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The 2016 United States presidential election in Florida was held on Tuesday November 8 2016 as part of the 2016 United S

2016 United States presidential election in Florida

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  • Wikipedia
  • 2016 United States presidential election in Florida

The 2016 United States presidential election in Florida was held on Tuesday, November 8, 2016, as part of the 2016 United States presidential election in which all 50 states plus the District of Columbia participated. Florida voters chose electors to represent them in the Electoral College via a popular vote, pitting the Republican nominee, businessman Donald Trump, and his running mate Indiana Governor Mike Pence, against the Democratic nominee, former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and her running mate Virginia Senator Tim Kaine. Florida had 29 electoral votes in the Electoral College.

2016 United States presidential election in Florida
image
← 2012 November 8, 2016 2020 →
Turnout74.48% image 2.94 pp
  image image
Nominee Donald Trump Hillary Clinton
Party Republican Democratic
Home state New York New York
Running mate Mike Pence Tim Kaine
Electoral vote 29 0
Popular vote 4,617,886 4,504,975
Percentage 49.02% 47.82%

image County results
image Congressional district results
image Precinct results

Trump

  40–50%
  50–60%
  60–70%
  70–80%
  80–90%
  90–100%

Clinton

  40–50%
  50–60%
  60–70%
  70–80%
  80–90%
  90–100%

Tie/No data

  
  


President before election

Barack Obama
Democratic

Elected President

Donald Trump
Republican

image
Results by county showing number of votes by size and candidates by color
image
Treemap of the popular vote by county.

Trump carried the state with a plurality of 49.0% of the popular vote, which included a 1.2% winning margin over Clinton, who had 47.8% of the vote. Trump consequently became the first Republican to win the White House without carrying Hillsborough County since Calvin Coolidge in 1924. Trump was also the first Republican presidential candidate to carry St. Lucie County since 1992, and the first to carry Jefferson and Monroe Counties since 1988; all three of these counties were last carried by George H. W. Bush.

Florida voted for Donald Trump by a margin of 1.20%. It was the fifth-closest state result, with only Wisconsin, Michigan, New Hampshire and Pennsylvania closer. According to the National Election Pool, Trump got a majority of 54% from the Cuban-American voters in the state—in comparison to the 71% of Clinton support by Latino voters from other origins. This is also the closest election contested by any of Trump's three Democratic opponents in his presidential bids, as the Florida electorate has decisively swung to the right in the Trump political era; relatedly, this would be the last time Trump ran for president as a resident of another state (New York) rather than of Florida.

Primary elections

Democratic primary

Democratic debate

March 9, 2016 – Kendall, Florida

Candidate Airtime Polls
Clinton 23:29 51.0%
Sanders 17:51 39.6%

The eighth debate took place on March 9, 2016, at 9:00 PM Eastern Standard Time in Building 7 of the Kendall Campus of Miami Dade College in Kendall, Florida. It was broadcast through a partnership between Univision and The Washington Post. The debate was discussed during a job interview conducted in early 2015 between the Democratic National Committee's then-Communications Director Mo Elleithee and future Hispanic Media Director Pablo Manriquez. After starting at the DNC in April 2015, Manriquez "talked about the idea for a debate for Democratic candidates on Univision to anyone who had ears to listen." The debate was officially announced on November 2, 2015.

Opinion polling

Results

image
Election results by county.
  Hillary Clinton
  Bernie Sanders

Three candidates appeared on the Democratic presidential primary ballot:

e • d 2016 Democratic Party's presidential nominating process in Florida
– Summary of results –
Candidate Popular vote Estimated delegates
Count Percentage Pledged Unpledged Total
Hillary Clinton 1,101,414 64.44% 141 24 165
Bernie Sanders 568,839 33.28% 73 2 75
Martin O'Malley (withdrawn) 38,930 2.28%
Uncommitted — 0 6 6
Total 1,709,183 100% 214 32 246
Source:
Florida Democratic primary, March 15, 2016
District Delegates Votes Clinton Votes Sanders Votes Qualified Clinton delegates Sanders delegates
1 3 26987 18497 45484 2 1
2 6 50190 34073 84263 4 2
3 4 32070 27974 60044 2 2
4 4 33920 22765 56685 2 2
5 6 55855 18639 74494 4 2
6 5 37995 24443 62438 3 2
7 5 37410 26795 64205 3 2
8 5 39384 24376 63760 3 2
9 5 40609 19880 60489 3 2
10 5 38011 22213 60224 3 2
11 5 38061 21590 59651 3 2
12 5 35498 23172 58670 3 2
13 6 44121 29707 73828 4 2
14 6 49146 23617 72763 4 2
15 5 32793 20712 53505 3 2
16 6 43921 25856 69777 4 2
17 4 29899 17045 46944 3 1
18 6 42804 20620 63424 4 2
19 4 31958 17235 49193 3 1
20 7 61998 15761 77759 6 1
21 7 57723 22100 79823 5 2
22 6 49602 22209 71811 4 2
23 6 44510 19974 64484 4 2
24 8 59274 13893 73167 6 2
25 3 24897 9287 34184 2 1
26 4 32069 14148 46217 3 1
27 4 30709 12258 42967 3 1
Total 140 1101414 568839 1670253 93 47
PLEO 28 1101414 568839 1670253 18 10
At Large 46 1101414 568839 1670253 30 16
Gr. Total 214 1101414 568839 1670253 141 73
Total vote 64.44% 33.28% 1,709,183
Source: Florida Department of State Division of Elections

Republican primary

Republican debate

March 10, 2016 – Coral Gables, Florida

Candidate Airtime Polls
Trump 28:11 38.6%
Cruz 21:42 21.8%
Rubio 21:23 18.0%
Kasich 18:49 12.0%

The twelfth debate was the fourth and final debate to air on CNN and led into the Florida, Illinois, North Carolina, Missouri, and Ohio primaries on March 15. The candidates debated at the University of Miami, moderated by Jake Tapper and questioned by CNN chief political correspondent Dana Bash, Salem Radio Network talk-show host Hugh Hewitt, and Washington Times contributor Stephen Dinan. The Washington Times cohosted the debate. The debate was originally scheduled considering the likelihood that no candidate would clinch the Republican nomination before March 15, due to the overall size of the field. On the day of the debate, CNN summarized the immediate stakes: "This debate comes just five days ahead of 'Super Tuesday 3', when more than 350 delegates are decided, including winner-take-all contests in Florida and Ohio. Both Trump and Rubio are predicting [a win in] Florida. For Trump, a win here would fuel his growing momentum and further grow his delegate lead; for Rubio, losing his home state could be the death knell for his campaign." This was the twelfth and final debate appearance of Rubio, who suspended his campaign on March 15.

