Английская Википедия:2016 Pennsylvania Democratic presidential primary

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox election Шаблон:Elections in Pennsylvania sidebar The 2016 Pennsylvania Democratic presidential primary was held on April 26 in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania as one of the Democratic Party's primaries ahead of the 2016 presidential election.

The Democratic Party's primaries in Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland and Rhode Island were held the same day, as were Republican primaries in the same five states, including their own Pennsylvania primary. Despite winning the Pennsylvania primary, Clinton went on to lose the state to Republican candidate Donald Trump in the general election.

Opinion polling

Шаблон:See also

Шаблон:Pennsylvania Democratic primary polls, 2016

Results

Шаблон:See also

Шаблон:2016PADem

Results by county

County[1] Clinton % Sanders % Others Totals Turnout Margin
Adams 3,863 48.08% 4,101 51.04% 71 8,035 41.15% -2.96%
Allegheny 123,715 55.08% 99,078 44.11% 1,819 224,612 43.18% 10.97%
Armstrong 2,992 48.30% 3,073 49.60% 130 6,195 39.00% -1.31%
Beaver 13,531 56.92% 9,873 41.53% 369 23,773 40.41% 15.39%
Bedford 1,388 48.91% 1,387 48.87% 63 2,838 29.56% 0.04%
Berks 21,063 48.35% 22,078 50.68% 422 43,563 37.68% -2.33%
Blair 3,965 46.87% 4,360 51.54% 135 23,988 35.27% -4.67%
Bradford 1,809 48.88% 1,839 49.69% 53 3,701 35.49% -0.81%
Bucks 46,917 55.90% 36,173 43.10% 837 83,927 43.88% 12.80%
Butler 8,790 52.10% 7,833 46.43% 249 16,872 40.98% 5.67%
Cambria 8,507 47.16% 9,024 50.02% 509 18,040 39.64% -2.87%
Cameron 186 41.89% 240 54.05% 18 444 36.33% -12.16%
Carbon 3,384 48.73% 3,460 49.82% 101 6,945 38.13% -1.09%
Centre 8,458 44.72% 10,331 54.63% 123 18,912 41.15% -9.90%
Chester 33,082 55.62% 26,193 44.04% 204 59,479 46.05% 11.58%
Clarion 1,529 49.34% 1,511 48.76% 59 3,099 38.37% 0.58%
Clearfield 3,194 47.30% 3,414 50.56% 145 6,753 32.18% -3.26%
Clinton 1,704 48.63% 1,739 49.63% 61 3,504 39.02% -1.00%
Columbia 2,504 40.48% 3,601 58.21% 81 6,186 39.59% -17.73%
Crawford 3,707 48.69% 3,789 49.76% 118 7,614 39.39% -1.08%
Cumberland 12,421 51.54% 11,513 47.77% 168 24,102 45.45% 3.77%
Dauphin 18,474 56.82% 13,787 42.41% 250 32,511 36.26% 14.42%
Delaware 46,252 59.73% 30,824 39.80% 363 77,439 43.45% 19.92%
Elk 1,601 45.50% 1,846 52.46% 72 3,519 36.47% -6.96%
Erie 20,395 52.17% 18,362 46.97% 338 39,095 40.76% 5.20%
Fayette 9,195 57.69% 6,460 40.53% 285 15,940 32.70% 17.16%
Forest 251 52.07% 221 45.85% 10 482 37.28% 6.22%
Franklin 4,707 51.69% 4,282 47.02% 118 9,107 37.27% 4.67%
Fulton 366 48.87% 365 48.73% 18 749 28.81% 0.13%
Greene 2,268 52.55% 1,927 44.65% 121 4,316 34.27% 7.90%
Huntingdon 1,304 43.28% 1,666 55.29% 43 3,013 33.11% -12.01%
Indiana 4,049 50.34% 3,839 47.73% 156 8,044 40.04% 2.61%
Jefferson 1,249 43.89% 1,507 52.95% 90 9,712 29.30% -9.07%
Juniata 664 45.60% 754 51.79% 38 3,996 36.44% -6.18%
Lackawanna 23,020 56.52% 17,308 42.49% 402 40,730 45.36% 14.02%
Lancaster 19,840 47.97% 21,321 51.55% 197 41,358 40.14% -3.58%
Lawrence 5,845 58.64% 3,981 39.94% 142 9,968 36.39% 18.70%
Lebanon 4,669 49.88% 4,599 49.13% 93 9,361 35.78% 0.75%
Lehigh 20,430 52.40% 18,338 47.03% 224 38,992 35.66% 5.37%
Luzerne 20,542 51.94% 18,543 46.89% 462 39,547 37.49% 5.05%
Lycoming 3,808 43.94% 4,730 54.58% 128 8,666 39.29% -10.64%
McKean 1,053 46.18% 1,190 52.19% 37 2,280 31.50% -6.01%
Mercer 6,530 56.99% 4,739 41.36% 190 11,459 33.91% 15.63%
Miflin 1,201 48.29% 1,242 49.94% 44 2,487 32.93% -1.65%
Monroe 8,169 53.27% 7,042 45.92% 123 15,334 31.37% 7.35%
Montgomery 75,628 59.00% 52,132 40.67% 421 128,181 49.31% 18.33%
Montour 846 47.85% 890 50.34% 32 1,768 37.84% -2.49%
Northampton 18,104 51.18% 16,940 47.89% 328 35,372 37.27% 3.29%
Northumberland 3,582 48.92% 3,632 49.60% 108 7,322 33.78% -0.68%
Perry 1,329 42.60% 1,752 56.15% 39 3,120 43.59% -13.56%
Philadelphia 218,959 62.59% 129,353 36.98% 1,493 349,805 43.50% 25.62%
Pike 2,009 51.22% 1,894 48.29% 19 3,922 29.70% 2.93%
Potter 402 40.94% 560 57.03% 20 982 33.83% -16.09%
Schuylkill 6,534 51.30% 6,040 47.42% 164 12,738 37.61% 3.88%
Snyder 1,125 50.40% 1,081 48.43% 26 2,232 41.42% 1.97%
Somerset 3,114 48.18% 3,206 49.61% 143 6,463 35.95% -1.42%
Sullivan 312 50.16% 296 47.59% 14 622 40.65% 2.57%
Susquehanna 1,680 50.42% 1,610 48.32% 42 3,332 41.41% 2.10%
Tioga 1,055 43.20% 1,354 55.45% 33 2,442 34.07% -12.24%
Union 1,626 50.50% 1,579 49.04% 15 3,220 46.09% 1.46%
Venango 2,020 48.08% 2,087 49.68% 94 4,201 37.90% -1.59%
Warren 1,836 51.66% 1,665 46.85% 53 3,554 33.49% 4.81%
Washington 15,872 57.43% 11,262 40.75% 505 27,639 41.38% 16.68%
Wayne 1,859 47.44% 2,026 51.70% 34 3,919 39.12% -4.26%
Westmoreland 25,009 54.31% 20,286 44.05% 754 46,049 39.24% 10.26%
Wyoming 1,123 48.21% 1,168 50.42% 33 2,398 45.72% -2.21%
York 18,459 50.72% 17,544 48.21% 390 36,393 36.74% 2.51%
Total 935,107 55.61% 731,881 43.53% 14,439 1,681,427 41.39% 12.09%

