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2020 United States presidential election in Nevada

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For related races, see2020 United States presidential election.
2020 United States presidential election in Nevada

← 2016November 3, 20202024 →
Turnout78.22%Increase
 
NomineeJoe BidenDonald Trump
PartyDemocraticRepublican
Home stateDelawareFlorida
Running mateKamala HarrisMike Pence
Electoral vote60
Popular vote703,486669,890
Percentage50.06%47.67%

County results
Congressional district results
Precinct results

Biden

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

Trump

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

Tie/No data

  
  


President before election

Donald Trump
Republican

Elected President

Joe Biden
Democratic

Elections in Nevada
U.S. President
U.S. Senate
U.S. House

None of These Candidates

flagNevada portal

The2020 United States presidential election in Nevada was held on Tuesday, November 3, 2020, as part of the2020 United States presidential election in which all 50 states plus theDistrict of Columbia participated.[1]Nevada voters chose electors to represent them in theElectoral College via a popular vote, pitting theRepublican Party's nominee, incumbent PresidentDonald Trump, and running mateVice PresidentMike Pence againstDemocratic Party nominee, former Vice PresidentJoe Biden, and his running mate California SenatorKamala Harris. Nevada has six votes in the Electoral College.[2]

Throughout the campaign, polls of the state generally showed a Biden lead, albeit with a sometimes slender margin. Before polling day, most news organizations considered that Nevada was leaning towards Biden. Biden carried Nevada by 2.39%, a slightly smaller margin thanHillary Clinton's 2.42% in2016, making it one of six states (along with Washington DC) in which Trump improved on his 2016 margin. Biden's somewhat narrow victory in Nevada also made it his weakest victory in a state that Hillary Clinton had won in 2016, as he carried all other such states by more than 7%.

Most counties in the state of Nevada are rural and sparsely populated, and voted heavily for Trump. However, Biden won the two most populous counties,Clark andWashoe, which make up almost 89% of Nevada's population.[3] The state's three largest cities are located in these counties:Las Vegas andHenderson in the former, andReno in the latter. His strength in these areas was likely due to high presence of minority and union voters: Biden's strength came from heavy turnout amongculinaryunions in populous Clark County, anchored by Las Vegas. Biden had the backing ofCulinary Union Local 226, based onright-to-work standards.[4] Additionally, Biden was able to win about 43% and 34% of votes in the tourism-heavyLake Tahoe areas ofCarson City andDouglas County respectively, sealing his victory in the state. Nevada weighed in for this election as 2.1% more Republican than the nation-at-large.

Caucuses

[edit]

Canceled Republican caucuses

[edit]
Further information:2020 Republican Party presidential primaries § Cancellation of state caucuses or primaries

On September 7, 2019, theNevada Republican Party became one of several state GOP parties to officially cancel their respective primaries and caucuses.[5] Donald Trump's re-election campaign and GOP officials have cited the fact that Republicans canceled several state primaries whenGeorge H. W. Bush andGeorge W. Bush sought a second term in1992 and2004, respectively; and Democrats scrapped some of their primaries whenBill Clinton andBarack Obama were seeking reelection in1996 and2012, respectively.[6][7] In August 2019, theAssociated Press quoted the state party spokesman, Keith Schipper, who stated it "isn't about any kind of conspiracy theory about protecting the president ... He's going to be the nominee ... This is about protecting resources to make sure that the president wins in Nevada and that Republicans up and down the ballot win in 2020."[8]

In lieu of conducting their caucuses, the state party's governing central committee instead formally held anAlternative Presidential Preference Poll on February 22, 2020,[9] votingby acclamation to officially bind all 25 of its national pledged delegates to Trump.[10][11]

Democratic caucuses

[edit]
This section is an excerpt from2020 Nevada Democratic presidential caucuses § NVresults.[edit]
popular vote
Final alignment popular vote share by county
  Sanders—30–40%
  Sanders—40–50%
  Sanders—60–70%
  Sanders—70–80%
  Buttigieg—<30%
  Buttigieg—30–40%
  Buttigieg—40–50%
county convention delegates
County convention delegates won by county
  Sanders—30–40%
  Sanders—40–50%
  Sanders—50–60%
  Sanders—70–80%
  Buttigieg—<30%
  Buttigieg—30–40%
  Buttigieg—40–50%
  Steyer—<30%
popular vote congressional
Final alignment popular vote share by congressional district
  Sanders—30–40%
  Sanders—40–50%
2020 Nevada Democratic presidential caucuses[12][13][14][15]
CandidateFirst
alignment
Final
alignment[a]
County
convention
delegates[b]
Pledged
national
convention

