Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

2016 United States presidential election in Indiana

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2016 United States presidential election in Indiana

← 2012
November 8, 2016
2020 →
Turnout57.9%[1]
 
NomineeDonald TrumpHillary Clinton
PartyRepublicanDemocratic
Home stateNew YorkNew York
Running mateMike PenceTim Kaine
Electoral vote110
Popular vote1,557,2861,033,126
Percentage56.94%37.77%

County results
Congressional district results
Precinct results

Trump

  40–50%
  50–60%
  60–70%
  70–80%
  80–90%
  90–100%

Clinton

  40–50%
  50–60%
  60–70%
  70–80%
  80–90%
  90–100%

Tie/No Data

  
  


President before election

Barack Obama
Democratic

Elected President

Donald Trump
Republican

Main article:2016 United States presidential election
Treemap of the popular vote by county.
Elections in Indiana
Presidential elections
Presidential primaries
Democratic
1996
2000
2004
2008
2016
2020
Republican
2008
2012
2016
2020
2024
U.S. Senate elections
U.S. House of Representatives elections

Apresidential election was held inIndiana on Tuesday, November 8, 2016, as part of the2016 United States presidential election in which all 50 states plus theDistrict of Columbia participated.Indiana voters chose electors to represent them in theElectoral College via a popular vote, pitting theRepublican Party's nominee, businessmanDonald Trump, and running mateIndiana GovernorMike Pence againstDemocratic Party nominee, formerSecretary of StateHillary Clinton, and her running mate VirginiaSenatorTim Kaine. Indiana has 11 electoral votes in the Electoral College.[2]

Trump won the state with 56.94% of the vote, while Clinton received 37.77%.[3] Indiana is the home state of Pence, which was believed to have provided assistance to the Trump campaign in what already would have been a Republican-leaning state.

Primary elections

[edit]

Democratic primary

[edit]
County results of the 2016 Indiana Democratic presidential primary.
  Bernie Sanders
  Hillary Clinton
Main article:2016 Indiana Democratic presidential primary

Two candidates appeared on the Democratic presidential primary ballot:

Indiana Democratic primary, May 3, 2016
CandidatePopular voteEstimated delegates
CountPercentagePledgedUnpledgedTotal
Bernie Sanders335,07452.46%44044
Hillary Clinton303,70547.54%39746
UncommittedN/a022
Total638,779100%83992
Source:[4]

Republican primary

[edit]
  Donald Trump
  Ted Cruz
Main article:2016 Indiana Republican presidential primary

Twelve candidates appeared on the Republican presidential primary ballot:

Indiana Republican primary, May 3, 2016
CandidateVotesPercentageActual delegate count
BoundUnboundTotal
Donald Trump591,51453.26%57057
Ted Cruz406,78336.63%000
John Kasich84,1117.57%000
Ben Carson(withdrawn)8,9140.80%000
Jeb Bush(withdrawn)6,5080.59%000
Marco Rubio(withdrawn)5,1750.47%000
Rand Paul(withdrawn)4,3060.39%000
Chris Christie(withdrawn)1,7380.16%000
Carly Fiorina(withdrawn)1,4940.13%000
Unprojected delegates:000
Total:1,110,543100.00%57057
Source:The Green Papers

General election

[edit]

Polling

[edit]
See also:Statewide opinion polling for the 2016 United States presidential election § Indiana

Donald Trump won every pre-election poll conducted by at least 5 points, and often by double digits. The average of the last 3 polls showed Trump ahead of Hillary Clinton 49% to 38%.[5] Donald Trump had won almost all the undecided vote, as shown by the results where he won 56% to 37%.