Analysis

Clinton won a large victory over runner-up Bernie Sanders in Pennsylvania, replicating her 2008 performance against Barack Obama in the Keystone state. According to exit polls, Clinton won the white vote 51–47 (68% of the electorate), won the African American vote 70–30 (19% of the electorate), and won among women 60-39 (she lost men 50-49 to Sanders). While Sanders won among younger voters 63-37, Clinton won voters over the age of 45 66-33. Clinton swept all income and educational attainment levels except for whites without college degrees, whom Sanders won 50–49.

Clinton swept all political ideologies in the primary. She won Democrats 62-38 but lost self-identified Independents to Sanders 72–26.

Clinton also won among unions 56-43, a very important demographic in a big manufacturing state like Pennsylvania.

Clinton won large victories in all of Pennsylvania's major cities: she won in Philadelphia 63-37, the affluent Philadelphia suburbs 58-42, and also carried the cities of Pittsburgh and Erie. She won in Northeastern Pennsylvania 51-48, and in Western Pennsylvania 54-45. Sanders, for his part, did better in the rural parts of the state, winning rural voters 50–48 and carrying Central Pennsylvania 50-49.[2] Sanders swept many of the more remote and conservative counties of the state, including parts of Amish country such as Lancaster County.

Of her victory in the Keystone State, New York Times analyst Alan Rappeport commented, "Lots of Philadelphia history and imagery coming from Clinton now. It's almost as if she has her convention speech ready."[3]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:2016 Democratic primaries