Super Tuesday: Results In
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| Assistant City Clerk Amal Rawling posts the last of the election results at Pittsfield City Hall on Tuesday night. |
Clinton outpolled fellow Sen. Barack Obama 56 percent to 41 percent statewide.
While former Gov. Mitt Romney also won the state, he found few supporters in its northwest corner. Arizona Sen. John McCain proved more popular than the one-term governor who never set foot in North Adams.
Mayor John Barrett III, a Clinton supporter, said the hard work of her campaign is what put her over the top despite the high-profile endorsements Obama received from the governor and both the state's U.S. senators.
| Clinton |
Obama |
McCain |
Romney |
Huckabee |
| 1,092 |
527 |
120 |
111 |
30 |
"Her organization worked hard to turn out people in Berkshire County," said Barrett on Tuesday night. "They made thousands of phone calls. They did a really good job."
Clinton generally beat Obama 2-to-1; with the exception of Adams among the towns contacted, McCain led the same way over Romney.
In Pittsfield, Clinton easily defeated Obama by more than 2,000 votes. The Illinois Democrat received 3,098 votes to Clinton's 5,602 in the city.
Sen. Benjamin B. Downing, an outspoken Obama supporter, admitted he was disappointed about the senator's loss in his district but said he wasn't ready to throw in the towel just yet.
| Clinton |
Obama |
McCain |
Romney |
Huckabee |
| 208 |
84 |
56 |
28 |
7 |
"Senator Obama's done incredibly well, even in traditionally red states. It really shows how he's truly a national candidate," said Downing. "I'm disappointed about the results in Massachusetts but I'm heartened by the results throughout the nation."
Romney was likely to be disappointed, too. Every precinct in the city - except for one - voted in favor of competitor McCain (Precinct 7B tallied 51 votes for both presidential hopefuls). McCain's 877 votes and Romney's 605 votes easily eclipsed closest candidates Mike Huckabee and Ron Paul, who received 164 and 93 votes respectively.
<L2>From all accounts, the primary turned out a large numbers of voters countywide, with Williamstown, home of Williams College, drawing the greatest number.
Town Clerk Mary Kennedy thought the high numbers were partly the result of the state moving the primary up to Super Tuesday.
"We've always had it March. By then, everything was pretty well settled," she said, adding that it was good day and everything went smoothly.
| Clinton |
Obama |
McCain |
Romney |
Huckabee |
| 86 |
48 |
26 |
17 |
9 |
Barrett put the vote in North Adams at about 50 percent - but only if the number of nonactive voters still listed were taken into account.
The number of registered voters was not immediately available but in November, 8,570 people were registered and the City Council election drew 18 percent, or 1,497, to the polls.
On Tuesday, at least 2,700 cast ballots - the bulk in the Democratic primary. The turnout was in line with City Clerk Marilyn Gomeau's prediction of about 33 percent.
This was the first time voters could choose which primary to vote in: Democratic, Republican, Green/Rainbow or Working Families.
Ralph Nader was once again on the Green Party ballot but few bothered to chose that ballot, said election workers. No one was listed on the Working Family ballot.
| Clinton |
Obama |
McCain |
Romney |
Huckabee |
| 1,493 |
737 |
247 |
107 |
62 |
At the Freight Yard Pub in North Adams, Clinton supporters cheered each time the former first lady took a state - Arkansas, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Arizona, New Jersey and, not long after midnight, California.
City Councilors Gailanne Cariddi and Lisa Blackmer described Clinton as a strong candidate. "You can hear ceilings shattering," said Blackmer later.
Obama picked up Illinois, Georgia, Alabama, Minnesota, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Utah, Kansas, North Dakota and Idaho, according to NBC News projections after midnight.
According to the MSNBC Web site, McCain won in California, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, New Jersey, New York, Oklahoma, Missouri and Arizona.<R3>
Romney, in addition to Massachusetts, won in Utah and the GOP caucuses in Colorado, North Dakota, Minnesota and Montana.
Among the also-rans in North County, former North Carolina John Edwards picked up a smattering of votes despite exiting the race two weeks ago, as did former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani.
| Clinton |
Obama |
McCain |
Romney |
Huckabee |
| 5,602 |
3,098 |
877 |
605 |
164 |
This primary also saw a number of voters who had never cast a ballot in a primary or in any election.
| Clinton |
Obama |
McCain |
Romney |
Huckabee |
| 782 |
1,229 |
242 |
111 |
29 |
"In the past, young people were taken for granted as volunteers or sign-holders, but more recently and especially in this campaign, young voters feel they have a real stake in the process."
Barrett said, "I have never seen a primary like this. I'm just shocked by the numbers."
Also picking up votes in Pittsfield:
Ron Paul (R): 93 votes
John Edwards (D): 147 votes
Chris Dodd (D): 5 votes
Mike Gravel (D): 2 votes
Dennis Kucinich (D): 19 votes
Bill Richardson (D): 14 votes
Joe Biden (D): 25 votes
Fred Thompson (R): 7 votes
Rudy Giuliani (R): 20 votes
Duncan Hunter (R): 4 votes
Ralph Nader (G): 4 votes
Cynthia McKinney (G): 9 votes
Kent Mesplay (G): 4 votes
Kat Swift (G): 4 votes

