McCain ranked the war in Iraq the most important. Meanwhile, voters who supported Romney overwhelmingly felt immigration was the most important issue.
McCain has been a staunch supporter of the war in Iraq, but co-sponsored comprehensive immigration reform legislation that drew the ire of many conservatives in his party. The legislation failed to pass Congress. Romney has been taking a tough stance on immigration.
McCain bested one-time Baptist minister former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee among New Hampshire voters who said a candidate's religious beliefs matter a great deal, according to CNN exit polls. While Huckabee won overwhelmingly among those voters in Iowa, in New Hampshire, 35 percent went to McCain while 31 percent went to Huckabee.
The religious voters made up 14 percent of all Republican primary voters in New Hampshire -- much less than in Iowa.
Huckabee and Romney called McCain to congratulate him Tuesday night.
"I'll fight to be back in this state and others," Romney told supporters.
Huckabee, who earlier said a third-place finish would be "huge" for him, also promised to return to New Hampshire.
"After we secure the nomination, we've got to come back here and make sure we carry New Hampshire."
Obama, the junior senator from Illinois, congratulated Clinton and praised "all the candidates in this race" as "patriots who serve this country honorably."
But Obama assailed critics who he said doubted his campaign and said the record numbers of voters in Iowa and New Hampshire showed "there is something happening in America."
"For most of this campaign, we were far behind," he said. "We always knew our climb would be steep. But in record numbers, you came out and you spoke up for change."
Former Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina painted himself as the candidate of the voiceless after tracking a distant third in the Democratic primary.
Noting that there are "two states down, 48 states to go" in primary and caucus voting, the 2004 vice presidential nominee said that only about 1 percent of Americans had voted so far and that the other "99 percent deserve to be heard."
With 89 percent of precincts counted, Clinton had 39 percent of the vote to Iowa caucus winner Obama's 37 percent. Edwards had 17 percent. New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson had 5 percent, and Ohio Rep. Dennis Kucinich had 1 percent.
With 89 percent of Republican precincts reporting, McCain had 37 percent of the vote. Romney was second with 32 percent, and Huckabee, the winner of last week's Iowa GOP caucuses, followed with 11 percent.
Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani had 9 percent and Texas Rep. Ron Paul had 8 percent. Former Tennessee Sen. Fred Thompson received 1 percent of the vote.
New Hampshire Gov. John Lynch predicted a record turnout for the first-in-the-nation presidential primary. He said he expected half a million people to vote.
The leading presidential hopefuls are expected to head next to South Carolina, another key state in the race to the White House.
Her tears touched the hearts of the voters.![]()
I am just satisfied to see Ron Paul with a solid 10% in Iowa, followed by 9% in New Hampshire.
Sure- we're not going to win, but we are not insignificant either.
The problem with Ron Paul is he draws support from the 2 extremes of the political spectrum.
On the left, he draws the anti-war liberals.
On the right, he draws the anti-war isolationists.
However the liberals and isolationists are polar-opposites on taxes, guns, immigration, and welfare.
He's turning away more supporters than drawing them.
"Only Nixon can go to China." -- Old Vulcan proverb.
Very true, gunnut. Paul also has a few bands of raving lunatics who go spamming about, making him look bad.
However, his grassroots campaign makes me think that perhaps a middle-ground can be discovered and embraced. I hate both parties. I think they're all crooks.
That said, if I were a gambler, my money is on Obama to win.
Ron Paul is nowhere near the "middle ground." He's definitely on the fringe.
No, older voters just came out and voted in larger numbers than expected.
All of the hype about Obama came from his having huge crowds at his rallies, and how those crowds had large numbers of young people in them. However, I think we can still chalk this up in the win column for Obama, because while he didn't get the projected win, it was fairly close.
As for McCain... he needed this win, and I say good for him! Huckabee also did surprisingly well, and while Romney isn't out, he is in trouble.
It is too early to say any thing yet. Let's wait and see. Good to see
McCain in lead, though for this moment only.
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