delegates[c]
Votes%Votes%Number%
Bernie Sanders35,65233.9941,07540.456,78846.8424
Joe Biden18,42417.5719,17918.892,92720.209
Pete Buttigieg16,10215.3517,59817.332,07314.313
Elizabeth Warren13,43812.8111,70311.531,4069.70
Tom Steyer9,5039.064,1204.066824.71
Amy Klobuchar10,1009.637,3767.266034.16
Tulsi Gabbard3530.34320.0340.03
Andrew Yang(withdrawn)6120.58490.0510.01
Michael Bennet(withdrawn)1400.13360.0400.00
Deval Patrick(withdrawn)860.0880.0100.00
John Delaney(withdrawn; not on the ballot)10.0000.0000.00
Uncommitted4720.453670.3670.05
Total104,883100%101,543100%14,491100%36

General election

[edit]

Final predictions

[edit]
SourceRanking
The Cook Political Report[16]Lean D
Inside Elections[17]Likely D
Sabato's Crystal Ball[18]Lean D
Politico[19]Lean D
RCP[20]Tossup
Niskanen[21]Safe D
CNN[22]Lean D
The Economist[23]Likely D
CBS News[24]Lean D
270towin[25]Lean D
ABC News[26]Lean D
NPR[27]Lean D
NBC News[28]Lean D
538[29]Likely D

Polling

[edit]

Graphical summary

[edit]
This graph was using thelegacy Graph extension, which is no longer supported. It needs to be converted to thenew Chart extension.


Aggregate polls

[edit]
Source of poll
aggregation
Dates
administered
Dates
updated
Joe
Biden

Democratic
Donald
Trump

Republican
Other/
Undecided
[d]
Margin
270 to Win[30]October 16–31, 2020November 1, 202049.4%44.4%6.2%Biden +5.0
Real Clear Politics[31]October 23 – November 2, 2020November 1, 202048.7%46.3%5.0%Biden +2.4
FiveThirtyEight[32]until November 2, 2020November 3, 202049.7%44.4%5.9%Biden +5.3
Average49.3%45.0%5.7%Biden +4.3

Polls

[edit]
Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size[e]
Margin
of error
Donald
Trump