Predictions

[edit]
SourceRankingAs of
CNN[6]Safe RNovember 4, 2016
Cook Political Report[7]Likely RNovember 7, 2016
Electoral-vote.com[8]Safe RNovember 7, 2016
NBC[9]Lean RNovember 7, 2016
RealClearPolitics[10]Likely RNovember 7, 2016
Rothenberg Political Report[11]Lean RNovember 7, 2016
Sabato's Crystal Ball[12]Safe RNovember 7, 2016

Results

[edit]
2016 United States presidential election in Indiana[13]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanDonald Trump
Mike Pence
1,557,28656.94%+2.81%
DemocraticHillary Clinton
Tim Kaine
1,033,12637.77%−6.16%
LibertarianGary Johnson
Bill Weld
133,9934.90%+2.99%
GreenJill Stein (write-in)
Ajamu Baraka
7,8410.29%+0.27%
ConstitutionDarrell Castle (write-in)
Scott Bradley
1,9370.07%+0.06%
Write-in7750.03%+0.03%
Total votes2,734,958100.00%

By congressional district

[edit]

Trump won seven of nine congressional districts.[14]

DistrictTrumpClintonRepresentative
1st41%53%Pete Visclosky
2nd58%35%Jackie Walorski
3rd64%30%Marlin Stutzman
4th63%30%Todd Rokita
5th52%41%Susan Brooks
6th67%27%Luke Messer
7th36%58%André Carson
8th64%31%Larry Bucshon
9th60%34%Todd Young

