Washington - Democrat Barack Obama and Republican Mike
Huckabee won their parties' respective presidential primaries in
Georgia, the largest southern state to vote on Tuesday.
Obama scored a decisive victory ahead of rival Hillary Clinton,
winning 63 per cent to Clinton's 34 per cent, with 87 per cent of
precincts reporting.
Huckabee took one of the tightest races of the night on the
Republican side. The former Arkansas governor led the field with 34
per cent of the vote, ahead of Senator John McCain with 32 per cent
and former governor Mitt Romney with 29 per cent.
Georgia was the third-largest prize among the 21 states voting for
their preferred Republican nominees Tuesday, sending 72 delegates to
the party's nominating convention in September.
Huckabee has been running a strong third in national polls behind
frontrunner McCain and Romney, but had staked his continued campaign
on winning key states in his native South.
An ordained Baptist minister, Huckabee has appealed strongly to
social conservatives especially across the Southern states known as
the Bible Belt.
For Democrats, 103 delegates were at stake - the sixth largest
number among 22 states voting Tuesday.
Obama, hoping to become the first African-American president, had
been expected to win in Georgia. The Illinois senator won
neighbouring South Carolina last month by a 2-1 margin ahead of
Clinton.
About 50 per cent of Tuesday's voters in Georgia were expected to
be African-American. Nearly 90 per cent of them picked Obama, but 39
per cent of whites also voted for him - a sharp increase from South
Carolina - according to exit polls from CNN.
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