Republican
Joe
Biden

Democratic
Jo
Jorgensen

Libertarian
OtherUndecided
Trafalgar Group[33]Oct 31 – Nov 2, 20201,024 (LV)± 2.98%49%48%1%1%[f]1%
SurveyMonkey/Axios[34]Oct 20 – Nov 2, 20202,366 (LV)± 3%49%[g]49%-
Data for Progress[35]Oct 27 – Nov 1, 20201,442 (LV)± 2.6%44%51%3%2%[h]
Emerson College[36]Oct 29–31, 2020720 (LV)± 3.6%47%49%-4%[i]
Trafalgar Group[37]Oct 28–29, 20201,024 (LV)± 2.98%47%49%2%1%[f]1%
Gravis Marketing[38]Oct 27–28, 2020688 (LV)± 3.7%44%50%6%
SurveyMonkey/Axios[34]Oct 1–28, 20203,333 (LV)49%50%-
Siena College/NYT Upshot[39]Oct 23–26, 2020809 (LV)± 3.8%43%49%3%2%[j]4%[k]
BUSR/University of Nevada[40]Oct 16–21,
Oct 23, 2020
809 (LV)± 4%41%50%
Civiqs/Daily Kos[41]Oct 17–20, 2020712 (LV)± 5.3%43%52%-3%[l]1%
WPA Intelligence/Las Vegas Review-Journal/AARP[42]Oct 7–11, 2020512 (LV)± 4.4%42%44%3%5%[m]6%
YouGov/CBS[43]Oct 6–9, 20201,036 (LV)± 4.1%46%52%-2%[n]0%
Siena College/NYT Upshot[44]Oct 2–6, 2020660 (LV)± 4.3%42%48%3%1%[o]6%[k]
SurveyMonkey/Axios[34]Sep 1–30, 20201,239 (LV)47%51%--2%
Pulse Opinion Research/Rasmussen Reports/American Greatness PAC[45][A]Sep 23–25, 2020750 (LV)48%49%-2%[p]1%
Qualtrics/University of Nevada/BUSR[46]Sep 10–25, 2020641 (LV)± 4%41%46%-7%[q]6%
Fox News[47]Sep 20–23, 2020810 (LV)± 3%41%52%3%2%[r]2%
911 (RV)± 3%40%50%3%3%[s]4%
ALG Research/ALG Research/The Nevada Independent (D)[48][B]Sep 15–21, 2020800 (LV)± 3.5%43%47%
Siena College/NYT Upshot[49]Sep 8–10, 2020462 (LV)± 5.3%42%46%3%1%[t]7%[k]
SurveyMonkey/Axios[34]Aug 1–31, 2020998 (LV)49%50%-1%
Qualtrics/University of Nevada/BUSR[46]Aug 20–30, 2020682 (LV)± 4%39%44%5%[u]12%
SurveyMonkey/Axios[34]Jul 1–31, 20201,021 (LV)52%47%--2%
SurveyMonkey/Axios[34]Jun 8–30, 2020609 (LV)49%50%--1%
ALG Research/ALG Research/The Nevada Independent (D)[50][C]Apr 27–30, 2020763 (LV)± 3.6%45%49%
AtlasIntel[51]Feb 19–21, 20201,100 (RV)± 3.0%41%44%15%
FOX News[52]Jan 5–8, 20201,505 (RV)± 2.5%39%47%9%[v]4%
FOX News[53]Nov 10–13, 20191,506 (RV)± 2.5%40%47%9%[v]4%
Emerson College[54]Oct 31 – Nov 2, 20191,089 (RV)± 2.9%51%49%
Gravis Marketing[55]Aug 14–16, 2019926 (RV)± 3.2%43%49%8%
Emerson College[56]Mar 28–30, 2019719 (RV)± 3.6%48%52%


Hypothetical polling

Donald Trump vs. Bernie Sanders

Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size[e]
Margin
of error
Donald
Trump (R)
Bernie
Sanders (D)
OtherUndecided
AtlasIntel[51]Feb 19–21, 20201,100 (RV)± 3.0%41%52%7%
FOX News[52]Jan 5–8, 20201,505 (RV)± 2.5%41%46%8%[w]4%
FOX News[53]Nov 10–13, 20191,506 (RV)± 2.5%40%47%9%[x]4%
Emerson College[54]Oct 31 – Nov 2, 20191,089 (RV)± 2.9%50%50%
Gravis Marketing[55]Aug 14–16, 2019926 (RV)± 3.2%44%47%8%
Emerson College[56]Mar 28–30, 2019719 (RV)± 3.6%51%49%

Donald Trump vs. Elizabeth Warren

Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size[e]
Margin
of error
Donald
Trump (R)
Elizabeth
Warren (D)
OtherUndecided
AtlasIntel[51]Feb 19–21, 20201,100 (RV)± 3.0%41%48%12%-
FOX News[52]Jan 5–8, 20201,505 (RV)± 2.5%42%43%10%[y]5%
FOX News[53]Nov 10–13, 20191,506 (RV)± 2.5%41%44%10%[y]5%
Emerson College[54]Oct 31 – Nov 2, 20191,089 (RV)± 2.9%51%49%
Gravis Marketing[55]Aug 14–16, 2019926 (RV)± 3.2%47%46%7%
Emerson College[56]Mar 28–30, 2019719 (RV)± 3.6%54%46%

Donald Trump vs. Pete Buttigieg

Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size[e]
Margin
of error
Donald
Trump (R)
Pete
Buttigieg (D)
OtherUndecided
AtlasIntel[51]Feb 19–21, 20201,100 (RV)± 3.0%38%49%14%-
FOX News[52]Jan 5–8, 20201,505 (RV)± 2.5%40%41%12%[z]7%
FOX News[53]Nov 10–13, 20191,506 (RV)± 2.5%41%41%9%[v]6%
Gravis Marketing[55]Aug 14–16, 2019926 (RV)± 3.2%46%42%12%
Emerson College[56]Mar 28–30, 2019719 (RV)± 3.6%52%48%

Donald Trump vs. Cory Booker

Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size[e]
Margin
of error
Donald
Trump (R)
Cory
Booker (D)
Undecided
Gravis Marketing[55]Aug 14–16, 2019926 (RV)± 3.2%46%44%10%

