Kansas: Obama wins
WASHINGTON (AP) - February 5, 2008 With two-thirds of the sites reporting results, the Illinois
senator had captured 72 percent of the vote, compared with 27
percent for New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton. Obama had given
Republican-leaning Kansas an unusual amount of attention and had
picked up the endorsement of Gov. Kathleen Sebelius.
In Topeka, organizers of a caucus in a middle school cafeteria
set up chairs for about 350 people, and about 900 showed up.
Sebelius stood with Obama supporters there, and they outnumbered
Clinton supporters three to one. The two sides chanted campaign
slogans back and forth.
"He's fresh. He's new. He's going to change the status quo,"
said Janet Radziejeski, 54.
Obama has ties to the traditionally Republican state: His mother
was born at Fort Leavenworth during World War II, and Stanley
Dunham, her father and Obama's grandfather, was a native of El
Dorado.
Obama opened his Kansas headquarters in Lawrence in October,
five months before the caucuses, and he eventually devoted 20 staff
members to the state, compared with three for Clinton, who didn't
open a Kansas headquarters until January.