Sens. Hillary Clinton and John McCain embraced much-needed New Hampshire wins that helped revitalize what were faltering presidential campaigns after Iowa.
(Photo: AP Images / Charles Dharapak)Republican presidential hopeful Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and his wife Cindy, left, greet supporters at his post primary election victory party in Nashua, N.H., Tuesday, Jan. 8, 2008.
Clinton had 39 percent of the vote in New Hampshire, compared to Barack Obamas 37 percent, and John Edwards 17 percent, according to CNN. The win was especially surprising for Clinton, who had trailed Obama by double digits in recent polls.
On the Republican side, McCain won with 37 percent and second-place finisher Mitt Romney garnered 32 percent of the vote. Mike Huckabee came in third with 11 percent, followed by Rudy Giuliani at nine percent, and Ron Paul at eight percent. Former Tennessee Senator Fred Thompson received one percent of the vote.
Both Clinton and McCain had come off of a disappointing third-place finish in Iowa, where younger and less-likely winners Obama and Huckabee had easily won the first state to hold a party caucus.
Im 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, said McCain, 71, to supporters after his win was announced.
McCain beat out Romney, who held a double digit lead in New Hampshire before Christmas. Former Massachusetts governor Romney came in second as he did in Iowa, but won the Wyoming caucuses on Saturday.
Meanwhile, Iowa winner, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, suffered from the Granite States smaller population of religious voters. About 14 percent of voters who attended the Republican primary were religious. In Iowa, more than half of the caucusgoers were self-described born-again or evangelical Christians.
Huckabee, a former Baptist preacher, has depended heavily on evangelical voters for support in his bid for the Republican nomination.
In addition to the smaller religious population, Huckabee also lost to McCain in votes from residents who said a candidates religious belief mattered a great deal to them. According to CNN exit polls, McCain captured 35 percent of the votes from this group, compared to Huckabees 31 percent.
Nonetheless, the Arkansas Republican said he would be happy with a third place finish, which would give him enough momentum to campaign in the upcoming state of South Carolina, where he has strong support among the states large population of evangelical voters.
The Democratic and the Republican candidates head to Michigan for the next primary on Jan. 15.









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