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Less than 20 percent of all Kentucky voters showed up Tuesday to the polls.App users: Tap here to view Kentucky presidential primary resultsKentucky ballots featured a Democratic presidential primary, U.S. Senate, U.S. House of Representatives, state senate and house of representatives and various local races.Click here to see local Kentucky primary resultsVoters and poll workers blamed low turnout on rain and a lack of a Republican presidential primary.Don't Miss: Interactive Kentucky Primary Votes Map Kentucky Primary Vote Results: Statewide | By County Presidential Delegate Count: National Delegate TrackerTurnout was higher in Jefferson County, which saw 25 percent participation. A power outage at one polling place caused a delay in results until 10:30 p.m. Workers from the county board of elections had to travel to the polling place to retrieve ballots.Presidential primary races:39596500Hillary Clinton declared victory in Kentucky's Democratic presidential primary, but her race with Bernie Sanders still remains too close to call.Clinton said in a statement posted on Twitter that she just won the state's primary and thanks "everyone who turned out." She said, "We're always stronger united."The margin between the two is less than one-half of 1 percent, which means the race is too close to call.The tight margin means that the two will split the state's delegates fairly evenly.With 55 delegates at stake, Clinton and Sanders will each pick up at least 25.Five delegates remain to be allocated, pending final vote tallies.The Sanders campaign is not immediately saying whether it will challenge the results. Kentucky does not have an automatic recount.The outcomes in Tuesday's primaries in Kentucky and Oregon are not expected to change the arc of the Democratic race.If Sanders still hopes to reach the 2,383 needed to win, he would have to pick up an overwhelming 88 percent of the remaining delegates and uncommitted superdelegates. That's all but impossible under the Democrats' system of awarding delegates in proportion to the vote, rather than winner-takes-all.Republican voters cast ballots for their presidential nominee during a caucus in March. The caucus was held separately to allow Sen. Rand Paul to run for president and senate in the same year. Paul dropped out of the presidential race before the Kentucky caucus. Donald Trump came out the winner in Kentucky.38340406Senate primary race:Republican senate39573818Paul faced two challengers in his quest for reelection to his Senate seat, but pulled away an easy victory.Democratic senate39596524Meanwhile, seven Democrats battled it out for a chance to face Paul in the general election in November.Lexington Mayor Jim Gray claimed the nomination, giving his party a wealthy candidate with a business pedigree to take on Paul in a state trending toward the GOP.Gray touted his city hall experience and background in helping build his family's successful construction company.1st Congressional DistrictJames Comer won the Republican nomination in Kentucky's 1st Congressional District one year after a close loss in the GOP primary for governor.39574200Comer wants to replace retiring U.S. Rep. Ed Whitfield, who has held the seat since 1995. Comer defeated Michael Pape, Whitfield's district director for two decades, Hickman County Attorney Jason Batts and military veteran Miles A. Caughey Jr.3rd Congressional District:Three men ran for the chance to unseat current U.S. Rep. John Yarmuth in Kentucky's 3rd Congressional District.39575080Harold Bratcher, who has joked that his only experience in politics came when his kids ran for class president, has won the GOP nod to challenge five-term Democratic Congressman John Yarmuth in November.Bratcher, 43, runs a small trucking company in Louisville and campaigned on being a political outsider. He pledges to bring jobs back to the United States, reform the tax code and close the nation's borders.He will face Yarmuth, who has represented the state's 3rd Congressional District for a decade, in the fall.Yarmuth, a former newspaper publisher, was first elected in 2006 and remains the only Democrat in Kentucky's congressional delegation.Yarmuth says his priorities have been to toughen campaign finance laws, combat gun violence and expand access to health care. He has handily won each of his re-election campaigns.See more local results by dropping down the menu below:App users: Tap here to view Kentucky presidential primary resultsKentucky Primary Results:39489630Adair County races: ResultsBreckinridge County races: ResultsBullitt County races: ResultsGrayson County races: ResultsHardin County races: ResultsHenry County races: ResultsJefferson County races: ResultsLaRue County races: ResultsMarion County races: ResultsMeade County races: ResultsOldham County races: ResultsShelby County races: ResultsTaylor County races: ResultsWashington County races: ResultsVisit our Politics section for more interactives and election news. Sign up for email newsletters with trending headlines.