Polling

Results

image
Election results by county.
  Donald Trump
  Marco Rubio

Twelve candidates appeared on the Republican presidential primary ballot:

Florida Republican primary, March 15, 2016
Candidate Votes Percentage Actual delegate count
Bound Unbound Total
Donald Trump 1,079,870 45.72% 99 0 99
Marco Rubio 638,661 27.04% 0 0 0
Ted Cruz 404,891 17.14% 0 0 0
John Kasich 159,976 6.77% 0 0 0
Jeb Bush (withdrawn) 43,511 1.84% 0 0 0
Ben Carson (withdrawn) 21,207 0.90% 0 0 0
Rand Paul (withdrawn) 4,450 0.19% 0 0 0
Mike Huckabee (withdrawn) 2,624 0.11% 0 0 0
Chris Christie (withdrawn) 2,493 0.11% 0 0 0
Carly Fiorina (withdrawn) 1,899 0.08% 0 0 0
Rick Santorum (withdrawn) 1,211 0.05% 0 0 0
Lindsey Graham (withdrawn) 693 0.03% 0 0 0
Jim Gilmore (withdrawn) 319 0.01% 0 0 0
Unprojected delegates: 0 0 0
Total: 2,361,805 100.00% 99 0 99
Source: The Green Papers

.

Green primary

The Green Party held a primary in Florida on July 31, 2016. Early voting began on July 25.

On July 31, 2016, the Green Party of Florida announced that Jill Stein had won the Florida primary via instant-runoff voting.

Green Party of Florida primary – first round
Candidate Votes Percentage National delegates
Jill Stein 18 52.9%
Elijah Manley 14 41.2%
William Kreml 1 2.94%
Kent Mesplay 1 2.94%
Sedinam Curry 0
Darryl Cherney 0
Total 34 100%
Green Party of Florida primary – second round
Candidate Votes Percentage National delegates
Jill Stein 19 55.9%
Elijah Manley 14 41.2%
William Kreml 1 2.94%
Total 34 100
Green Party of Florida primary – third round
Candidate Votes Percentage National delegates
Jill Stein 20 58.8% 15
Elijah Manley 14 41.2% 10
Total 34 100 25

General election

Predictions

The following are final 2016 predictions from various organizations for Florida as of Election Day.

Source Ranking As of
Los Angeles Times Lean D November 6, 2016
CNN Tossup November 4, 2016
Rothenberg Political Report Tilt D November 7, 2016
Sabato's Crystal Ball Lean D November 7, 2016
NBC Tossup November 8, 2016
Electoral-vote.com Tossup November 8, 2016
RealClearPolitics Tossup November 8, 2016
Fox News Tossup November 7, 2016
ABC Tossup November 7, 2016

Polling

In early polling conducted in late 2015, Trump started with strong momentum and won almost every poll against Clinton by margins varying from 2 to 8 points. In March 2016, Trump's early momentum seemed to slow, as Clinton won every poll until June 2016, when Trump won a poll 45% to 44%. Most polling conducted throughout the summer was favorable to Clinton, but both candidates were neck and neck in late August and early September, with neither having a consistent lead. From mid September to October 20, Clinton won every poll but one. In the last weeks, polling was extremely close, with neither candidate taking the lead. The third to last and fourth to last poll ended in a tie, but Trump won the last poll 50% to 46%. The average of the last three polls showed Trump ahead 47.3% to 46.7%, where the race was essentially tied.

Results

2016 United States presidential election in Florida
Party Presidential candidate Popular vote Electoral vote
Count Percentage
Republican Donald Trump 4,617,886 49.02% 29
Democratic Hillary Clinton 4,504,975 47.82% 0
Libertarian Gary Johnson 207,043 2.20% 0
Green Jill Stein 64,399 0.68% 0
Constitution Darrell L. Castle 16,475 0.17% 0
Reform Rocky De La Fuente 9,108 0.10% 0
Write-in
-
153 0.01% 0
Date November 8, 2016 Total voters Registered: 12,863,773
Eligible: 14,441,877
Turnout % Registered: 74.48%
VAP: 66.34%
Turnout votes Valid votes: 9,420,039
Invalid votes: 160,450


