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2016 Vermont Democratic presidential primary

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2016 Vermont Democratic presidential primary

← 2012
March 1, 2016 (2016-03-01)
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CandidateBernie SandersHillary Clinton
Home stateVermontNew York
Delegate count160
Popular vote115,90018,338
Percentage85.69%13.56%

County results
Municipality results
Sanders:     70–80%     80–90%     >90%
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The2016 Vermont Democratic presidential primary was held on March 1, 2016, in the state ofVermont as one of theDemocratic Party's primaries ahead of the2016 presidential election.

On the same day, dubbed "Super Tuesday,"Democratic primaries were held in ten other states plusAmerican Samoa, while theRepublican Party held primaries in eleven states including their ownVermont primary.

SenatorBernie Sanders took a very strong victory in his home state, receiving over 85% of the vote and winning all 16 of the state's pledged delegates.

Opinion polling

[edit]
See also:Statewide opinion polling for the 2016 Democratic Party presidential primaries
Poll sourceDate1st2ndOther
Official Primary results[1]March 1, 2016Bernie Sanders
85.7%
Hillary Clinton
13.6%
Others / Uncommitted
0.8%
The Castleton Polling Institute[2]

Margin of error: ± 3.27
Sample size: 895

February 3–17, 2016Bernie Sanders
83.1%
Hillary Clinton
9.0%
Others / Undecided 7.9%
Public Policy Polling[3]

Margin of error: ± 3.7
Sample size: 500

February 14–16, 2016Bernie Sanders
86%
Hillary Clinton
10%
Castleton University[4]

Margin of error: ± 4%
Sample size: 617

August 24 – September 14, 2015Bernie Sanders
65%
Hillary Clinton
14%
Others 10%, Not sure 11%
Castleton University[5]

Margin of error: ± 3.8%
Sample size: 653

October 10, 2014Bernie Sanders
36%
Hillary Clinton
29%
Neither 29%, Not sure 5%, Refused 1%

Results

[edit]
Sanders presidential campaign kickoff in his home state of Vermont, May 2015. Sanders would go on to win Vermont with over 85% of the vote.
Vermont participates in the roll call vote at the2016 Democratic National Convention
See also:Results of the 2016 Democratic Party presidential primaries

Primary date: March 1, 2016
National delegates: 26

Vermont Democratic primary, March 1, 2016
CandidatePopular voteEstimated delegates
CountPercentagePledgedUnpledgedTotal
Bernie Sanders115,90085.69%16622
Hillary Clinton18,33813.56%044
Martin O'Malley(withdrawn)2820.21%
Roque "Rocky" De La Fuente800.06%
Total blank votes2600.19%
Total write-ins2380.18%
Total spoiled votes1580.12%
UncommittedN/a000
Total135,256100%161026
Source:[6][7]

Results by county

[edit]
CountyClinton%Sanders%OthersTotalsTurnoutMargin
Addison1,11112.5%7,73287.0%
Bennington1,25517.9%5,65180.5%
Caledonia52710.2%4,59889.0%
Chittenden5,68714.9%32,24484.5%
Essex14113.5%89085.1%
Franklin77810.2%6,74688.8%
Grand Isle23313.1%1,52985.6%
Lamoille57411.3%4,47188.0%
Orange64610.7%5,40288.8%
Orleans47211.7%3,54087.6%
Rutland1,58414.3%9,35484.6%
Washington1,71712.2%12,31387.1%
Windham1,41612.2%10,08587.2%
Windsor2,19716.1%11,34583.3%
Total18,33813.6%115,90085.7%

Analysis

[edit]

Bernie Sanders won his largest victory of the entire 2016 primary season in his home state of Vermont, routing Hillary Clinton by a 72-point margin and therefore blocking her from collecting any pledged delegates from the state. He carried every county in the state. Sanders won all major demographics—age, gender, income and educational attainment levels. The electorate in Vermont was 95% white, with voters backing Sanders 86–13.[8]

After voting in the primary, Sanders said of his chances in other Super Tuesday contests: "I am confident that if there is a large voter turnout today across this country, we will do well [...] If not we're going to be struggling."[9]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Official Primary results
  2. ^"Subject: The VPR Poll: The Races, The Issues And The Full Results".
  3. ^"Subject: Clinton leads in 10 of 12 Early March Primaries; Benefits From Overwhelming Black Support"(PDF).
  4. ^"Poll: Bernie Sanders popular in Vt., even among Republicans · Castleton College". Wcax.com. RetrievedSeptember 18, 2015.
  5. ^"Vermont Election Poll – 2014". Castleton.edu. RetrievedJuly 10, 2015.
  6. ^The Green Papers
  7. ^Vermont Secretary of State
  8. ^"2016 Election Center".CNN. March 1, 2016. RetrievedSeptember 25, 2016.
  9. ^Martin, Jacquelyn (March 1, 2016)."Bernie Sanders Wins Vermont".U.S. News & World Report. RetrievedSeptember 25, 2016.
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