Clinton, Romney Win Nevada Caucuses
Hillary Clinton cheers with hotel workers during a campaign stop at the Mandalay Bay Hotel on caucus day in Las Vegas Saturday. (AP Photo)
Hillary Clinton and Mitt Romney took home wins in the Nevada caucuses Saturday, both racking up a greater number of votes than their opponents combined.
With 98 percent of Democratic precincts reporting, Clinton had 51 percent and Obama had 45 percent. John Edwards had 4 percent.
On the Republican side, with 100 percent of caucus sites reporting, Romney had 51 percent followed by Ron Paul, who made his strongest showing yet with 14 percent. John McCain took in 13 percent, Mike Huckabee and Fred Thompson took in 8 percent, Rudy Giuliani took in 4 percent and Duncan Hunter took in 2 percent.
It was not immediately clear what impact the Nevada win would have on Romney’s campaign. Interest was low among the GOP candidates, but Romney made a last-minute push in the state, and in a race with no clear front-runner he’s defended his against-the-grain strategy, saying he could stomach a loss in South Carolina, which voted on the same day. He came in fourth in the first-in-the-South primary.
Romney cast his campaign as a quest for convention delegates, a race that he is currently winning and which relied in part on grabbing a good portion of Nevada’s delegates. He took 17 of the 31 available delegates there, The Associated Press projected.
The former Massachusetts governor was one of the few Republicans with any campaign presence in the state. Paul also aired television ads in Nevada. Romney heard about his victory while on a plane to Florida.
“I’m not looking just to get a couple high-profile victories; I want to get delegates and I want to win this nomination,” he said.
Democrats focused on Nevada much more heavily.
FOX News exit polls showed Clinton won with big leads among female, senior, Hispanic voters and union members in the state. Polls showed 52 percent of women, 61 percent of seniors and 64 percent of Hispanics voted for the New York senator, whose victory in New Hampshire was achieved on the backs of some of the same voting groups.
“We had a great campaign here,” Clinton said after winning Nevada. “And I am particularly gratified that the people of Nevada have given us such a positive send-off. This is one step on a long journey throughout the country …”
Clinton captured the popular vote overall, but Obama appeared to edge her out for national convention delegates at stake, taking 13 to her 12. The state’s Democratic Party released a statement later saying those delegate counts could change as national convention delegates have not yet been directly awarded.
“Just like in Iowa what was awarded today were delegates to the County Convention. No national convention delegates were awarded. The calculations of national convention delegates being circulated are based upon an assumption that delegate preferences will remain the same between now and April 2008. We look forward to our county and state conventions where we will choose the delegates for the nominee that Nevadans support,” said party chairwoman Jill Derby.
Obama won the lead-off Iowa caucuses Jan. 3, and Clinton followed that with a victory on Jan. 8 in New Hampshire. The Democratic candidates next face off in South Carolina, where polls show Obama has an edge ahead of the state’s Jan. 26 primary.
Seeing a tight race, the Democratic Nevada campaign had heated up in recent days. Accusations of dirty tricks flew on all sides, and Obama’s rivals stepped up criticism of him for questionable tactics allegedly being carried out by his union supporters.
Bill Clinton repeated charges Saturday that Obama’s supporters — which include the powerful Culinary Workers Union — were using voter intimidation to rack up pledges for the Illinois senator.
Clinton told FOX News that eight caucus-goers he knows of on The Strip were told they could only register for Obama. He said only when he intervened were they allowed to caucus for Hillary Clinton.
“I think all the votes should count the same,” the former president said, decrying the caucus rules that were in place Saturday.
A recent federal court decision permitted nine at-large caucus sites for hotel and casino workers on the Las Vegas Strip — immediately following the decision a union supporting Obama began running a Spanish-language radio ad blasting Clinton’s supporters for backing the lawsuit that tried to block the caucus sites. The Clinton campaign hammered Obama for not denouncing the radio ads. Edwards did the same.
The Clinton campaign issued a lengthy statement Saturday afternoon saying it “won a huge victory by overcoming institutional hurdles and one of the worst negative ads in recent memory … our campaign also received numerous reports of strong-arm tactics designed to discourage our voters from caucusing.”
The Obama campaign circulated a memo ahead of the Nevada returns saying a win there would be a “significant upset,” and claiming the allegations of voter suppression were “outrageous.”
“The conduct of the Clinton campaign in recent weeks essentially makes the case for why we need Barack Obama — it’s the same old-style say anything or do anything to win, divisive attacks that have prevented progress in this country for so long,” the memo said.
Obama’s camp also said its backers were receiving telephone calls that made repeated reference to “Barack Hussein Obama.” And the campaign claimed more than 200 separate incidents of “trouble” at caucus sites, where allegedly doors were closed up to 30 minutes early and registration forms ran out so that people were turned away. More than 114,000 voters were estimated to have caucused to choose the roughly 10,000 delegates to the state convention.
Having finished a distant third, Edwards pledged to stay in the race.
