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The Badger Herald

Independent Student Newspaper Since 1969

The Badger Herald

Independent Student Newspaper Since 1969

The Badger Herald

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Kerry takes 5 states, but race is still on

WASHINGTON (REUTERS) — Democratic frontrunner John Kerry took a huge stride toward the presidential nomination Tuesday with wins in five states, but victories by John Edwards and Wesley Clark kept the race alive.

Kerry, riding a wave of momentum from back-to-back wins in the first two contests last month, won in Missouri, Arizona, Delaware, North Dakota and New Mexico as seven states voted on the biggest day yet in the race to find a presidential challenger.

Edwards, a senator from North Carolina, and Clark, a retired general, scored wins in South Carolina and Oklahoma, respectively, throwing at least temporary speed bumps on Kerry’s cruise to the nomination.

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Connecticut Sen. Joseph Lieberman, the Democratic nominee for vice president in 2000, was shut out Tuesday and pulled out of the race, saying, “The judgment of the voters is now clear.”

Fallen frontrunner Howard Dean also went zero-for-Tuesday but put a brave face on his poor showing and promised to keep “going and going and going.”

Kerry, the Massachusetts senator and decorated Vietnam veteran who had faced questions about whether he could compete nationwide, answered with strong finishes in seven states in the South, East, West and Midwest.

“Now we will carry this campaign and the cause of a stronger, fairer, more prosperous America to every part of America,” Kerry said at a victory rally in Seattle.

“We will take nothing for granted, we will compete everywhere, and in November, we will beat George W. Bush,” he said.

Clark, the former commander of NATO and a political novice, scored a narrow win over Edwards in Oklahoma, where he led by 1,300 votes with all precincts reporting.

“As an old soldier from Arkansas, I couldn’t be prouder of your support in this first election I’ve ever won,” Clark told supporters in Oklahoma City.

The double-digit victory by Edwards in South Carolina, which he labeled a must-win state, and his strong showing in Oklahoma boosted his argument he would provide the strongest opponent to Bush in rural areas and in the South.

“Tonight you said that the politics of lifting people up beats the politics of tearing people down,” Edwards, who emphasized a positive message focused on the economy, told roaring supporters in downtown Columbia, S.C. “Today we said clearly to the American people that in our country, in our America, everything is possible.”

A total of 269 delegates to July’s nominating convention were at stake in the seven states voting Tuesday, with 2,162 needed to win the nomination.

Kerry takes delegate lead

According to early delegate projections by MSNBC, Kerry picked up at least 88 delegates Tuesday for a total of 201. Edwards picked up 59 for a total of 100, putting him in third place behind Dean, who picked up three for 117. Clark picked up 24 for a total of 55.

Lieberman had been hoping for a win in Delaware but dropped out after meeting with staff members and conferring with his family.

“I have decided tonight to end my quest for the presidency of the United States of America,” Lieberman said at a rally near his campaign headquarters in Arlington, Va.

Tuesday’s votes offered the first nationwide test for the candidates, who spent almost all of January battling in Iowa and New Hampshire, largely white and rural states that hosted the first two nominating tests.

South Carolina was the first contest in the South and the first in a state with a large black population, while Arizona and New Mexico hold the first contests in states with large Hispanic populations.

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