Donald Trump vs. Marianne Williamson

Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size[e]
Margin
of error
Donald
Trump (R)
Marianne
Williamson (D)
Undecided
Gravis Marketing[55]Aug 14–16, 2019926 (RV)± 3.2%48%40%12%

Donald Trump vs. Kamala Harris

Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size[e]
Margin
of error
Donald
Trump (R)
Kamala
Harris (D)
Undecided
Gravis Marketing[55]Aug 14–16, 2019926 (RV)± 3.2%45%45%11%
Emerson College[56]Mar 28–30, 2019719 (RV)± 3.6%51%49%

Donald Trump vs Generic Democrat vsHoward Schultz

Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size[e]
Margin
of error
Donald
Trump (R)
Generic
Democrat
Howard
Schultz (I)
Undecided
DFM Research[57]Jan 28–31, 2019500 (V)± 4.4%38%45%6%11%


Results

[edit]
2020 United States presidential election in Nevada[58][59]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
DemocraticJoe Biden
Kamala Harris
703,48650.06%+2.14%
RepublicanDonald Trump (incumbent)
Mike Pence (incumbent)
669,89047.67%+2.17%
LibertarianJo Jorgensen
Spike Cohen
14,7831.05%−2.24%
None of These Candidates14,0791.00%−1.54%
Independent AmericanDon Blankenship
William Mohr
3,1380.22%n/a
Total votes1,405,376100.00%

By county

[edit]
County[60]Joe Biden
Democratic
Donald Trump
Republican
Various candidates
Other parties
MarginTotal votes cast
#%#%#%#%
Carson City12,73542.82%16,11354.18%8913.00%-3,378-11.36%29,739
Churchill3,05123.67%9,37272.71%4673.62%-6,321-49.04%12,890
Clark521,85253.66%430,93044.31%19,7282.03%90,9229.35%972,510
Douglas11,57133.91%21,63063.38%9242.71%-10,059-29.47%34,125
Elko4,55720.74%16,74176.21%6693.05%-12,184-55.47%21,967
Esmeralda7415.20%40082.14%132.66%-326-66.94%487
Eureka10510.32%89588.00%171.68%-790-77.68%1,017
Humboldt1,68921.73%5,87775.63%2052.64%-4,188-53.90%7,771
Lander49617.94%2,19879.49%712.57%-1,702-61.55%2,765
Lincoln33013.49%2,06784.51%492.00%-1,737-71.02%2,446
Lyon8,47328.02%20,91469.16%8512.82%-12,441-41.14%30,238
Mineral82935.50%1,42360.94%833.56%-594-25.44%2,335
Nye7,28828.72%17,52869.07%5622.21%-10,240-40.35%25,378
Pershing54723.58%1,73174.61%421.81%-1,184-51.03%2,320
Storey90231.35%1,90866.32%672.33%-1,096-34.97%2,877
Washoe128,12850.82%116,76046.31%7,2542.87%11,3684.51%252,142
White Pine85919.66%3,40377.89%1072.45%-2,544-58.23%4,369
Totals703,48650.06%669,89047.67%32,0002.27%33,5962.39%1,405,376
Swing by county
Legend
  •   Democratic — +2.5-5%
  •   Democratic — +0-2.5%
  •   Republican — +0-2.5%
  •   Republican — +2.5-5%
  •   Republican — +5-7.5%

By congressional district

[edit]

Biden won three of the state's four congressional districts.[61]

DistrictTrumpBidenRepresentative
1st36%61%Dina Titus
2nd54%44%Mark Amodei
3rd48.9%49.1%Susie Lee
4th47%51%Steven Horsford

Analysis

[edit]

Given the outcome of the election in other states, Nevada became a crucialswing state to determine whetherJoe Biden orDonald Trump would win the 2020 presidential election. With Biden's win, this would mark the fourth presidential election in a row that Nevada has voted Democratic, although this is the first time since the beginning of the Democratic winning streak in Nevada that the state was more Republican than the nation, the last time being 2004, when incumbent George W. Bush carried the state by 2.6% and won the national popular vote by 2.4%. Nevada was the state that came closest to flipping from blue to red in 2020.

TheCOVID-19 pandemic in particular had a strong effect on Nevada, as the pandemic negatively affected gambling and tourism, which the state's economy relies on. 22% of voters regarded the pandemic as the most important issue of the election, and these voters broke for Biden by 73 points.