By county

County Donald Trump
Republican
Hillary Clinton
Democratic
Various candidates
Other parties
Margin Total votes cast
# % # % # % # %
Alachua 46,834 36.00% 75,820 58.28% 7,446 5.72% -28,986 -22.28% 130,100
Baker 10,294 81.02% 2,112 16.62% 299 2.36% 8,182 64.40% 12,705
Bay 62,194 70.50% 21,797 24.71% 4,231 4.79% 40,397 45.79% 88,222
Bradford 8,913 73.31% 2,924 24.05% 321 2.64% 5,989 49.26% 12,158
Brevard 181,848 57.16% 119,679 37.62% 16,614 5.22% 62,169 19.54% 318,141
Broward 260,951 31.16% 553,320 66.08% 23,117 2.76% -292,369 -34.92% 837,388
Calhoun 4,655 75.96% 1,241 20.25% 232 3.79% 3,414 55.71% 6,128
Charlotte 60,128 61.96% 33,445 34.41% 3,524 3.63% 26,773 27.55% 97,187
Citrus 54,456 67.72% 22,789 28.34% 3,167 3.94% 31,667 39.38% 80,412
Clay 74,963 69.85% 27,822 25.93% 4,532 4.22% 47,141 43.92% 107,317
Collier 105,423 61.11% 61,085 35.41% 6,002 3.48% 44,338 25.70% 172,510
Columbia 20,368 70.57% 7,601 26.33% 895 3.10% 12,767 44.24% 28,864
DeSoto 6,778 62.17% 3,781 34.68% 344 3.15% 2,997 27.49% 10,903
Dixie 5,822 80.35% 1,270 17.53% 154 2.12% 4,552 62.82% 7,246
Duval 211,672 48.48% 205,704 47.12% 19,197 4.40% 5,968 1.36% 436,573
Escambia 88,808 57.60% 57,461 37.27% 7,903 5.13% 31,347 20.33% 154,172
Flagler 33,850 58.38% 22,026 37.98% 2,111 3.64% 11,824 20.40% 57,987
Franklin 4,125 68.08% 1,744 28.78% 190 3.14% 2,381 39.30% 6,059
Gadsden 6,728 30.29% 15,020 67.62% 466 2.09% -8,292 -37.33% 22,214
Gilchrist 6,740 79.56% 1,458 17.21% 274 3.23% 5,282 62.35% 8,472
Glades 2,996 68.37% 1,271 29.01% 115 2.62% 1,725 39.36% 4,382
Gulf 5,329 72.69% 1,720 23.46% 282 3.85% 3,609 49.23% 7,331
Hamilton 3,443 62.70% 1,904 34.67% 144 2.63% 1,539 28.03% 5,491
Hardee 5,242 68.57% 2,149 28.11% 254 3.32% 3,093 40.46% 7,645
Hendry 6,195 55.40% 4,615 41.27% 372 3.33% 1,580 14.13% 11,182
Hernando 58,970 62.30% 31,795 33.59% 3,886 4.11% 27,175 28.71% 94,651
Highlands 29,565 64.26% 14,937 32.46% 1,509 3.28% 14,628 31.80% 46,011
Hillsborough 266,870 44.19% 307,896 50.99% 29,124 4.82% -41,026 -6.80% 603,890
Holmes 7,483 87.46% 853 9.97% 220 2.57% 6,630 77.49% 8,556
Indian River 48,620 60.20% 29,043 35.96% 3,106 3.84% 19,577 24.24% 80,769
Jackson 14,257 67.38% 6,397 30.23% 505 2.39% 7,860 37.15% 21,159
Jefferson 3,930 51.11% 3,541 46.05% 218 2.84% 389 5.06% 7,689
Lafayette 2,809 82.35% 518 15.19% 84 2.46% 2,291 67.16% 3,411
Lake 102,188 59.48% 62,838 36.58% 6,773 3.94% 39,350 22.90% 171,799
Lee 191,551 58.12% 124,908 37.90% 13,095 3.98% 66,643 20.22% 329,554
Leon 53,821 34.98% 92,068 59.83% 7,992 5.19% -38,247 -24.85% 153,881
Levy 13,775 70.64% 5,101 26.16% 623 3.20% 8,674 44.48% 19,499
Liberty 2,543 76.78% 651 19.66% 118 3.56% 1,892 57.12% 3,312
Madison 4,851 56.80% 3,526 41.29% 163 1.91% 1,325 15.51% 8,540
Manatee 101,944 56.40% 71,224 39.40% 7,589 4.20% 30,720 17.00% 180,757
Marion 107,833 61.30% 62,041 35.27% 6,026 3.43% 45,792 26.03% 175,900
Martin 53,204 61.41% 30,185 34.84% 3,244 3.75% 23,019 26.57% 86,633
Miami-Dade 333,999 33.83% 624,146 63.22% 29,046 2.95% -290,147 -29.39% 987,191
Monroe 21,904 50.97% 18,971 44.14% 2,102 4.89% 2,933 6.83% 42,977
Nassau 34,266 72.92% 10,869 23.13% 1,857 3.95% 23,397 49.79% 46,992
Okaloosa 71,893 70.42% 23,780 23.29% 6,423 6.29% 48,113 47.13% 102,096
Okeechobee 9,356 67.99% 3,959 28.77% 446 3.24% 5,397 39.22% 13,761
Orange 195,216 35.37% 329,894 59.77% 26,792 4.86% -134,678 -24.40% 511,902
Osceola 50,301 35.56% 85,458 60.41% 5,709 4.03% -35,157 -24.85% 141,468
Palm Beach 272,402 40.89% 374,673 56.24% 19,137 2.87% -102,271 -15.35% 666,212
Pasco 142,101 58.41% 90,142 37.06% 11,022 4.53% 51,959 21.35% 243,265
Pinellas 239,201 48.08% 233,701 46.98% 24,583 4.94% 5,500 1.10% 497,485
Polk 157,430 54.86% 117,433 40.92% 12,106 4.22% 39,997 13.94% 286,969
Putnam 22,138 66.48% 10,094 30.31% 1,069 3.21% 12,044 36.17% 33,301
St. Johns 88,684 64.34% 43,099 31.27% 6,063 4.39% 45,585 33.07% 137,846
St. Lucie 70,289 49.50% 66,881 47.10% 4,823 3.40% 3,408 2.40% 141,993
Santa Rosa 65,339 73.68% 18,464 20.82% 4,881 5.50% 46,875 52.86% 88,684
Sarasota 124,438 53.79% 97,870 42.30% 9,045 3.91% 26,568 11.49% 231,353
Seminole 109,443 48.10% 105,914 46.55% 12,169 5.35% 3,529 1.55% 227,526
Sumter 52,730 68.27% 22,638 29.31% 1,870 2.42% 30,092 38.96% 77,238
Suwannee 14,287 76.05% 3,964 21.10% 536 2.85% 10,323 54.95% 18,787
Taylor 6,930 74.13% 2,152 23.02% 266 2.85% 4,778 51.11% 9,348
Union 4,568 79.83% 1,014 17.72% 140 2.45% 3,554 62.11% 5,722
Volusia 143,007 54.32% 109,091 41.44% 11,180 4.24% 33,916 12.88% 263,278
Wakulla 10,512 68.07% 4,348 28.15% 584 3.78% 6,164 39.92% 15,444
Walton 25,756 75.98% 6,876 20.28% 1,266 3.74% 18,880 55.70% 33,898
Washington 8,637 77.04% 2,264 20.19% 310 2.77% 6,373 56.85% 11,211
Totals 4,617,886 48.60% 4,504,975 47.41% 379,886 3.99% 112,911 1.19% 9,502,747
imageSwing by county
Legend
  •   Democratic — +7.5-10%
  •   Democratic — +5-7.5%
  •   Democratic — +2.5-5%
  •   Democratic — +0-2.5%
  •   Republican — +0-2.5%
  •   Republican — +2.5-5%
  •   Republican — +5-7.5%
  •   Republican — +7.5-10%
  •   Republican — +10-12.5%
  •   Republican — +12.5-15%
  •   Republican — +>15%
imageTrend relative to the state by county
Legend
  •   Democratic — +7.5-10%
  •   Democratic — +5-7.5%
  •   Democratic — +2.5-5%
  •   Democratic — +0-2.5%
  •   Republican — +0-2.5%
  •   Republican — +2.5-5%
  •   Republican — +5-7.5%
  •   Republican — +7.5-10%
  •   Republican — +10-12.5%
  •   Republican — +12.5-15%
  •   Republican — +>15%
imageCounty flips
Legend
  • Democratic

