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However, Trump was able to improve significantly upon his 2016 margins in many of New Jersey's most heavily populated cities, which kept the statewide margin within 2% of the 2016 results. For example, in New Jersey's most populated city, Newark, Trump nearly doubled his 2016 share of the vote, going from 6.63% to 12.25% of the vote. [59]
This is the highest popular vote percentage ever recorded by any candidate in New Jersey. [2] On the county level map, reflecting the decisiveness of his victory, Harding became the first presidential nominee to sweep all 21 of New Jersey's counties, a feat later accomplished only by Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1956, Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964 and ...
But, based on initial results in New Jersey, Donald Trump performed about as well in Monmouth County this year as he did four years ago, but Kamala Harris seriously underperformed Joe Biden ...
Prior to the 1992 election, New Jersey voted red in six consecutive presidential elections including: 1968 and 1972: NJ voted Richard Nixon; Nixon won 1976: NJ voted Gerald Ford; Jimmy Carter won
9:46 District 16 first results in Somerset County. With the first results being counted in Somerset County, Democratic Incumbent Andrew Zwicker is leading the GOP's Michael Pappas, 6,340 to 3,042 ...
On the other hand, southern New Jersey, especially Cumberland County and Salem County, voted significantly more Republican than they had in 2012. For example, even though Cumberland County voted Democratic in both 2012 and 2016, Clinton won it by just 6%, whereas Obama won it by nearly 24% in 2012.
This was the first presidential election in which a candidate received more than 3 million votes in Ohio. Ohio is one of three states, the others being Iowa and Florida, that voted twice for Barack Obama and twice for Donald Trump. This ended Ohio's 14-election bellwether streak from 1964 to 2016.