Results of the 2016 Democratic Party presidential primaries
This article will show the current results of the 2016 Democratic Party presidential primaries. The Democratic Party presidential primary is a process of choosing delegates, or people that represent someone, to go to the 2016 Democratic National Convention. People in each state will vote on who they think will be good for the presidency, and each candidate gets a certain amount of delegates based on the number of votes they receive. The primaries began on 1 February 2016 in Iowa.[1] The remaining candidates are former first lady and secretary of state and senator Hillary Clinton and senator Bernie Sanders.
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4,765 delegates to the Democratic National Convention 2,383 delegates votes needed to win | |||||||||||||
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First place (popular vote or delegate count)
Hillary Clinton Bernie Sanders | |||||||||||||
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On June 6, 2016, the Associated Press reported that senator Hillary Clinton has gotten enough delegates to become the presumptive Democratic nominee.[2] However, their count includes some superdelegates. Since superdelegates can vote however they want at the Democratic convention, their votes could change at any time before then, so it is possible (but only remotely possible) that Clinton will not get the nomination. Bernie Sanders endorsed Clinton on 12 July 2016.[3]
Main candidates
change- Hillary Clinton – 67th United States Secretary of State (2009 to 2013), First Lady of the United States (1993 to 2001) and New York senator (2001 to 2009).
- Bernie Sanders – Vermont senator (2007 to present) and representative (1991 to 2007).
Dropped out during primaries
change- Martin O'Malley – Maryland governor (2007 to 2015) and Baltimore mayor (1999 to 2007).
Dropped out before primaries
change- Jim Webb – Virginia senator (2007 to 2013) and Secretary of the Navy (1987 to 1988).
- Lincoln Chafee – Rhode Island governor (2011 to 2015), senator (1999 to 2007) and Warwick mayor (1993 to 1999)
- Lawrence Lessig – professor
Results
changeAll delegate total are approximate.[4]
Candidates | Hillary Clinton |
Bernie Sanders |
Martin O'Malley | |||||
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Pledged delegates | 2,219 | 1,832 | 0 | |||||
Unpledged delegates | 581 | 49 | 1 | |||||
Total delegates | 2,800 | 1,881 | 1 | |||||
Contests won | 34 | 23 | 0 | |||||
Results | ||||||||
Feb 1 | Iowa | 49.9% (23 delegates) |
49.6% (21 delegates) |
0.6% (0 delegates) | ||||
Feb 9 | New Hampshire | 38.0% (9 delegates) |
60.4% (15 delegates) |
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Feb 20 | Nevada | 52.6% (20 delegates) |
47.3% (15 delegates) |
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Feb 27 | South Carolina | 73.5% (39 delegates) |
26.0% (14 delegates) |
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Mar 1 | Alabama | 77.8% (44 delegates) |
19.2% (9 delegates) |
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American Samoa | 68.4% (4 delegates) |
25.7% (2 delegates) |
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Arkansas | 66.3% (22 delegates) |
29.7% (10 delegates) |
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Colorado | 40.4% (28 delegates) |
59.0% (38 delegates) |
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Georgia | 71.3% (74 delegates) |
28.2% (28 delegates) |
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Massachusetts | 50.1% (46 delegates) |
48.7% (45 delegates) |
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Minnesota | 38.3% (31 delegates) |
61.7% (46 delegates) |
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Oklahoma | 41.5% (17 delegates) |
51.9% (21 delegates) |
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Tennessee | 66.1% (44 delegates) |
32.4% (23 delegates) |
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Texas | 65.2% (147 delegates) |
33.2% (75 delegates) |
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Vermont | 13.6% (0 delegates) |
86.1% (16 delegates) |
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Virginia | 64.3% (62 delegates) |
35.2% (33 delegates) |
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Mar 5 | Kansas | 32.3% (9 delegates) |
67.7% (24 delegates) |
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Louisiana | 71.1% (37 delegates) |
23.2% (14 delegates) |
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Nebraska | 42.9% (10 delegates) |
57.2% (15 delegates) |
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Mar 6 | Maine | 35.5% (9 delegates) |
64.2% (16 delegates) |
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Mar 1–8 | Democrats Abroad | 30.9% (4 delegates) |
68.9% (9 delegates) |
