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Tuesday, June 23
The Indiana Daily Student

Clinton wins Indiana by slim margin

Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Hillary Clinton speaks in Indianapolis Tuesday, flanked by Sen. Evan Bayh (left), Chelsea Clinton (middle left) and former President Bill Clinton (right). Hillary Clinton narrowly beat out Barack Obama in the Indiana primary.

INDIANAPOLIS - It was (almost) a premature victory speech for Hillary Clinton.\n Before any of the networks or major newspapers had called the Indiana race, Clinton delivered a victorious speech to a cheering, raucous crowd in the Murat Theatre Tuesday night. With former President Bill Clinton and daughter Chelsea Clinton standing behind her, the New York senator proclaimed that her win in Indiana was a mandate for her to carry on the race. \nLast month, her opponent Barack Obama told a crowd that the Hoosier state would be a “tie breaker” for the major remaining primaries. \n “We’ve come from behind, we’ve broken the tie, and now its full speed to the White House,” Clinton said. \nBut in reality, Clinton’s victory here was only by the slimmest margins. It was not until early Wednesday morning, several hours after the crowds cleared out of the Murat Theatre, that most media outlets called the state for Clinton. \nIn the end, she ended up taking the state by some 22,000 votes or less than two percent.

An initial head start for Clinton quickly led into a tight race well into the night. However, after the pivotal count in Lake County votes in Northwest Indiana, Clinton came out as the winner just after 1 a.m.

This win will give Clinton two more delegates in the race than Obama will receive, according to CNN projections. The Indiana primary had 72 delegates at stake.

Monroe County, which heavily favored Obama, 65 percent to Clinton’s 35 percent, was one of nine counties in Indiana to vote for the Illinois senator.

Despite Obama’s loss in Indiana, North Carolina still gave a decisive win for the candidate early in the evening, with Obama snagging 56 percent of the state’s vote.\nNine IU students attended Clinton’s victory rally in Indianapolis. \nDespite Obama’s resounding victory on the IU campus, IU Students for Hillary Clinton said they believed Obama’s appeal to students was not based on educated choices.\n “The problem is, Obama is increasing voter turnout but not increasing civic engagement,” said freshman Sarah Robinson. \nRobinson’s sister Laura, also an IU freshman, said she was “constantly amazed at how easy it is to talk someone out of voting for Obama.”

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