First votes cast in US election

Barack Obama claims the first win of the 2008 US election with a 15 to 6 victory over John McCain in the town of Dixville Notch.

Election officials Nancy Ritger (L), Carolyn King (C) and Karen Faxon (R) tally up the votes in the US presidential election at a polling station just after midnight on November 4, 2008 in Hart's Location, the smallest town in the northeastern state of New Hampshire.  Residents of two tiny towns in New Hampshire, Hart's Location and Dixville Notch, symbolically kicked off voting in the US presidential election on Tuesday, November 4, 2008, casting ballots just after midnight. Hart's Location switched from its pro-Republican record to back a Democrat: Barack Obama won 17 votes there to 10 for his Republican rival John McCain, said an AFP journalist at the voting station, a simple trailer with a US flag hanging outside. Dixville Notch voted 15-6 in favor of Obama, who was leading in national polls, against McCain, CNN reported. It was the first time the location voted for a Democrat since 1968, the network said. With just 42 residents, Hart's Location claims the spotlight every four years, when it casts the first ballots for the presidency. The practice began in earnest in 1948, when town residents chose to vote at the stroke of midnight so that railroad employees could report to work on time in the morning.    AFP PHOTO / Jesse Baker *** Local Caption ***  629326-01-08.jpg
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DIXVILLE NOTCH, NEW HAMPSHIRE // Barack Obama came up a big winner in the presidential race in Dixville Notch and Hart's Location, New Hampshire, where a tradition of having the first Election Day ballots tallied lives on. The Democrat candidate Barack Obama beat his Republican rival John McCain by a count of 15 to 6 in Dixville Notch, where a loud whoop accompanied the announcement. It was the first time Dixville Notch chose the Democratic candidate since 1968.

The town of Hart's Location reported 17 votes for Obama, 10 for McCain and two for write-in Ron Paul, a libertarian leaning congressman who unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination. The independent Ralph Nader was on both towns' ballots but got no votes. Hart's Location had favored the Republican candidate in every election since reinstating early voting in 1996. The first Dixville Notch voter, following a tradition established in 1948, was picked ahead of the midnight voting and the rest of the town's 21 registered voters followed suit in Tuesday's first minutes. The town Clerk Rick Erwin said the northern New Hampshire town is proud of its tradition, but added the most important thing is that the turnout represents a 100 per cent vote.

President George W Bush won the votes in Dixville Notch and Hart's Location in 2004 on the way to his re-election. *AP