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Clinton wins New Mexico’s Democratic caucus

Hillary Rodham Clinton won New Mexico's Democratic caucus Thursday following a marathon vote count that went on for nine days after the Feb. 5 election, the party's chairman said.
Clinton 2008
Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., listens to a family's story at a campaign stop at the Fair River Oaks Council in Dayton, Ohio, on Thursday.Carolyn Kaster / AP
/ Source: The Associated Press

Hillary Clinton won New Mexico's Democratic caucus Thursday following a prolonged vote-count that went on for nine days after the Feb. 5 election, the party's chairman said.

Brian Colon, whose party conducted the caucus, said Clinton had won 73,105 votes, or 48.8 percent, to Barack Obama's 71,396, or 47.6 percent.

New Mexico had been the only one of 22 states that held Democratic primaries and caucuses on Super Tuesday, but which had not yet reported a winner. The count had been delayed because of some 17,000 provisional ballots that had been cast Feb. 5 but not immediately counted.

Those provisional ballots, and declaration of Clinton as the winner Thursday, ultimately added one more delegate to her total -- giving Clinton 14 delegates from New Mexico to 12 for Obama, according to the Associated Press.

With the addition of New Mexico's delegate, the national delegate count stood at 1,276 for Obama and 1,220 for Clinton on Thursday.

The Associated Press and NBC News conduct separate delegate counts. NBC News has not yet awarded the additional New Mexico delegate. NBC's national delegate count stands at 985 for Clinton and 1,116 for Obama.

There are differences in how news organizations count superdelegates, how they account for states that have held caucuses but have not yet chosen their delegates, and how they project the apportionment of delegates within congressional districts where the vote was close.

"I am so proud to have earned the support of New Mexicans from across the state," Clinton said in a written statement. "New Mexicans want real solutions to our nation's challenges. As president, I will continue to stand up for New Mexico and will hit the ground running on day one to bring about real change

Mara Lee, state director of Clinton's campaign in New Mexico, said: "We're absolutely thrilled to be the choice."

The election itself on Feb. 5 was a mess, with reports of overwhelmed polling places, long lines, too few ballots, and voter confusion over where to cast their ballots. In Rio Rancho, one of the state's largest cities, a single polling location where 1,900 people remain lined up at 7 p.m on election night.

Colon has apologized repeatedly for the problems, saying he miscalculated turnout.

Carlos Monje Jr., state director of the Obama campaign was asked Thursday if he was confident the results were 100 percent accurate. He declined to answer directly, saying only "we have confidence in the process."

Asked if the Obama campaign would pursue a recount, he said: "We have a lot of momentum behind our backs. We've won eight primary contests for Barack Obama. We feel we are going to look forward at the contests we have remaining."

He said there were some "troubling aspects" with how the caucus was conducted.

"There were incredibly long lines that kept people from voting," he said.

"We're going to continue to work with the New Mexico Democratic state party to make sure the next election goes more smoothly."

Colon, who came under fire for his handling of the troubled election, thanked the hundreds of volunteers who spent the past nine days counting ballots.

The final figures, he assured, "have been double and triple checked."