      Hold

    Republican

      Hold
      Gain from Democratic

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

  • Jefferson (largest city: Monticello)
  • Monroe (largest city: Key West)
  • Pinellas (largest city: St. Petersburg)
  • St. Lucie (largest city: Port St. Lucie)

By congressional district

Trump won 14 of 27 congressional districts, while Clinton won 13, including two held by Republicans.

District Trump Clinton Representative
1st 68% 28% Jeff Miller
Matt Gaetz
2nd 66% 31% Gwen Graham
Neal Dunn
3rd 56% 40% Ted Yoho
4th 62% 34% Ander Crenshaw
John Rutherford
5th 36% 61% Corrine Brown
Al Lawson
6th 57% 40% Ron DeSantis
7th 44% 51% John Mica
Stephanie Murphy
8th 58% 38% Bill Posey
9th 42% 55% Alan Grayson
Darren Soto
10th 35% 62% Daniel Webster
Val Demings
11th 65% 33% Rich Nugent
Daniel Webster
12th 57% 39% Gus Bilirakis
13th 46% 50% David Jolly
Charlie Crist
14th 39% 57% Kathy Castor
15th 53% 43% Dennis Ross
16th 54% 43% Vern Buchanan
17th 62% 35% Tom Rooney
18th 53% 44% Patrick Murphy
Brian Mast
19th 60% 38% Curt Clawson
Francis Rooney
20th 18% 80% Alcee Hastings
21st 39% 59% Lois Frankel
22nd 41% 57% Ted Deutch
23rd 36% 62% Debbie Wasserman Schultz
24th 16% 81% Frederica Wilson
25th 50% 48% Mario Díaz-Balart
26th 41% 57% Carlos Curbelo
27th 39% 59% Ileana Ros-Lehtinen

See also

  • United States presidential elections in Florida
  • 2016 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums
  • 2016 Democratic Party presidential primaries
  • 2016 Republican Party presidential debates and forums
  • 2016 Republican Party presidential primaries

References

  1. "Voter Turnout - Division of Elections - Florida Department of State". dos.myflorida.com.
  2. 2016 General Election November 8, 2016. Official Election Results. Florida Department of State, Division of Elections.
  3. "Distribution of Electoral Votes". National Archives and Records Administration. September 19, 2019. Retrieved November 23, 2020.
  4. "Florida Election Results 2016 – The New York Times". Retrieved November 10, 2016.
  5. Unlike other Latinos, about half of Cuban voters in Florida backed Trump, Pew Research Center, November 15, 2016.
  6. RealClearPolitics.com"
  7. "Miami Dade College To Host Democratic Presidential Debate". wlrn.org. November 2, 2015. Retrieved January 8, 2016.
  8. "DNC/Florida Democratic Party Primary Debate Hosted by Univision News and The Washington Post to Take Place at the Nation's Largest and Most Diverse College, Miami Dade College, on March 9, 2016 - Univision". Univision. Archived from the original on February 2, 2016. Retrieved January 8, 2016.
  9. Avendaño, Alberto (December 18, 2015). "Él impulsa el debate hispano entre los precandidatos demócratas". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved January 8, 2016.
  10. "Univision/Washington Post Democratic debate to be held March 9". POLITICO. Retrieved January 8, 2016.
  11. The Green Papers
  12. Florida Division of Elections - Official Primary Results
  13. "RealClearPolitics - Election 2016 - 2016 Republican Presidential Nomination".
  14. Wemple, Erik (January 20, 2016). "CNN partnering with the Washington Times for March 10 debate in Miami". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved February 13, 2016.
  15. "CNN announces March debate in Florida". Politico. Retrieved January 18, 2016.
  16. "Republican Debate in Miami: What to Watch". CNN.com. March 10, 2016.
  17. Peters, Jeremy; Barbaro, Michael (March 15, 2016). "Marco Rubio Suspends His Presidential Campaign". The New York Times. Retrieved March 15, 2016.
  18. "2016 Presidential Primary". Green Party of Florida. May 5, 2016. Retrieved June 1, 2016.
  19. "Campaign 2016 updates: Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton traverse the country in final push". Retrieved November 9, 2016 – via LA Times.
  20. Chalian, David. "Road to 270: CNN's new election map". Retrieved November 9, 2016.
  21. "Presidential Ratings". The Rothenberg Political Report. Retrieved August 16, 2021.
  22. "Larry J. Sabato's Crystal Ball » 2016 President". Retrieved November 9, 2016.
  23. "NBC's final battleground map shows a lead for Clinton". Retrieved November 9, 2016.
  24. "ElectoralVote". Retrieved November 9, 2016.
  25. "RealClearPolitics - 2016 Election Maps - Battle for White House". Retrieved November 9, 2016.
  26. "Fox News Electoral Scorecard: Map shifts again in Trump's favor, as Clinton holds edge". November 7, 2016. Retrieved November 9, 2016.
  27. "The Final 15: Latest Polls in Swing States". ABC News. November 8, 2016. Retrieved November 9, 2016.
  28. "RealClearPolitics - Election 2016 - Florida: Trump vs. Clinton".
  29. "Florida Department of State - Election Results". Retrieved April 14, 2017.
  30. "Introducing the 2017 Cook Political Report Partisan Voter Index". cookpolitical.com.