Most counties in the state of Nevada are rural, and have voted Republican since 1980. As a whole, the rural counties outside ofLas Vegas andReno made up much of Trump's total. The state's two most populous counties,Clark County andWashoe County, which contain over 89% of the state's population, broke for Biden. Trump was able to narrow the Democratic margin in Clark to 9.35%, compared to 10.71% in 2016, winning 44.31% of the vote in the county. Outside of Clark and Reno, Biden's strongest performances would be in theLake Tahoe areas ofCarson City andDouglas County; while these areas are more rural and Republican-leaning, they are also reliant on both the gambling and tourism industries. Biden hit nearly 43% in Carson City, and received 33% of the vote in Douglas County—this totaled to more than 24,000 votes, effectively clinching the state for Biden.

Nevada received enhanced attention because of the delay in its finalization of results compared to most other battleground states. Three days before the state was called, the electoral map showed Biden at 264 electoral votes while having a narrow lead in Nevada, with Trump having a lead in the remaining uncalled swing states. Had the state been called for Biden sooner, its six electors would have increased his electoral vote count exactly to the required 270 to win the presidency. The delay in Nevada's results became an internet meme before the state was projected for Biden on November 7.[62]

Latino voters

[edit]

Latinos were critical to Biden's victory in Nevada, particularly Latinos ofMexican heritage.[63] Latino membership in theCulinary Workers Union was a key driver of Democratic dominance in the state, with over 60,000 (mostly Latino) members who work in theLas Vegas casino, hotel, andservice industries, as well as othertourism industries.

Voter demographics

[edit]
2020 presidential election in Nevada by demographic subgroup (Edison exit polling)[64]
Demographic subgroupBidenTrump% of
total vote
Total vote504898
Ideology
Liberals89926
Moderates613737
Conservatives128538
Party
Democrats95535
Republicans59435
Independents504430
Gender
Men465148
Women544452
Race/ethnicity
White435665
Black80187
Latino613517
Asian64355
Other42545
Age
18–24 years old69269
25–29 years old52455
30–39 years old593917
40–49 years old494814
50–64 years old415724
65 and older465330
Sexual orientation
LGBT80167
Heterosexual475193
First-time voter
Yes554310
No504890
Education
High school or less494819
Somecollege education465235
Associate degree524614
Bachelor's degree484820
Postgraduate degree603812
Income
Under $30,000633517
$30,000–49,999504420
$50,000–99,999504933
$100,000–199,999415724
Over $200,00052476
Union households
Yes583919
No485081
Military service
Veterans297017
Non-veterans544483
Issue regarded as most important
Racial inequality90814
Coronavirus851222
Economy118736
Crime and safety118810
Health care841411
Region
Washoe County514718
Clark County544469
Rest of the state306813
Area type
Urban524671
Suburban584116
Rural306813
Family's financial situation today
Better than four years ago148435
Worse than four years ago851125
About the same603839

Aftermath

[edit]

On November 5, theNevada Republican Party alleged "at least 3,062 instances of voter fraud". Republican lawyers released a list of over 3,000 people who allegedly did not live in Clark County, Nevada, when they voted. However, these were not proven to be illegal votes, because Nevada (a) allows for people who moved states 30 days before the election to vote in Nevada's election, and (b) allows people studying in colleges in another state to vote in Nevada's election. Additionally, the list featured military members who were overseas and voted by mail.[65]

On November 17, representatives of the Trump campaign asked a judge to nullify Biden's 33,596-vote margin, and simply declare Trump the winner and his electors elected.[66] However, on November 24, theNevada Supreme Court certified Biden as the winner of the state.[67]