By county

[edit]
CountyDonald Trump
Republican
Hillary Clinton
Democratic
Various candidates
Other parties
MarginTotal
#%#%#%#%
Adams9,64873.12%2,80521.26%7415.62%6,84351.86%13,194
Allen83,93056.47%55,38237.26%9,3206.27%28,54819.21%148,632
Bartholomew20,64063.09%9,84130.08%2,2366.83%10,79933.01%32,717
Benton2,57969.93%86023.32%2496.75%1,71946.61%3,688
Blackford3,35068.63%1,24325.47%2885.90%2,10743.16%4,881
Boone19,65460.41%10,18131.29%2,7028.30%9,47329.12%32,537
Brown5,01662.69%2,51831.47%4675.84%2,49831.22%8,001
Carroll6,27372.10%1,89221.74%5366.16%4,38150.36%8,701
Cass9,70168.27%3,75926.46%7495.27%5,94241.81%14,209
Clark30,03557.99%18,80836.32%2,9465.69%11,22721.67%51,789
Clay8,53175.26%2,30620.34%4984.40%6,22554.92%11,335
Clinton8,53171.15%2,81923.51%6415.34%5,71247.64%11,991
Crawford3,01564.95%1,32328.50%3046.55%1,69236.45%4,642
Daviess8,54578.98%1,80016.64%4744.38%6,74562.34%10,819
Dearborn18,11375.06%4,88320.24%1,1354.70%13,23054.82%24,131
Decatur8,49075.95%2,12118.97%5675.08%6,36956.98%11,178
DeKalb12,05470.92%3,94223.19%1,0005.89%8,11247.73%16,996
Delaware24,26353.31%18,15339.89%3,0936.80%6,11013.42%45,509
Dubois13,36566.51%5,38926.82%1,3416.67%7,97639.69%20,095
Elkhart41,86763.21%20,74031.31%3,6325.48%21,12731.90%66,239
Fayette6,83971.25%2,25223.46%5075.29%4,58747.79%9,598
Floyd21,43256.64%13,94536.85%2,4656.51%7,48719.79%37,842
Fountain5,66275.15%1,47619.59%3965.26%4,18655.56%7,534
Franklin8,66978.12%1,96917.74%4594.14%6,70060.38%11,097
Fulton6,01071.23%1,96023.23%4675.54%4,05048.00%8,437
Gibson11,08171.56%3,72124.03%6824.41%7,36047.53%15,484
Grant17,00866.51%7,01027.41%1,5546.08%9,99839.10%25,572
Greene10,27774.14%2,92921.13%6554.73%7,34853.01%13,861
Hamilton87,40456.04%57,26336.72%11,2997.24%30,14119.32%155,966
Hancock25,07468.76%8,90424.42%2,4906.82%16,17044.34%36,468
Harrison12,94369.74%4,78325.77%8324.49%8,16043.97%18,558
Hendricks48,33763.45%22,60029.67%5,2476.88%25,73733.78%76,184
Henry13,89568.48%5,12425.25%1,2716.27%8,77143.23%20,290
Howard23,67563.40%11,21530.03%2,4526.57%12,46033.37%37,342
Huntington11,64971.99%3,50621.67%1,0266.34%8,14350.32%16,181
Jackson12,85972.79%3,84321.75%9655.46%9,01651.04%17,667
Jasper9,38269.61%3,32924.70%7675.69%6,05344.91%13,478
Jay5,69771.02%1,88923.55%4365.43%3,80847.47%8,022
Jefferson8,54662.59%4,32631.69%7815.72%4,22030.90%13,653
Jennings8,22473.23%2,36421.05%6435.72%5,86052.18%11,231
Johnson45,45667.70%17,31825.79%4,3736.51%28,13841.91%67,147
Knox11,07771.00%3,77224.18%7534.82%7,30546.82%15,602
Kosciusko23,93573.78%6,31319.46%2,1936.76%17,62254.32%32,441
LaGrange7,02572.68%2,08021.52%5615.80%4,94551.16%9,666
Lake75,62537.29%116,93557.66%10,2435.05%-41,310-20.37%202,803
LaPorte22,68749.74%19,79843.41%3,1246.85%2,8896.33%45,609
Lawrence14,03572.95%4,21021.88%9935.17%9,82551.07%19,238
Madison32,37659.54%18,59534.20%3,4076.26%13,78125.34%54,378
Marion130,36035.53%212,89958.03%23,6206.44%-82,539-22.50%366,879
Marshall12,28867.36%4,79826.30%1,1556.34%7,49041.06%18,241
Martin3,69776.29%88118.18%2685.53%2,81658.11%4,846
Miami9,97573.34%2,76620.34%8606.32%7,20953.00%13,601
Monroe20,59235.23%34,21658.53%3,6466.24%-13,624-23.30%58,454
Montgomery11,05972.41%3,36222.01%8515.58%7,69750.40%15,272
Morgan23,67475.28%6,04019.21%1,7325.51%17,63456.07%31,446
Newton4,07769.57%1,40423.96%3796.47%2,67345.61%5,860
Noble12,19871.32%3,90422.83%1,0025.85%8,29448.49%17,104
Ohio2,11872.51%68623.49%1174.00%1,43249.02%2,921
Orange5,80370.10%2,04824.74%4275.16%3,75545.36%8,278
Owen6,15371.41%1,94622.59%5176.00%4,20748.82%8,616
Parke4,86373.28%1,44121.71%3325.01%3,42251.57%6,636
Perry4,55656.30%3,06237.84%4745.86%1,49418.46%8,092
Pike4,39873.58%1,29721.70%2824.72%3,10151.88%5,977
Porter38,83249.62%33,67643.03%5,7587.35%5,1566.59%78,266
Posey8,40466.74%3,52127.96%6675.30%4,88338.78%12,592
Pulaski3,85470.60%1,32724.31%2785.09%2,52746.29%5,459
Putnam10,63771.78%3,35622.65%8255.57%7,28149.13%14,818
Randolph7,51771.43%2,44623.24%5605.33%5,07148.19%10,523
Ripley9,80675.81%2,47119.10%6585.09%7,33556.71%12,935
Rush5,29272.83%1,52520.99%4496.18%3,76751.84%7,266
Scott6,07466.40%2,64228.88%4314.72%3,43237.52%9,147
Shelby12,71870.34%4,24723.49%1,1156.17%8,47146.85%18,080
Spencer6,57265.41%2,86128.47%6156.12%3,71136.94%10,048
St. Joseph52,02146.51%52,25246.72%7,5696.77%-231-0.21%111,842
Starke6,36768.34%2,48926.72%4604.94%3,87841.62%9,316
Steuben10,13368.87%3,74425.45%8375.68%6,38943.42%14,714
Sullivan6,13871.26%2,11324.53%3624.21%4,02546.73%8,613
Switzerland2,55868.97%93025.07%2215.96%1,62843.90%3,709
Tippecanoe30,76848.57%27,28243.07%5,2928.36%3,4865.50%63,342
Tipton5,58974.42%1,58721.13%3344.45%4,00253.29%7,510
Union2,44573.76%71521.57%1554.67%1,73052.19%3,315
Vanderburgh40,49655.19%28,53038.88%4,3495.93%11,96616.31%73,375
Vermillion4,51364.72%2,08129.84%3795.44%2,43234.88%6,973
Vigo21,93754.67%15,93139.70%2,2595.63%6,00614.97%40,127
Wabash9,82172.47%3,01822.27%7135.26%6,80350.20%13,552
Warren2,89873.31%83921.22%2165.47%2,05952.09%3,953
Warrick19,11363.84%9,08630.35%1,7415.81%10,02733.49%29,940
Washington8,20972.12%2,63623.16%5374.72%5,57348.96%11,382
Wayne16,02862.66%8,32232.53%1,2294.81%7,70630.13%25,579
Wells10,00575.30%2,58619.46%6965.24%7,41955.84%13,287
White6,89368.27%2,59025.65%6146.08%4,30342.62%10,097
Whitley11,35872.07%3,37921.44%1,0226.49%7,97950.63%15,759
Totals1,557,28656.42%1,033,12637.43%169,9636.15%524,16018.99%2,760,375
Swing by county
Legend
  •   Democratic — +>15%
  •   Democratic — +12.5-15%
  •   Democratic — +7.5-10%
  •   Democratic — +5-7.5%
  •   Democratic — +2.5-5%
  •   Democratic — +0-2.5%
  •   Republican — +0-2.5%
  •   Republican — +2.5-5%
  •   Republican — +5-7.5%
  •   Republican — +7.5-10%
  •   Republican — +10-12.5%
  •   Republican — +12.5-15%
  •   Republican — +>15%
Trend relative to the state by county
Legend
  •   Democratic — +>15%
  •   Democratic — +12.5-15%
  •   Democratic — +7.5-10%
  •   Democratic — +5-7.5%
  •   Democratic — +2.5-5%
  •   Democratic — +0-2.5%
  •   Republican — +0-2.5%
  •   Republican — +2.5-5%
  •   Republican — +5-7.5%
  •   Republican — +7.5-10%
  •   Republican — +10-12.5%
  •   Republican — +12.5-15%
  •   Republican — +>15%
County flips
Legend
  • Democratic

