MANCHESTER, N.H. - Arizona Sen. John McCain, near broke and far behind several months ago, won Tuesday's New Hampshire Republican primary and climbed back into the race for his party's presidential nomination as he headed to upcoming contests that could be tougher battles for him.
"Mac is back. Mac is back," McCain supporters chanted as the victory became clear.
Yes, he said, he is. "We showed the people of this country what a real comeback looks like," he said before addressing supporters. "We're going to move on to Michigan and South Carolina and win the nomination."
McCain had a 5 percentage-point lead over Mitt Romney, the former governor of next-door Massachusetts and owner of a New Hampshire vacation home. Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, last week's winner in Iowa, was a distant third.
"Who'd have thought it last summer?" said Dartmouth political scientist Linda Fowler. She still sees McCain facing major challenges in getting the nomination.
The GOP race, she said, is "wild and woolly" and could remain so until Feb. 5, when a long list of states have primaries.
The New Hampshire race largely was a McCain-Romney battle, with Huckabee, a former Arkansas governor, acknowledging that the lack of evangelical voters made him a long shot. Exit polls showed that 29 percent of GOP voters identified themselves as evangelicals. In Iowa, it was 60 percent.
Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani largely skipped New Hampshire and stuck with a strategy keyed on later races.