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These candidates are on the ballots for every state, territory, and federal district contest. The results of caucuses do not always have attached preference polls and attendance can be extremely limited. The unpledged delegate count may not always reflect the latest declared preferences. Results are collected by The New York Times. [3]
Presidential primaries and caucuses were organized by the Democratic Party to select the 4,051 delegates to the 2016 Democratic National Convention held July 25–28 and determine the nominee for President in the 2016 United States presidential election.
2016 Senate results Democratic hold Republican hold Democratic gain: House elections; Overall control: Republican hold: Seats contested: All 435 voting-members and 6 non-voting delegates: Popular vote margin: Republican +1.1%: Net seat change: Democratic +6: Map of the 2016 House races (delegate races not shown)
Look back at the results of the 2016 race between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton. Votes are being counted in the 2024 presidential election. Look back at the results of the 2016 race between ...
Trump now leads the field with 756 delegates -- or 45 percent of all delegates awarded to date. Yet he has won about 37 percent of all votes. Despite complaints, delegate system has given Trump a ...
With the 2018 midterm elections approaching next year, political analysts and campaign officials will looking to the 2016 electoral map as a roadmap to how party politics played out throughout the ...
Seventeen major candidates were listed in major independent nationwide polls and filed as candidates with the Federal Election Commission. [citation needed] A total of 2,472 delegates attended the 2016 Republican National Convention, and the winning candidate needed a simple majority of 1,237 votes to become the Republican nominee.
2016 was the first presidential election since 1948 in which the Democratic nominee won the popular vote without the state. Pennsylvania's vote for Donald Trump, along with that of Wisconsin and Michigan , marked the fall of the Democratic Blue Wall , a bloc of over 240 electoral votes that voted solidly Democratic from 1992 to 2012.