      Hold

    Republican

      Hold
      Gain from Democratic

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

Analysis

[edit]
Indiana GovernorMike Pence ran as Donald Trump's running-mate

Of the 2,760,375 votes cast, Donald Trump won 1,557,286 votes, Hillary Clinton won 1,033,126 votes and Gary Johnson won 133,993 votes.[15] Indiana has historically been the most conservative state in the Rust Belt. It wentDemocratic forBarack Obama in2008—the first time it had done so since1964, and only the fourth time since1912. However, it has shifted back to being solidlyRepublican. Republican nomineeDonald Trump carried the state by 19 points over DemocratHillary Clinton,[16] thus gaining all of Indiana's 11electoral votes.

Donald Trump's victory in Indiana can be attributed to several factors. For one, Donald Trump had selectedIndiana governorMike Pence as his running mate, effectively eliminating any chance that Clinton could repeat Obama's surprise upset win in the state overJohn McCain eight years prior. Also, the state skewswhiter and moreEvangelical Protestant than the rest of theMidwest and theRust Belt overall, which is a better demographic make-up for Republicans; Trump won white born-agains and evangelicals by a margin of 75–22.[17]

Suburban communities in the "doughnut counties" surroundingIndianapolis lean heavily Republican, and bolstered the Trump-Pence ticket in the state. Many of these voters are bothfiscally andsocially conservative. Another GOP stronghold that benefited Trump was thenortheast region aroundFort Wayne, which is a mix of suburban,exurban andrural areas, and is home to some of the most socially conservative voters in the nation.

InSouthern Indiana along theOhio River, especially aroundEvansville inVanderburgh County, the electorate is dominated by "Butternut Democrats" - socially conservative,working-classwhite voters who were Democrats for generations but have been trending Republican in reaction to the increased social liberalism of national Democrats.[18] Such voters turned out for Trump in full force, inspired by his economic populism and by Pence's social conservatism.

