TOLEDO, Ohio — Dennis Kucinich is out and Marcy Kaptur has captured the Democratic primary in the new 9th District, according to data analysis from cleveland.com

Kaptur, the longest-serving woman in Congress, has apparently won the Democratic primary.

According to the

, Kaptur had won four of the five counties -- except for Cuyahoga -- although not all of the ballots have been counted in the five-county district.

But based on the vote totals around 11:15 p.m., even a big win in Cuyahoga County would not be enough for Kucinich to overtake Kaptur.

A big reason is that Kaptur carried 94 percent of the vote in her home Lucas County, while Kucinich won 73 percent of the vote on his home turf, Cuyahoga County

Kaptur had arrived at a laborer's hall in Toledo late tonight and she essentially declared victory.

"I thought it was ours to win," she said, but made a point in her speech to assure Kucinich supporters in the Cleveland area that she would take care of them.

"I understand that it takes awhile for people to get used to you," she said. "People in Cuyahoga County don't have to worry. I will pay attention to them, too."

Her campaign manager, Steve Fought, was more direct: "We defeated Dennis Kucinich!" Kucinich and his supporters were at a West Side Cleveland restaurant, where he finally conceded the race just after midnight, according to the Associated Press.

Kucinich said Kaptur "ran a campaign lacking in integrity, filled with false truths."

"Now I would like to be able to congratulate Congresswoman Kaptur, but I do have to say that she ran a campaign in the Cleveland media market that was utterly lacking in integrity with false statements, half-truths and misrepresentations."

Kucinich said he was going to get back to work Wednesday. He is talking to people who worked on his campaign and thanking them privately.

"When Elizabeth and I began this campaign, we said that we were married to each other but not an outcome," he said. "We knew full well that redistricting was going to impose some challenges."

Khalid Samad, a local community activist, said the congressman's potential loss will impact the county. He supports Kucinich and was at Rubin's Deli.

"I think it is a shame you have state legislators who are so narrow-minded they would redistrict congressional areas to benefit their party affiliation," Samad said.

He said the congressman speaks for working people and against corporations that have "gutted our community."

"Not to take anything away from the other candidate, but [state legislators] put a bulls-eye on his back."

The battle between the two incumbents took place in the new 9th Congressional District. It stretches along the Lake Erie shoreline -- from Kaptur's longtime Toledo base to Kucinich's base in Cleveland and its western suburbs.

The once-friendly colleagues had been embroiled in a fight for several months, but last week, things got even testier as a

paying for television ads that hammered away at Kaptur.

Political newcomer

, 29, a Cleveland entrepreneur, had a disappointing showing. Veysey has presented himself as a change of pace with fresh ideas to solve problems such as poverty and the national deficit.

Veysey's video production company produced a

A news story on foxtoledo.com, however, said that Kaptur's campaign was agitated because as many as several dozen voters apparently incorrectly received ballots for the 5th Congressional District instead of the 9th Congressional District.

Reporters Thomas Ott and Stan Donaldson contributed to this story.