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Big win helps Hillary hang on

Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., addresses supporters Tuesday in Philadelphia after winning the Pennsylvania primary. Still the underdog, the victory keeps Clinton in the prolonged race for the Democratic nomination.
She nets 55% of Democrats

WASHINGTON — Still the underdog in a contest that won't quit, Hillary Rodham Clinton pulled off a feisty act of political survival in the Pennsylvania primary, defeating Barack Obama to keep her Democratic presidential hopes alive.

The New York senator's comfortable win sends the race on to North Carolina, where the flush-with-money Obama is favored; and Indiana, where the two are close.

Obama was able to stave off an eyebrow-arching blowout by Clinton even while falling short in his effort to bring the polarizing competition effectively to a close. Clinton beat him by about 10 points.

"Some counted me out and said to drop out," the former first lady told Philadelphia supporters who roared their disapproval of that idea and cheered her victory in a state where Obama outspent her 2-to-1. "But the American people don't quit. And they deserve a president who doesn't quit, either."

In a round of television interviews this morning, Clinton argued that she's the stronger candidate to take on Republican John McCain because she's won big swing states like Pennsylvania and Ohio.

"The fair question is if you can't win the states we have to win in the fall maybe that says something about your general election appeal," Clinton said.

Their Keystone state matchup was fierce and bitter, which seemed to harden attitudes among Democrats even as McCain tended to the unification of the GOP and campaigned across the country in preparation for the fall. Only half of each Democrat's supporters said they would be satisfied if the other Democrat won the nomination, according to interviews with voters as they left polling stations.

"After 14 long months, it's easy to forget what this campaign's about from time to time," Obama told an Evansville, Ind., rally, obliquely conceding that the Pennsylvania race turned nasty.

"It's easy to get caught up in the distractions and the silliness and the tit-for-tat that consumes our politics, the bickering that none of us are entirely immune to, and it trivializes the profound issues: two wars, an economy in recession, a planet in peril, issues that confront our nation. That kind of politics is not why we are here tonight. It's not why I'm here, and it's not why you're here."

Obama wasted no time making tracks to Indiana. His plane was in the air when the primary was called in Clinton's favor, which he discovered upon landing.

The Illinois senator trailed in opinion polls all along but had made up ground in the last few weeks, despite a series of inartful episodes in a campaign that once seemed smooth at every turn.

Clinton was winning 55 percent of the vote to 45 percent for Obama with 99 percent of the vote counted. She won the votes of blue-collar workers, women and white men in an election where the economy was the dominant concern.

He was favored by blacks, the affluent and voters who recently switched to the Democratic Party, a group that comprised about one in 10 Pennsylvania voters, according to surveys.

Clinton won at least 80 delegates to the party's national convention, with 12 still to be awarded, according to AP's analysis of election returns. Obama won at least 66. A final count could come today.

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