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Until September 2016, Hillary Clinton won or tied in the vast majority of polls, with Trump only winning 2 polls before September. However, on September 7, Trump won his first statewide poll in 4 months by 46% to 45%. Subsequently, in September, Republican nominee Donald Trump took a lead in Ohio polls, winning every poll but one.
In general exit polls by CNN showed Ohio Democratic voters with slightly less support for Clinton than the national average, [4] and Trump receiving higher support among Democratic voters in Ohio than Mitt Romney had in the 2012 election. [5] Hillary Clinton had relatively low support in Appalachia from Democratic voters.
According to CNN exit polls, veterans voted at a 2-1 ratio for Trump over Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton. In Ohio, North Carolina and Florida -- battleground states rich with military history ...
Leading presidential 2016 candidate by electoral vote count. States in gray have no polling data. Polls from lightly shaded states are older than September 1, 2016. This map only represents the most recent statewide polling data; it is not a prediction for the 2016 election.
Trump carried Ohio by 8 points in both the 2016 and 2020 elections. The Ohio CNN Exit Poll is a combination of in-person interviews with Election Day voters and early in-person voters, along with ...
An examination of the exit polls in 3 key states that helped swing the election Trump's way revealed the most important issue. Democrats think Trump won on economic issues — but exit polls offer ...
The 2016 election marked the eighth consecutive presidential election where the victorious major party nominee did not receive a popular vote majority by a double-digit margin over the losing major party nominee(s), with the sequence of presidential elections from 1988 through 2016 surpassing the sequence from 1876 through 1900 to become the ...
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