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Bush and Kerry trade early victories
US President Bush and challenger John Kerry traded early victories Tuesday in a tense and testy contest between an embattled wartime incumbent and a hard-charging Democrat who blamed the incumbent for chaos in Iraq and joblessness at home. The president claimed an early victory in West Virginia, but higher stakes battlegrounds loomed.
"I've given it my all," Bush said after voting at a Crawford, Texas, firehouse, hoping to avoid being the first president voted out of office at a time of war. Kerry, a four-term Massachusetts senator, got teary-eyed as he thanked his staff for a campaign's worth of work. "We made the case for change," he said after voting at the Massachusetts Statehouse. Alongside the first presidential election since the Sept. 11 attacks, control of Congress was at stake as Bush's fellow Republicans sought to extend their hold on the House and Senate. A full roster of propositions and local offices filled ballots nationwide.
Exit polls suggested that slightly more voters trusted Bush to handle terrorism than Kerry. They were evenly split on whether they approved of the war in Iraq, with those backing the conflict heavily supporting Bush and those opposed strongly behind Kerry. Interviews with voters as they left the polls suggested that most believed the country was headed in the wrong direction. Those wrong-track voters overwhelmingly backed Kerry. One in 10 voters were casting ballots for the first time and fewer than 10
percent were young voters, hardly the groundswell that experts had predicted.
Kerry was favored by both groups, according to the surveys conducted for The
Associated Press by Edison Media Research and Mitofsky International.
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