“This is one of those times that I hope the old saying ‘What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas’ turns out to be true. We’ll find out,” he said in Greenville, S.C. “”I am not finished with this fight. I am dead in it.”
Republican caucus-goers were much fewer, with roughly 35,000 voters meeting. Many of the voters said they were most concerned about the economy. Much as he did in Michigan, which he also won, Romney campaigned on the economy in Nevada. A day after President Bush called for a stimulus package worth up to $150 billion, Romney issued a plan of his own calling for $230 billion in tax cuts — it included a reduction in the lowest income tax bracket, tax cuts for working seniors and tax-free savings for the middle class.
The campaign released a statement Saturday claiming the Nevada win helps solidify his status as a change candidate.
“Today, the people of Nevada voted for change in Washington. For far too long, our leaders have promised to take the action necessary to build a stronger America, and still the people of Nevada and all across this country are waiting. Whether it is reforming health care, making America energy independent or securing the border, the American people have been promised much and are now ready for change,” he said.
Though earlier polls showed Romney had only a moderate lead going into Nevada, exit polls showed Mormons also contributed to Romney’s landslide.
Romney is a Mormon, and about one-quarter of Nevada voters share his faith. Exit polls showed nearly all Mormons voted for Romney in Saturday’s caucuses.
Campaigning in Columbia, S.C., Thompson teased Romney when he heard the news of his Nevada victory.
“Imagine that! Glad he could pull one out,” Thompson said.
FOX News’ Steve Brown, Aaron Bruns and Shushannah Walshe and The Associated Press contributed to this report.





Everything about this Presidential race makes me so sad for the American people. Unfortunately, we may end up getting what we deserve. I really wanted to believe that Americans wouldn’t put up with, or fall for, pandering, lies, perversions of the facts, and “win at all costs” campaigning.
If the general election ends up being Romney vs. Clinton, the U.S. will need some new bumper stickers — “Presidential Election 2008: Lie to us, and we’ll reward you for it.”
It’s really too bad all the Paul bashers here have no clue as to what he really stands for. It just goes to show how ignorant all you Faux News junkies are with your spoon fed daily dose of BS.
Funny If Hillary gets in the White House,there will be no more sex in the oval office.
IT WILL ALL OUTSIDE THE OVAL OFFICE,BILL BILL SEE TO THAT!
http://WWW.ATicketToHell.com
Go Hillary. And go and go and go and don’t come back.
You anti-Paul people crack me up –>
“I mean if he has such GREAT ideas, why such little support?”
Uh yeah…. so you want us to believe that Jefferson and Madison were total idiots and had the whole thing wrong.
The fact is… the rest of the field are just big government Republicans.
They want to cut taxes…. they want to cut government GROWTH! About 98% of the Federal government is already living outside of the 10th Amendment and you people are worried about TRIMMING the size of government?
The Federal government right now tells you how to raise your kids, what kind of car to drive, what kind of light bulb to put in your house, what your kids need to learn, the size and shape of your toilets, and how much of your own money they are going to let you keep, among other equally ridiculous intrusions.
Do you think this is freedom the way the Founding Fathers intended?
You all argue about which candidate is the real conservative.
Is it the liberal Mayor from New York?
Is it the formerly liberal Governor from Massachusetts?
How about the little Rhino Senator from Arizona?
At least Huck supports the FairTax which will, at least, forever whittle away at the behemoth.
I am fed up with all big government Republicans and that includes the ones that will just cut it down “a little”.
Ron Paul or BUST.
Who is solid enough to lead this country? Freedom isn’t free, support your troops and remember your patriotism!
I am so tired of the bad reporting. Obama won Nevada.
The point to the caucus was to select delegates. The delegates won?
Obama: 13
Clinton: 12
That’s an Obama win, not a Clinton one. But though that fact is contained in the text, the misleading “Clinton Wins!” ia all over the place.
You’d think after Gore’s “win” people would understand such things.
To date, Clinton hasn’t won more delegates in any state than Obama. Obama has beaten Clinton twice now (Iowa and Nevada) and tied once (New Hampshire) or twice (if you include Michigan, where they each won 0 delegates.)
Watch out for McCain! He is a liberal wearing a Republican badge. McCain supports all liberal causes except for military issues. If elected, the Republicans will be the ones blamed when his policies fail. I say Mit Romney is the best choice and hope he wins the Republican nomination. He can beat Hillary. I’m not sure about Obama. The media must expose McCain’s views so people can see what he REALLY stands for.
I was upset with your coverage on Ron Paul what happen here why was his picture omitted when clearly he was in 2nd and in his place you put up huckabee Hello he only got 8% what happen to the fair and balanced fox news i use to know???????????
http://people.ronpaul2008.com/campaign-updates/files/2008/01/foxnv.jpg
I think Romney’s victory shows that he owns the West. All the talk is about South Carolina and the South, but this is 2 Golds for Romney in the West, and he owned it. He had more votes than all the other candidates combined.
In addition everybody talked about how Nevada was a big state for the Democrats and not the Republicans. The fact is, the Republicans had 4times as many voters. Romney for President 2008!