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McCain wins S.C. GOP primary

Presidential hopeful Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz, talks to supporters as he visits a voting site in Charleston, South Carolina on January 19, 2008 during the Republican primary. (UPI Photo/Nell Redmond)
1 of 4 | Presidential hopeful Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz, talks to supporters as he visits a voting site in Charleston, South Carolina on January 19, 2008 during the Republican primary. (UPI Photo/Nell Redmond) | License Photo

COLUMBIA, S.C., Jan. 19 (UPI) -- Arizona Sen. John McCain was the winner Saturday in the South Carolina Republican presidential primary.

With 97 percent of precincts reporting, McCain had 33 percent of the vote, compared to 30 percent for former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and 16 percent for former Tennessee Sen. Fred Thompson, CNN reported.

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Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney was fourth with 15 percent of the vote, followed by Texas Rep. Ron Paul with 4 percent and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani with 2 percent.

In claiming victory, McCain noted that the winner of the South Carolina usually goes on to win the GOP nomination, and joked about his loss to George W. Bush in the state in 2000.

"What's eight years among friends?" he said.

In a concession speech, Huckabee promised to remain competitive as the primary season progresses.

"This is not an event, it is a process," he said, "and the process is far, far from over."

Voting was affected by rain and snow in parts of the sate, and CNN reported that voting machines failed in all of the nearly 100 precincts in Horry County, which contains Myrtle Beach. Poll workers handed out paper ballots instead -- and at least one precinct ran out of the back-up ballots.

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