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Attention Shifts to S.C., Nevada

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[January 16, 2008]  CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) -- Savoring a much-needed win in his native Michigan, Mitt Romney promised Wednesday to give John McCain a run for his money in the next contest for the Republican presidential nomination, a four-man, anything-goes scramble in South Carolina.

Mike Huckabee and McCain now were under increased pressure to show results in the South's first primary Saturday, as was Fred Thompson, making what could be his last stand in South Carolina.

"I'm not making predictions about what's going to happen in every other state, but I'm feeling pretty darn good at this point," Romney said Wednesday. Of South Carolina poll-leader McCain, Romney said: "We'll give him a run for his money."

The Michigan primary "gave me the kind of boost I needed," said Romney, a former Massachusetts governor. Anything short of victory would have left his campaign on the ropes, after his losses to Huckabee in Iowa and McCain in New Hampshire.

Romney spoke while taking a victory lap on the CBS "Early Show," NBC's "Today Show" and ABC's "Good Morning America."

Democratic candidates vied for support ahead of Nevada's caucuses, also Saturday, after a toned-down TV debate in which rivals Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama pledged to tamp down arguments between their camps over race. The Democratic contest also lacks a clear-cut leader.

McCain predicted he would prevail this time in South Carolina, the state that derailed his candidacy eight years ago.

Out of Michigan before the polls closed, McCain told South Carolina supporters: "For a minute there in New Hampshire, I thought this campaign might be getting easier. But you know what? We've gotten pretty good at doing things the hard way, too. I think we've shown them we don't mind a fight."

In an interview with The Associated Press, as well as in his comments to supporters, the Arizona senator emphasized Romney's ties to Michigan. He grew up there and his father, George, was an auto company executive and a popular governor.

"Michigan welcomed their native son with their support," McCain said.

Indeed, interviews with voters as they left polling stations indicated Romney's roots mattered to many of them -- four in 10 said those ties were important in how they voted. That's of no help in states coming next.

But the tea leaves were also troubling for McCain, who was powered to victory in New Hampshire largely by independents and has yet to show he can rally the Republican base behind him. Michigan exit polls suggested McCain only got about a quarter of votes cast by Republicans in a state where citizens could participate in either party's primary.

In Michigan, Romney had 39 percent of the vote, McCain had 30 percent and Huckabee 16 percent. No other Republican fared better than single digits.

All the major Republican candidates were campaigning on Wednesday in South Carolina.

McCain hopes for a strong showing in South Carolina, thanks largely to his military background, and he needs to show that he's competitive in the South.

But South Carolina has been a disappointment for him in the past. In 2000, he won the New Hampshire primary only to see his campaign run into a wall in South Carolina, where George W. Bush emerged victorious and went on to wrap up the GOP nomination.

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Also, among his rivals this time are two Southerners -- Huckabee, a former Arkansas governor; and Thompson, a former Tennessee senator. Thompson has said "I am drawing a line in the sand in South Carolina."

Huckabee, a former Baptist minister, is counting on support among South Carolina's evangelicals.

Like McCain, Huckabee was already campaigning in the next primary state and predicted in Lexington, S.C., that he would "put a flag in the ground here Saturday."

The top Democratic candidates -- Clinton, Obama and former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards -- were locked in a tight battle in Nevada. All three were beginning their day with campaign events in the state.

In their televised debate on Tuesday night, Clinton and Obama sought to defuse their flash-point over race, including comments by the former first lady on President Lyndon Johnson's role in winning approval of civil rights legislation in the 1960s, comments that some of Obama's backers suggested belittled the role of Martin Luther King Jr.

They jointly pledged on the slain civil rights leader's birthday to put the matter behind them. Obama is seeking to become the nation's first black president.

There were some limits to cordiality at the Democratic debate, however.

Asked whether Edwards and Obama were prepared to sit in the White House, Clinton said "that's what the voters have to decide."

Clinton won the Democratic primary in Michigan, but her victory was essentially meaningless since the contest was held in violation of party rules and major Democratic candidates did not campaign there.

On the Democratic side, Obama won the kickoff Iowa caucuses but Clinton came back with a narrow victory in the New Hampshire primary, defying polls.

After the Saturday caucuses for both parties in Nevada and the GOP primary in South Carolina, attention turns to the Democratic primary in South Carolina on Jan. 26 and then the Florida primary on Jan. 29, where Rudy Giuliani hopes to spring into the race as a top GOP contender.

The former New York mayor got only 3 percent of the Michigan vote, trailing Thompson and Texas Rep. Ron Paul as well as the top three, and he hasn't fared better than fourth in any of the states so far.

After that, come the Feb. 5 Super Tuesday contests in 22 states.

[Associated Press; By TOM RAUM]

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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