Further reading

  • David Weigel; Lauren Tierney (August 30, 2020), "The six political states of Florida", Washingtonpost.com

External links

  • RNC 2016 Republican Nominating Process Archived November 8, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  • Green papers for 2016 primaries, caucuses, and conventions
  • Interactive Map, 2016 Florida Primary Election Results - ap.com
  • Decision Desk Headquarter Results for Florida

Author: www.NiNa.Az

Publication date: May 09, 2025 / 19:50

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The 2016 United States presidential election in Florida was held on Tuesday November 8 2016 as part of the 2016 United States presidential election in which all 50 states plus the District of Columbia participated Florida voters chose electors to represent them in the Electoral College via a popular vote pitting the Republican nominee businessman Donald Trump and his running mate Indiana Governor Mike Pence against the Democratic nominee former U S Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and her running mate Virginia Senator Tim Kaine Florida had 29 electoral votes in the Electoral College 2016 United States presidential election in Florida 2012 November 8 2016 2020 Turnout74 48 2 94 pp Nominee Donald Trump Hillary Clinton Party Republican Democratic Home state New York New York Running mate Mike Pence Tim Kaine Electoral vote 29 0 Popular vote 4 617 886 4 504 975 Percentage 49 02 47 82 County resultsCongressional district resultsPrecinct results Trump 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 90 100 Clinton 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 90 100 Tie No data President before election Barack Obama Democratic Elected President Donald Trump Republican Results by county showing number of votes by size and candidates by color Treemap of the popular vote by county Trump carried the state with a plurality of 49 0 of the popular vote which included a 1 2 winning margin over Clinton who had 47 8 of the vote Trump consequently became the first Republican to win the White House without carrying Hillsborough County since Calvin Coolidge in 1924 Trump was also the first Republican presidential candidate to carry St Lucie County since 1992 and the first to carry Jefferson and Monroe Counties since 1988 all three of these counties were last carried by George H W Bush Florida voted for Donald Trump by a margin of 1 20 It was the fifth closest state result with only Wisconsin Michigan New Hampshire and Pennsylvania closer According to the National Election Pool Trump got a majority of 54 from the Cuban American voters in the state in comparison to the 71 of Clinton support by Latino voters from other origins This is also the closest election contested by any of Trump s three Democratic opponents in his presidential bids as the Florida electorate has decisively swung to the right in the Trump political era relatedly this would be the last time Trump ran for president as a resident of another state New York rather than of Florida Primary electionsDemocratic primary Democratic debate March 9 2016 Kendall Florida Candidate Airtime Polls Clinton 23 29 51 0 Sanders 17 51 39 6 The eighth debate took place on March 9 2016 at 9 00 PM Eastern Standard Time in Building 7 of the Kendall Campus of Miami Dade College in Kendall Florida It was broadcast through a partnership between Univision and The Washington Post The debate was discussed during a job interview conducted in early 2015 between the Democratic National Committee s then Communications Director Mo Elleithee and future Hispanic Media Director Pablo Manriquez After starting at the DNC in April 2015 Manriquez talked about the idea for a debate for Democratic candidates on Univision to anyone who had ears to listen The debate was officially announced on November 2 2015 Opinion polling Results Election results by county Hillary Clinton Bernie Sanders Three candidates appeared on the Democratic presidential primary ballot e d 2016 Democratic Party s presidential nominating process in Florida Summary of results Candidate Popular vote Estimated delegates Count Percentage Pledged Unpledged Total Hillary Clinton 1 101 414 64 44 141 24 165 Bernie Sanders 568 839 33 28 73 2 75 Martin O Malley withdrawn 38 930 2 28 Uncommitted 0 6 6 Total 1 709 183 100 214 32 246 Source Florida Democratic primary March 15 2016 District Delegates Votes Clinton Votes Sanders Votes Qualified Clinton delegates Sanders delegates 1 3 26987 18497 45484 2 1 2 6 50190 34073 84263 4 2 3 4 32070 27974 60044 2 2 4 4 33920 22765 56685 2 2 5 6 55855 18639 74494 4 2 6 5 37995 24443 62438 3 2 7 5 37410 26795 64205 3 2 8 5 39384 24376 63760 3 2 9 5 40609 19880 60489 3 2 10 5 38011 22213 60224 3 2 11 5 38061 21590 59651 3 2 12 5 35498 23172 58670 3 2 13 6 44121 29707 73828 4 2 14 6 49146 23617 72763 4 2 15 5 32793 20712 53505 3 2 16 6 43921 25856 69777 4 2 17 4 29899 17045 46944 3 1 18 6 42804 20620 63424 