Trump also won inVigo County, home toTerre Haute and a notedbellwether; it has voted for the winner of every presidential election all but twice since1892. Clinton, for her part, performed well inIndianapolis inMarion County and inGary inLake County, which has a largeAfrican American population and is considered part of theChicago Metropolitan Area. Clinton wonAfrican Americans by a margin of 83–12. She also wonSt. Joseph andMonroe counties, home to theUniversity of Notre Dame andIndiana University, respectively. Areas, where Clinton improved on Obama's performance in2012, were predominantly located in well-educated suburbs of Indianapolis and areas surrounding large universities, where several socially moderate Republicans chose not to vote for Trump out of discomfort for his controversial views on race and women.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Voter turnout in United States elections".Ballotpedia. RetrievedAugust 3, 2022.
  2. ^"Distribution of Electoral Votes".National Archives and Records Administration. September 19, 2019. RetrievedNovember 25, 2020.
  3. ^"FEDERAL ELECTIONS 2016 -- Election Results for the U.S. President, the U.S. Senate and the U.S. House of Representatives"(PDF).Federal Election Commission. December 2017. RetrievedAugust 12, 2020.
  4. ^The Green Papers - Official Primary Results
  5. ^"RealClearPolitics - Election 2016 - Indiana: Trump vs. Clinton".
  6. ^Chalian, David (November 4, 2016)."Road to 270: CNN's new election map".CNN. RetrievedFebruary 17, 2019.
  7. ^"2016 Electoral Scorecard".The Cook Political Report. November 7, 2016. Archived fromthe original on February 7, 2019. RetrievedFebruary 17, 2019.
  8. ^"2016 Predicted Electoral Map".Electoral-vote.com. RetrievedFebruary 17, 2019.
  9. ^Todd, Chuck (November 7, 2016)."NBC's final battleground map shows a lead for Clinton".NBC News. RetrievedFebruary 17, 2019.
  10. ^"2016 Election Maps - Battle for White House".RealClearPolitics. RetrievedFebruary 17, 2019.
  11. ^"Presidential Ratings". The Rothenberg Political Report. RetrievedAugust 16, 2021.
  12. ^Sabato, Larry (November 7, 2016)."The Crystal Ball's 2016 Electoral College ratings".University of Virginia Center for Politics. RetrievedFebruary 12, 2019.
  13. ^"Candidate List".Indiana Secretary of State. RetrievedNovember 6, 2020.
  14. ^"DRA 2020".Daves Redistricting. RetrievedAugust 29, 2025.
  15. ^"2016 Presidential General Election Results".
  16. ^"Indiana Election Results 2016".New York Times. RetrievedNovember 12, 2016.
  17. ^"2016 election results: Indiana Exit polls". CNN. RetrievedNovember 12, 2016.
  18. ^Cohen, Micah (October 19, 2012)."After Brief Role as Battleground, Indiana Exits, Stage Right".FiveThirtyEight. RetrievedNovember 12, 2016.

External links

[edit]
U.S.
President
U.S.
Senate
U.S.
House

(Election
ratings
)
Governors
Attorneys
general
State
legislatures
Mayors
Local
Statewide
Republican Party
AIP ·CPNY ·RTLP
Candidates
Democratic Party
WEP ·WFP
Candidates
Libertarian Party
IPNY
Candidates
Green Party
Candidates
Independents
IPMN
American Delta Party
Reform
American Party (South Carolina)
American Solidarity Party
America's Party
Constitution Party
Nominee
Darrell Castle
campaign
VP nominee:Scott Bradley
Other candidates
Tom Hoefling
Nutrition Party
Peace and Freedom Party
PSL
Prohibition Party
Socialist Action
Socialist Equality Party
Socialist Party USA
Socialist Workers Party
Pacifist Party
Workers World Party
Other Independent candidates
* : These candidates were constitutionally ineligible to serve as President or Vice President.
State and district results of the2016 United States presidential election
Electoral map, 2016 election
Election timelines
National opinion polling
Democratic Party
2008
2016
2020
2024
Republican Party
2008
2012
2016
2020
2024
State opinion polling
Democratic Party
2004
2008
2016
2020
2024
Republican Party
2008
2012
2016
2020
2024
Fundraising
Debates and forums
Straw polls
Major events
Caucuses
andprimaries
Democratic Party
Republican Party
Libertarian Party
Green Party
Reform Party
Constitution Party
Results breakdown
National
conventions
Democratic Party
Republican Party
Libertarian Party
Green Party
Defunct
Whig Party
Greenback Party
Populist Party
Progressive parties
Reforms
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2016_United_States_presidential_election_in_Indiana&oldid=1329072891"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp