


Obama still did better in the cities than in the countryside. This was true both in Maryland and Virginia. Obama's earned 66 percent of the vote in Virginia's cities, but dropped to 51.6 percent in rural counties. He scored 60 percent in Baltimore and Maryland's urban counties, but dropped to 47 percent in the state's rural communities.
Elva Tasker of Garrett County, Maryland, cast her first ballot for president in the fall of 1920; women had just won the right to vote. At age 107, she also participated in Maryland's recent presidential primary election, voting absentee last Wednesday. Pictured with her, at the Oakland Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, are Garrett Co. elections clerk Bob Boal and Mary Martin of the Oakland Rehab staff. Ms. Tasker "had no comment about whom she preferred in this year's race."
Photo: John McEwen for The Republican News [2]
In more rural counties, Clinton's percentages increased. Though Obama won in rural counties, he continues to poll 10 to 15 percentage points lower in these areas than he does in the cities.
Clinton did particularly well in Virginia's mountain counties. In the coal mining communities along the Kentucky and West Virginia borders, Clinton won overwhelming victories. She won Buchanan County 9-1, Lee County 6 to 1, Wise County 5 to 1, Scott and Tazewell counties 4 to 1. These are counties with few African-American residents.
This is also an area where the Clinton campaign concentrated its efforts in the last days of the Virginia campaign. Former president Bill Clinton visited Abington in Washington County on Saturday. Sen. Clinton won 70 percent of the vote there yesterday.
In Abington, according to Southwest Virginia Today [3], Clinton spoke to a "beyond-capacity crowd." Mark Sage wrote that the former president told the gathering that Hillary "would push for clean, independent energy "“ including solar, wind, biomass and, to a round of thundering applause from the largely Southwest Virginia crowd, clean coal technology "“ creating jobs along the way."
Obama, meanwhile, ran especially strong in the exurban region between Richmond and Norfolk. He won Surry and Charles City counties more than 4 to 1 over Clinton, and the independent city of Petersburg, south of Richmond, by 6-1.

Links:
[1] http://www.dailyyonder.com/super-tuesday-clinton-and-mccain-take-rural-vote
[2] http://www.therepublicannews.com/
[3] http://www.dailyyonder.com/www.swvatoday.com/comments/clinton_stumps_in_abingdon/news/1673