In December 2023,six Republicans were indicted for their alleged role in the fake elector scheme.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Vote count after votes for candidates who did not get at least 15% of the vote in that precinct are reallocated to the voter's second choice.
  2. ^County convention delegates (CCDs) are used to calculate how many pledged national convention delegates each candidate wins statewide and in the state'sfour congressional districts.
  3. ^The number of pledged national convention delegates is determined by the number of CCDs won. However, a candidate must get both at least 15% of the total vote to get statewide delegates, and at least 15% of the vote in a congressional district to get delegates from that district. Each precinct has a certain number of CCDs and allocates them based on how many caucus goers there are for each candidate at that precinct.
  4. ^Calculated by taking the difference of 100% and all other candidates combined.
  5. ^abcdefghKey:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear
  6. ^ab"Someone else" with 1%
  7. ^Overlapping sample with the previous SurveyMonkey/Axios poll, but more information available regarding sample size
  8. ^"Other candidate or write-in" with 2%; Undecided with 0%
  9. ^"Someone else" with 4%
  10. ^"Someone else" and would not vote with 1%
  11. ^abcIncludes "Refused"
  12. ^"Someone else" with 3%
  13. ^"None of these candidates" with 4%; Blankenship (C) with 1%
  14. ^"Other third party" with 2%
  15. ^"Someone else" with 1%; would not vote with 0%
  16. ^"Some other candidate" with 2%
  17. ^"Another candidate" with 4%; "None of the candidates" with 3%
  18. ^"Other" with 2%; would not vote with no voters
  19. ^"Other" with 2%; would not vote with 1%
  20. ^"Someone else" with 1%; would not vote and Hawkins (G) with 0%
  21. ^"Someone else" with 5%
  22. ^abcOther with 5%; would not vote with 4%
  23. ^Other with 5%; would not vote with 3%
  24. ^Other with 6%; would not vote with 3%
  25. ^abOther with 6%; would not vote with 4%
  26. ^Other with 8%; would not vote with 4%

Partisan clients

  1. ^The Center for American Greatness is a pro-Trump organization
  2. ^Sponsored by an anonymous partisan group but not the Biden campaign
  3. ^Sponsored by an anonymous partisan group

References

[edit]
  1. ^Kelly, Ben (August 13, 2018)."US elections key dates: When are the 2018 midterms and the 2020 presidential campaign?".The Independent.Archived from the original on August 2, 2018. RetrievedJanuary 3, 2019.
  2. ^"Distribution of Electoral Votes".National Archives and Records Administration. RetrievedJanuary 3, 2019.
  3. ^"County Population Totals: 2010-2019".The United States Census Bureau. RetrievedNovember 15, 2020.
  4. ^"Unions, progressives push for Latino Biden votes".Culinary Union Local 226. November 3, 2020. RetrievedNovember 9, 2020.
  5. ^Kinnard, Meg (September 7, 2019)."Nevada, SC, Kansas GOP drop presidential nomination votes".AP NEWS.
  6. ^Karni, Annie (September 6, 2019)."GOP plans to drop presidential primaries in 4 states to impede Trump challengers".Boston Globe. MSN. RetrievedSeptember 7, 2019.
  7. ^Steakin, Will; Karson, Kendall (September 6, 2019)."GOP considers canceling at least 3 GOP primaries and caucuses, Trump challengers outraged".ABC News. RetrievedSeptember 7, 2019.
  8. ^Price, Michelle (August 2, 2019)."Nevada GOP could let Trump bypass its nominating caucuses".Associated Press.
  9. ^Michelle Price (December 13, 2019)."Nevada GOP to vote Feb. 22 on endorsing Trump for president". Associated Press. RetrievedDecember 23, 2019.
  10. ^"Nevada GOP awards all 25 delegates to Trump". PBS Newshour. Associated Press. February 22, 2020.
  11. ^"The Nevada GOP Binds its Delegates to President Trump".Nevada Republican Party. February 22, 2020.
  12. ^"2020 primary Elections Nevada results".NBC News. February 24, 2020. RetrievedMarch 2, 2022.
  13. ^"Nevada democratic Caucus Results".USA Today. February 24, 2020. RetrievedMarch 2, 2022.
  14. ^"2020 Nevada Democratic presidential caucuses".The Washington Post. February 24, 2020. RetrievedMarch 2, 2022.
  15. ^"2020 Presidential Primaries, Caucuses, and Conventions – Nevada Democrat".The Green Papers. November 24, 2021. RetrievedMarch 2, 2022.
  16. ^"2020 POTUS Race ratings"(PDF).The Cook Political Report. RetrievedMay 21, 2019.
  17. ^"POTUS Ratings | Inside Elections".insideelections.com. RetrievedMay 21, 2019.
  18. ^"Larry J. Sabato's Crystal Ball » 2020 President".crystalball.centerforpolitics.org. RetrievedMay 21, 2019.
  19. ^"2020 Election Forecast".Politico. November 19, 2019.
  20. ^"Battle for White House".RCP. April 19, 2019.
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