4 2 19 4 31958 17235 49193 3 1 20 7 61998 15761 77759 6 1 21 7 57723 22100 79823 5 2 22 6 49602 22209 71811 4 2 23 6 44510 19974 64484 4 2 24 8 59274 13893 73167 6 2 25 3 24897 9287 34184 2 1 26 4 32069 14148 46217 3 1 27 4 30709 12258 42967 3 1 Total 140 1101414 568839 1670253 93 47 PLEO 28 1101414 568839 1670253 18 10 At Large 46 1101414 568839 1670253 30 16 Gr Total 214 1101414 568839 1670253 141 73 Total vote 64 44 33 28 1 709 183 Source Florida Department of State Division of Elections Republican primary Republican debate March 10 2016 Coral Gables Florida Candidate Airtime Polls Trump 28 11 38 6 Cruz 21 42 21 8 Rubio 21 23 18 0 Kasich 18 49 12 0 The twelfth debate was the fourth and final debate to air on CNN and led into the Florida Illinois North Carolina Missouri and Ohio primaries on March 15 The candidates debated at the University of Miami moderated by Jake Tapper and questioned by CNN chief political correspondent Dana Bash Salem Radio Network talk show host Hugh Hewitt and Washington Times contributor Stephen Dinan The Washington Times cohosted the debate The debate was originally scheduled considering the likelihood that no candidate would clinch the Republican nomination before March 15 due to the overall size of the field On the day of the debate CNN summarized the immediate stakes This debate comes just five days ahead of Super Tuesday 3 when more than 350 delegates are decided including winner take all contests in Florida and Ohio Both Trump and Rubio are predicting a win in Florida For Trump a win here would fuel his growing momentum and further grow his delegate lead for Rubio losing his home state could be the death knell for his campaign This was the twelfth and final debate appearance of Rubio who suspended his campaign on March 15 Polling Results Election results by county Donald Trump Marco Rubio Twelve candidates appeared on the Republican presidential primary ballot Florida Republican primary March 15 2016 Candidate Votes Percentage Actual delegate count Bound Unbound Total Donald Trump 1 079 870 45 72 99 0 99 Marco Rubio 638 661 27 04 0 0 0 Ted Cruz 404 891 17 14 0 0 0 John Kasich 159 976 6 77 0 0 0 Jeb Bush withdrawn 43 511 1 84 0 0 0 Ben Carson withdrawn 21 207 0 90 0 0 0 Rand Paul withdrawn 4 450 0 19 0 0 0 Mike Huckabee withdrawn 2 624 0 11 0 0 0 Chris Christie withdrawn 2 493 0 11 0 0 0 Carly Fiorina withdrawn 1 899 0 08 0 0 0 Rick Santorum withdrawn 1 211 0 05 0 0 0 Lindsey Graham withdrawn 693 0 03 0 0 0 Jim Gilmore withdrawn 319 0 01 0 0 0 Unprojected delegates 0 0 0 Total 2 361 805 100 00 99 0 99 Source The Green Papers Green primary The Green Party held a primary in Florida on July 31 2016 Early voting began on July 25 On July 31 2016 the Green Party of Florida announced that Jill Stein had won the Florida primary via instant runoff voting Green Party of Florida primary first round Candidate Votes Percentage National delegates Jill Stein 18 52 9 Elijah Manley 14 41 2 William Kreml 1 2 94 Kent Mesplay 1 2 94 Sedinam Curry 0 Darryl Cherney 0 Total 34 100 Green Party of Florida primary second round Candidate Votes Percentage National delegates Jill Stein 19 55 9 Elijah Manley 14 41 2 William Kreml 1 2 94 Total 34 100 Green Party of Florida primary third round Candidate Votes Percentage National delegates Jill Stein 20 58 8 15 Elijah Manley 14 41 2 10 Total 34 100 25General electionPredictions The following are final 2016 predictions from various organizations for Florida as of Election Day Source Ranking As of Los Angeles Times Lean D November 6 2016 CNN Tossup November 4 2016 Rothenberg Political Report Tilt D November 7 2016 Sabato s Crystal Ball Lean D November 7 2016 NBC Tossup November 8 2016 Electoral vote com Tossup November 8 2016 RealClearPolitics Tossup November 8 2016 Fox News Tossup November 7 2016 ABC Tossup November 7 2016 Polling In early polling conducted in late 2015 Trump started with strong momentum and won almost every poll against Clinton by margins varying from 2 to 8 points In March 2016 Trump s early momentum seemed to slow as Clinton won every poll until June 2016 when Trump won a poll 45 to 44 Most polling conducted throughout the summer was favorable to Clinton but both candidates were neck and neck in late August and early September with neither having a consistent lead From mid September to October 20 Clinton won every poll but one In the last weeks polling was extremely close with neither candidate taking the lead The third to last and fourth to last poll ended in a tie but Trump won the last poll 50 to 46 The average of the last three polls showed Trump ahead 47 3 to 46 7 where the race was essentially tied Results 2016 United States presidential election in Florida Party Presidential candidate Popular vote Electoral vote Count Percentage RepublicanDonald Trump4 617 88649 02 29 DemocraticHillary Clinton4 504 97547 82 0 LibertarianGary Johnson207 0432 20 0 GreenJill Stein64 3990 68 0 ConstitutionDarrell L Castle16 