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Obama and McCain still campaign as votes are castStaff and agencies
As if unwilling to cede the stage, both men campaigned into Election Day, long past time when long lines formed at polling places. Obama, bidding to become the first black president, greeted voters in Indiana, McCain supporters in Colorado and New Mexico. The same survey found that first-time voters were disproportionately young. About 20 percent were black, and roughly as many Hispanic in a year in which a black man was on the ballot for the first time. The White House was the main prize of the night on which 35 Senate seats and all 435 House seats were at stake. In both cases, Democrats hoped to pad their existing majorities, and Republicans braced for losses. By tradition, the first handful of ballots were cast just after midnight in tiny Dixville Notch, N.H. Obama got 15 votes and McCain six. An estimated 187 million voters were registered, and in an indication of interest in the battle for the White House, 40 million of so had already voted as Election Day dawned. Turnout was heavy. In Virginia, for example, officials estimated nearly 75 percent of eligible voters would cast ballots. That wasnt what set the Illinois senator apart, though neither from his rivals nor from the 43 men who have served as president since the nations founding more than two centuries ago. A black man, he confronted a previously unbreakable barrier as he campaigned on twin themes of change and hope in uncertain times. A conservative, he ran seeking to stress his mavericks streak. And a Republican, he did what he could to separate himself from an unpopular President Bush. McCain and Obama each won contested nominations the Democrat outdistancing former first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton and promptly set out to claim the mantle of change. Obama retorted that he might as well be, telling audiences in state after state that the Republican had voted with the president 90 percent of the time across eight years of the Bush administration. After voting with her husband, the former president, Clinton called Bush "the lamest of lame ducks" and predicted that Obama would begin making presidential appointments and announcing economic policies within weeks. The war in Iraq dominated the campaign early in the year, but by Election Day it had long since faded as an issue. The economy mattered above all else, with millions facing foreclosures on their homes, joblessness rising and Americans tallying the losses in their retirement accounts after a stock market plunge. The race was easily the costliest in history, in excess of $1 billion, more after the congressional campaigns were counted. McCain accepted federal matching funds, and was limited to $84 million for the fall campaign. After first saying he would go along, Obama reversed course, then raised and spent multiples of what his rival was allowed. McCain sought to make an issue of that, saying Obama had broken his word to the public. At the same time, for weeks on end, he could not match his rivals television advertising onslaught. Figures through mid-October showed Obama had spent roughly $240 million on television and radio advertisements. McCain had shelled out about $115 million, and the Republican National Committee another $80 on his behalf. In the battle for Congress, Democrats began the night with a 51-49 majority in the Senate, including two independents. Their majority in the House was 235-199, with one vacancy. In both cases, Republicans fought to overcome a financial disadvantage as well as numerous retirements. The governors races included open seats in North Carolina, Delaware and Missouri. The ballot issues ran from a measure to ban abortion in South Dakota to proposals outlawing affirmative action in Colorado and Nebraska. Three states voted on gay marriage.
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