Younger voters choose 'uncommitted' over Clinton

CNN) -- While Sen. Hillary Clinton won a majority of Michigan Democratic primary votes Tuesday, young voters favored the "uncommitted" choice, exit polling showed.
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Sen. Hillary Clinton did not remove her name from the ballot in the Michigan Democratic primary.

According to CNN exit polling, 48 percent of voters ages 18-29 voted for "uncommitted." Thirty-nine percent supported Clinton and 9 percent voted for Democratic Rep. Dennis Kucinich.

Of voters ages 30-44, 48 percent also chose "uncommitted" and 46 percent went with Clinton, exit polls said.

Clinton was the only top-tier presidential candidate on the ballot in Michigan's Democratic primary and she carried 58 percent of the overall vote.

But 37 percent of the voters in the Democratic primary chose to vote uncommitted.

Michigan's decision to move its primary to January 15 angered national Democratic Party officials who were trying to slow the "front-loading" by states of the primary process.

Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois and former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards withdrew from the ballot as a show of solidarity, leaving a ballot of Clinton, Rep. Dennis Kucinich of Ohio, former Sen. Mike Gravel of Alaska and Sen. Chris Dodd of Connecticut, who later withdrew from the race.

Under state law, supporters of other candidates cannot cast write-in votes for them.

Recently, some Democratic leaders had urged Obama and Edwards supporters to vote "uncommitted" as a sign of support for their candidates.

If at least 15 percent of the voters in a congressional district opt for "uncommitted," delegates not bound to any candidate could attend the national convention.

That could allow supporters of Edwards or Obama to play a role in candidate selection -- if the national party changes its mind and decides to count Michigan's delegates.

"The bottom line is the Clinton people have managed to circumvent the process," former Michigan Sen. Don Riegle -- an Obama supporter -- told The Detroit News.

"Democrats should show there is a large number of people who don't like the railroad job they're trying to do for Hillary Clinton," he said.

A new group, Detroiters for Uncommitted Voters, started a grassroots campaign to promote the "uncommitted" option.

Democratic Rep. John Conyers and his wife, Detroit City Councilwoman Monica Conyers, said they would launch ads calling for "uncommitted" votes if there was no other way to register support for Barack Obama, The Detroit News reported last week.

The option was also endorsed by Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan and state Democratic Party Chair Mark Brewer as a way for Democrats who do not support Clinton to participate in the vote.

Neither man has endorsed a presidential candidate.

In 2008, more than in recent campaigns, the delegate count may prove important.

Narrow losses -- which still add to a candidate's delegate total -- could keep more than one hopeful in contention. "For the first time since 1988, this is a delegate race," Clinton aide Howard Wolfson said last week.

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