4750 17 0 ReformRocky De La Fuente9 1080 10 0 Write in 1530 01 0 Date November 8 2016 Total voters Registered 12 863 773 Eligible 14 441 877 Turnout Registered 74 48 VAP 66 34 Turnout votes Valid votes 9 420 039 Invalid votes 160 450 By county County Donald Trump Republican Hillary Clinton Democratic Various candidates Other parties Margin Total votes cast Alachua 46 834 36 00 75 820 58 28 7 446 5 72 28 986 22 28 130 100 Baker 10 294 81 02 2 112 16 62 299 2 36 8 182 64 40 12 705 Bay 62 194 70 50 21 797 24 71 4 231 4 79 40 397 45 79 88 222 Bradford 8 913 73 31 2 924 24 05 321 2 64 5 989 49 26 12 158 Brevard 181 848 57 16 119 679 37 62 16 614 5 22 62 169 19 54 318 141 Broward 260 951 31 16 553 320 66 08 23 117 2 76 292 369 34 92 837 388 Calhoun 4 655 75 96 1 241 20 25 232 3 79 3 414 55 71 6 128 Charlotte 60 128 61 96 33 445 34 41 3 524 3 63 26 773 27 55 97 187 Citrus 54 456 67 72 22 789 28 34 3 167 3 94 31 667 39 38 80 412 Clay 74 963 69 85 27 822 25 93 4 532 4 22 47 141 43 92 107 317 Collier 105 423 61 11 61 085 35 41 6 002 3 48 44 338 25 70 172 510 Columbia 20 368 70 57 7 601 26 33 895 3 10 12 767 44 24 28 864 DeSoto 6 778 62 17 3 781 34 68 344 3 15 2 997 27 49 10 903 Dixie 5 822 80 35 1 270 17 53 154 2 12 4 552 62 82 7 246 Duval 211 672 48 48 205 704 47 12 19 197 4 40 5 968 1 36 436 573 Escambia 88 808 57 60 57 461 37 27 7 903 5 13 31 347 20 33 154 172 Flagler 33 850 58 38 22 026 37 98 2 111 3 64 11 824 20 40 57 987 Franklin 4 125 68 08 1 744 28 78 190 3 14 2 381 39 30 6 059 Gadsden 6 728 30 29 15 020 67 62 466 2 09 8 292 37 33 22 214 Gilchrist 6 740 79 56 1 458 17 21 274 3 23 5 282 62 35 8 472 Glades 2 996 68 37 1 271 29 01 115 2 62 1 725 39 36 4 382 Gulf 5 329 72 69 1 720 23 46 282 3 85 3 609 49 23 7 331 Hamilton 3 443 62 70 1 904 34 67 144 2 63 1 539 28 03 5 491 Hardee 5 242 68 57 2 149 28 11 254 3 32 3 093 40 46 7 645 Hendry 6 195 55 40 4 615 41 27 372 3 33 1 580 14 13 11 182 Hernando 58 970 62 30 31 795 33 59 3 886 4 11 27 175 28 71 94 651 Highlands 29 565 64 26 14 937 32 46 1 509 3 28 14 628 31 80 46 011 Hillsborough 266 870 44 19 307 896 50 99 29 124 4 82 41 026 6 80 603 890 Holmes 7 483 87 46 853 9 97 220 2 57 6 630 77 49 8 556 Indian River 48 620 60 20 29 043 35 96 3 106 3 84 19 577 24 24 80 769 Jackson 14 257 67 38 6 397 30 23 505 2 39 7 860 37 15 21 159 Jefferson 3 930 51 11 3 541 46 05 218 2 84 389 5 06 7 689 Lafayette 2 809 82 35 518 15 19 84 2 46 2 291 67 16 3 411 Lake 102 188 59 48 62 838 36 58 6 773 3 94 39 350 22 90 171 799 Lee 191 551 58 12 124 908 37 90 13 095 3 98 66 643 20 22 329 554 Leon 53 821 34 98 92 068 59 83 7 992 5 19 38 247 24 85 153 881 Levy 13 775 70 64 5 101 26 16 623 3 20 8 674 44 48 19 499 Liberty 2 543 76 78 651 19 66 118 3 56 1 892 57 12 3 312 Madison 4 851 56 80 3 526 41 29 163 1 91 1 325 15 51 8 540 Manatee 101 944 56 40 71 224 39 40 7 589 4 20 30 720 17 00 180 757 Marion 107 833 61 30 62 041 35 27 6 026 3 43 45 792 26 03 175 900 Martin 53 204 61 41 30 185 34 84 3 244 3 75 23 019 26 57 86 633 Miami Dade 333 999 33 83 624 146 63 22 29 046 2 95 290 147 29 39 987 191 Monroe 21 904 50 97 18 971 44 14 2 102 4 89 2 933 6 83 42 977 Nassau 34 266 72 92 10 869 23 13 1 857 3 95 23 397 49 79 46 992 Okaloosa 71 893 70 42 23 780 23 29 6 423 6 29 48 113 47 13 102 096 Okeechobee 9 356 67 99 3 959 28 77 446 3 24 5 397 39 22 13 761 Orange 195 216 35 37 329 894 59 77 26 792 4 86 134 678 24 40 511 902 Osceola 50 301 35 56 85 458 60 41 5 709 4 03 35 157 24 85 141 468 Palm Beach 272 402 40 89 374 673 56 24 19 137 2 87 102 271 15 35 666 212 Pasco 142 101 58 41 90 142 37 06 11 022 4 53 51 959 21 35 243 265 Pinellas 239 201 48 08 233 701 46 98 24 583 4 94 5 500 1 10 497 485 Polk 157 430 54 86 117 433 40 92 12 106 4 22 39 997 13 94 286 969 Putnam 22 138 66 48 10 094 30 31 1 069 3 21 12 044 36 17 33 301 St Johns 88 684 64 34 43 099 31 27 6 063 4 39 45 585 33 07 137 846 St Lucie 70 289 49 50 66 881 47 10 4 823 3 40 3 408 2 40 141 993 Santa Rosa 65 339 73 68 18 464 20 82 4 881 5 50 46 875 52 86 88 684 Sarasota 124 438 53 79 97 870 42 30 9 045 3 91 26 568 11 49 231 353 Seminole 109 443 48 10 105 914 46 55 12 169 5 35 3 529 1 55 227 526 Sumter 52 730 68 27 22 638 29 31 1 870 2 42 30 092 38 96 77 238 Suwannee 14 287 76 05 3 964 21 10 536 2 85 10 323 54 95 18 787 Taylor 6 930 74 13 2 152 23 02 266 2 85 4 778 51 11 9 348 Union 4 568 79 83 1 014 17 72 140 2 45 3 554 62 11 5 722 Volusia 143 007 54 32 109 091 41 44 11 180 4 24 33 916 12 88 263 278 Wakulla 10 512 68 07 4 348 28 15 584 3 78 6 164 39 92 15 444 Walton 25 756 75 98 6 876 20 28 1 266 3 74 18 880 55 70 33 898 Washington 8 637 77 04 2 264 20 19 310 2 77 6 373 56 85 11 211 Totals 4 617 886 48 60 4 504 975 47 41 379 886 3 99 112 911 1 19 9 502 747 Swing by county Legend Democratic 7 5 10 Democratic 5 7 5 Democratic 2 5 5 Democratic 0 2 5 Republican 0 2 5 Republican 2 5 5 Republican 5 7 5 Republican 7 5 10 Republican 10 12 5 Republican 12 5 15 Republican gt 15 Trend relative to the state by county Legend Democratic 7 5 10 