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Mar 8 | Michigan | 48.2% (63 delegates) |
49.8% (67 delegates) |
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Mississippi | 82.6% (32 delegates) |
16.5% (4 delegates) |
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Mar 12 | Northern Marianas | 54.0% (4 delegates) |
34.4% (2 delegates) |
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Mar 15 | Florida | 64.4% (142 delegates) |
33.3% (72 delegates) |
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Illinois | 50.5% (80 delegates) |
48.7% (76 delegates) |
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Missouri | 49.6% (36 delegates) |
49.4% (35 delegates) |
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North Carolina | 54.6% (60 delegates) |
40.8% (47 delegates) |
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Ohio | 56.5% (81 delegates) |
42.7% (62 delegates) |
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Mar 22 | Arizona | 57.6% (44 delegates) |
TBD (30 delegates) |
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Idaho | 21.2% (5 delegates) |
78.0% (17 delegates) |
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Utah | 20.3% (6 delegates) |
79.3% (27 delegates) |
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Mar 26 | Alaska | 18.4% (3 delegates) |
81.6% (13 delegates) |
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Hawaii | 30.0% (8 delegates) |
69.8% (17 delegates) |
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Washington | 27.1% (21 delegates) |
72.7% (68 delegates) |
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Apr 5 | Wisconsin | 43.1% (38 delegates) |
56.6% (48 delegates) |
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Apr 9 | Wyoming | 44.3% (7 delegates) |
55.7% (7 delegates) |
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Apr 19 | New York | 58.0% (139 delegates) |
42.0% (108 delegates) |
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Apr 26 | Connecticut | 51.7% (27 delegates) |
46.5% (24 delegates) |
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Delaware | 59.8% (12 delegates) |
39.2% (9 delegates) |
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Maryland | 63.0% (53 delegates) |
33.3% (24 delegates) |
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Pennsylvania | 55.6% (91 delegates) |
43.6% (59 delegates) |
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Rhode Island | 43.3% (11 delegates) |
55.0% (13 delegates) |
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May 3 | Indiana | 47.5% (39 delegates) |
52.5% (44 delegates) |
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May 7 | Guam | 59.5% (4 delegates) |
40.5% (3 delegates) |
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May 10 | West Virginia | 36.1% (9 delegates) |
51.3% (14 delegates) |
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May 17 | Kentucky | 46.8% (28 delegates) |
46.3% (27 delegates) |
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Oregon | 45.7% (24 delegates) |
54.3% (28 delegates) |
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Jun 4 | Virgin Islands | 84.2% (7 delegates) |
12.2% (0 delegates) |
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Jun 5 | Puerto Rico | 59.4% (36 delegates) |
37.5% (24 delegates) |
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Jun 7 | California | 55.8% (269 delegates) |
43.2% (206 delegates) |
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Montana | 44.6% (9 delegates) |
51.0% (10 delegates) |
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New Jersey | 63.3% (64 delegates) |
36.7% (41 delegates) |
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New Mexico | 51.5% (17 delegates) |
48.5% (14 delegates) |
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North Dakota | 25.6% (5 delegates) |
64.2% (13 delegates) |
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South Dakota | 51.0% (10 delegates) |
49.0% (10 delegates) |
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Jun 14 | District of Columbia | 78.7% (16 delegates) |
21.1% (4 delegates) |
- The delegate count that is under the popular vote percentage is estimated. If you add all the delegates listed, you may get a result that is a little bit off from the total at the top of the table. It also only shows pledged delegates, and not super delegates.
Related pages
changeReferences
change- ↑ "Iowa caucuses: Ted Cruz wins; Clinton declares victory". CNN. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
- ↑ "AP Count: Clinton has delegates to win Democratic nomination". 6 June 2016. Archived from the original on 7 June 2016. Retrieved 6 June 2016.
- ↑ "Bernie Sanders endorses Hillary Clinton". CNN. Retrieved 12 July 2016.
- ↑ "Delegate tracker". The Associated Press Interactives.