Jena Sandlin puts on a
Caption

Jena Sandlin puts on a "I'm a Georgia Voter" sticker after voting during Georgia's primary election at the polling station at South Lowndes Recreation Complex in Lake Park, Ga., Tuesday, March 1, 2016.

Donald Trump is the winner of Georgia's Republican presidential primary, while Democratic voters turned out overwhelmingly for Hillary Clinton.

GPB’s Bradley George breaks down the numbers.

As of 10:30 Wednesday morning, Trump has nearly 501,624 votes, or nearly 39 percent.

Preliminary results from the Secretary of State show Trump carried almost every county. An Associated Press estimate says he will win more than half of the state's 76 delegates.

Florida Senator Marco Rubio won the the most votes in Fulton, DeKalb, and Cobb, and Clarke counties, but came in second overall with 315,954 votes.

Texas Senator Ted Cruz came in third, with 305,087 votes.  Despite his third place finish, Cruz will end up with more delegates than Rubio, according to the AJC:

More than likely, this means that the Cruz campaign was successful in concentrating its votes within specific congressional districts – which is the basis for the largest part of delegate distribution in Georgia. But we’re not sure.

71 percent of Democratic voters (542,632) picked former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. 28 percent (214,311) voted for Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders.

Looking at county results, Clinton’s margin of victory was huge--above 70 percent or more.  Sanders won a single county-Echols-by four votes (70 people voted in the Democratic primary there). He came within 244 votes of winning in Clarke County.

Turnout was up for Republicans. 1,292,451 voted in the GOP primary, according to the Secretary of State. That's a 43 percent increase from 2012 and up 34 percent from 2008.  760,817 Democrats voted in this year's primary, down 28 percent from 2008.