Democratic 5 7 5 Democratic 2 5 5 Democratic 0 2 5 Republican 0 2 5 Republican 2 5 5 Republican 5 7 5 Republican 7 5 10 Republican 10 12 5 Republican 12 5 15 Republican gt 15 County flips Legend Democratic Hold Republican Hold Gain from Democratic Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican Jefferson largest city Monticello Monroe largest city Key West Pinellas largest city St Petersburg St Lucie largest city Port St Lucie By congressional district Trump won 14 of 27 congressional districts while Clinton won 13 including two held by Republicans District Trump Clinton Representative 1st 68 28 Jeff Miller Matt Gaetz 2nd 66 31 Gwen Graham Neal Dunn 3rd 56 40 Ted Yoho 4th 62 34 Ander Crenshaw John Rutherford 5th 36 61 Corrine Brown Al Lawson 6th 57 40 Ron DeSantis 7th 44 51 John Mica Stephanie Murphy 8th 58 38 Bill Posey 9th 42 55 Alan Grayson Darren Soto 10th 35 62 Daniel Webster Val Demings 11th 65 33 Rich Nugent Daniel Webster 12th 57 39 Gus Bilirakis 13th 46 50 David Jolly Charlie Crist 14th 39 57 Kathy Castor 15th 53 43 Dennis Ross 16th 54 43 Vern Buchanan 17th 62 35 Tom Rooney 18th 53 44 Patrick Murphy Brian Mast 19th 60 38 Curt Clawson Francis Rooney 20th 18 80 Alcee Hastings 21st 39 59 Lois Frankel 22nd 41 57 Ted Deutch 23rd 36 62 Debbie Wasserman Schultz 24th 16 81 Frederica Wilson 25th 50 48 Mario Diaz Balart 26th 41 57 Carlos Curbelo 27th 39 59 Ileana Ros LehtinenSee alsoUnited States presidential elections in Florida 2016 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums 2016 Democratic Party presidential primaries 2016 Republican Party presidential debates and forums 2016 Republican Party presidential primariesReferences Voter Turnout Division of Elections Florida Department of State dos myflorida com 2016 General Election November 8 2016 Official Election Results Florida Department of State Division of Elections Distribution of Electoral Votes National Archives and Records Administration September 19 2019 Retrieved November 23 2020 Florida Election Results 2016 The New York Times Retrieved November 10 2016 Unlike other Latinos about half of Cuban voters in Florida backed Trump Pew Research Center November 15 2016 RealClearPolitics com Miami Dade College To Host Democratic Presidential Debate wlrn org November 2 2015 Retrieved January 8 2016 DNC Florida Democratic Party Primary Debate Hosted by Univision News and The Washington Post to Take Place at the Nation s Largest and Most Diverse College Miami Dade College on March 9 2016 Univision Univision Archived from the original on February 2 2016 Retrieved January 8 2016 Avendano Alberto December 18 2015 El impulsa el debate hispano entre los precandidatos democratas The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved January 8 2016 Univision Washington Post Democratic debate to be held March 9 POLITICO Retrieved January 8 2016 The Green Papers Florida Division of Elections Official Primary Results RealClearPolitics Election 2016 2016 Republican Presidential Nomination Wemple Erik January 20 2016 CNN partnering with the Washington Times for March 10 debate in Miami The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved February 13 2016 CNN announces March debate in Florida Politico Retrieved January 18 2016 Republican Debate in Miami What to Watch CNN com March 10 2016 Peters Jeremy Barbaro Michael March 15 2016 Marco Rubio Suspends His Presidential Campaign The New York Times Retrieved March 15 2016 2016 Presidential Primary Green Party of Florida May 5 2016 Retrieved June 1 2016 Campaign 2016 updates Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton traverse the country in final push Retrieved November 9 2016 via LA Times Chalian David Road to 270 CNN s new election map Retrieved November 9 2016 Presidential Ratings The Rothenberg Political Report Retrieved August 16 2021 Larry J Sabato s Crystal Ball 2016 President Retrieved November 9 2016 NBC s final battleground map shows a lead for Clinton Retrieved November 9 2016 ElectoralVote Retrieved November 9 2016 RealClearPolitics 2016 Election Maps Battle for White House Retrieved November 9 2016 Fox News Electoral Scorecard Map shifts again in Trump s favor as Clinton holds edge November 7 2016 Retrieved November 9 2016 The Final 15 Latest Polls in Swing States ABC News November 8 2016 Retrieved November 9 2016 RealClearPolitics Election 2016 Florida Trump vs Clinton Florida Department of State Election Results Retrieved April 14 2017 Introducing the 2017 Cook Political Report Partisan Voter Index cookpolitical com Further readingDavid Weigel Lauren Tierney August 30 2020 The six political states of Florida Washingtonpost comExternal linksRNC 2016 Republican Nominating Process Archived November 8 2016 at the Wayback Machine Green papers for 2016 primaries caucuses and conventions Interactive Map 2016 Florida Primary Election Results ap com Decision Desk Headquarter Results for Florida

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