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2016 Michigan Democratic presidential primary

The 2016 Michigan Democratic presidential primary was held on March 8 in the U.S. state of Michigan as one of the Democratic Party's primaries ahead of the 2016 presidential election.

2016 Michigan Democratic presidential primary

← 2008 March 8, 2016 (2016-03-08) 2020 →
 
Candidate Bernie Sanders Hillary Clinton
Home state Vermont New York
Delegate count 67 63
Popular vote 598,943 581,775
Percentage 49.68% 48.26%

Sanders:      40–50%     50–60%      60–70%
Clinton:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%
  Bernie Sanders
  Hillary Clinton

On the same day, the Democratic Party held a second primary in Mississippi, while the Republican Party held primaries in four states, including their own Michigan primary. Bernie Sanders' narrow win was a massive upset, with polling before the primary showing him trailing Hillary Clinton by an average of 21.4 points.[1]

Clinton lost Michigan by a narrow margin of 0.23% in the general election, against Republican nominee Donald Trump.

Forums and debates edit

March 2016 debate in Flint edit

On March 6, 2016 the Democratic Party held a seventh presidential debate at The Whiting at the Flint Cultural Center. Flint, Michigan was chosen as the center of the ongoing Flint water crisis.[2] The debate was hosted by Anderson Cooper and aired on CNN. Participants were Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders. At the end of the debate, Cooper announced a labor union fund had committed $25 million in low-interest loans towards repairing the water system.

March 2016 forum in Detroit edit

The next day, on March 7, 2016, a Town Hall event, was held as the eighth democratic forum. It started at 6:00 p.m. E.S.T., at the Gem Theatre in Detroit, Michigan, and was aired by the Fox News Channel.[3] The forum was moderated by Bret Baier.

Opinion polling edit

Poll source Date 1st 2nd 3rd Other
Official Primary results March 8, 2016 Bernie Sanders
49.7%
Hillary Clinton
48.3%
Others / Uncommitted
2.1%
FOX 2 Detroit/Mitchell[4]

Margin of error: ± 4.5%
Sample size: 482

March 7, 2016 Hillary Clinton
61%
Bernie Sanders
34%
Others / Undecided
5%
FOX 2 Detroit/Mitchell[5]

Margin of error: ± 4.5%
Sample size: 475

March 6, 2016 Hillary Clinton
66%
Bernie Sanders
29%
Others / Undecided
5%
Monmouth[6]

Margin of error: ± 5.6%
Sample size: 302

March 3–6, 2016 Hillary Clinton
55%
Bernie Sanders
42%
Others / Undecided
4%
ARG[7]

Margin of error: ± 5.0%
Sample size: 400

March 4–5, 2016 Hillary Clinton
60%
Bernie Sanders
36%
Others / Undecided
4%
CBS News/YouGov[7]

Margin of error: ± 7.7%
Sample size: 597

March 2–4, 2016 Hillary Clinton
55%
Bernie Sanders
44%
Others / Undecided
1%
Mitchell/FOX 2[8]

Margin of error: ± 4.0%
Sample size: 610

March 2–3, 2016 Hillary Clinton
55%
Bernie Sanders
37%
Others / Undecided
8%
NBC News/Wall St. Jrnl[9]

Margin of error: ± 4.2%
Sample size: 546

March 1–3, 2016 Hillary Clinton
57%
Bernie Sanders
40%
Others / Undecided
3%
MSU[10]

Margin of error: ± 6.1%
Sample size: 262

January 25-March 3, 2016 Hillary Clinton
52%
Bernie Sanders
47%
Others / Undecided
1%
FOX 2 Detroit/Mitchell[11]

Margin of error: ± 4.7%
Sample size: 427

March 1, 2016 Hillary Clinton
61%
Bernie Sanders
33%
Others / Undecided
6%
MRG[12]

Margin of error: ± 4.0%
Sample size: 218

February 22–27, 2016 Hillary Clinton
56%
Bernie Sanders
36%
Others / Undecided
8%
FOX 2 Detroit/Mitchell[13]

Margin of error: ± 5.3%
Sample size: 344

February 23, 2016 Hillary Clinton
65%
Bernie Sanders
31%
Others / Undecided
4%
ARG[14]

Margin of error: ± 5%
Sample size: 400

February 19–20, 2016 Hillary Clinton
53%
Bernie Sanders
40%
Others / Undecided
7%
Fox 2 Detroit/Mitchell[15]

Margin of error: ± 4.69%
Sample size: 430

February 15, 2016 Hillary Clinton
60%
Bernie Sanders
27%
Others / Undecided 13%
Public Policy Polling[16]

Margin of error: ± 4.4
Sample size: 500

February 14–16, 2016 Hillary Clinton
50%
Bernie Sanders
40%
Fox 2 Detroit/Mitchell[17]

Margin of error: ± 5.5%
Sample size: 321

February 4, 2016 Hillary Clinton
57%
Bernie Sanders
28%
Others / Undecided 15%
IMP/Target Insyght [17]

Margin of error: ± 5.0%
Sample size: 400

February 2–4, 2016 Hillary Clinton
62%
Bernie Sanders
30%
Others / Undecided 8%
Marketing Resource Group[18]

Margin of error: ± 4%
Sample size: 600

September 9–14, 2015 Hillary Clinton
41%
Bernie Sanders
22%
Joe Biden 22% Martin O'Malley 1%, Undecided 12%
Public Policy Polling[19]

Margin of error: ± 4.7%
Sample size: 431

June 25–28, 2015 Hillary Clinton
57%
Bernie Sanders
25%
Lincoln Chafee 5% Jim Webb 2%, Martin O'Malley 1%, Not sure 10%
Suffolk

Margin of error: ± ?
Sample size: 212

September 6–10, 2014 Hillary Clinton
61%
Joe Biden
17%
Elizabeth Warren
7%
Andrew Cuomo 4%, Martin O'Malley 1%, Undecided 9%, Refused 1%

Results edit

Michigan Democratic primary, March 8, 2016
Candidate Popular vote Estimated delegates
Count Percentage Pledged Unpledged Total
Bernie Sanders 598,943 49.68% 67 0 67
Hillary Clinton 581,775 48.26% 63 10 73
Uncommitted 21,601 1.79% 0 7 7
Martin O'Malley (withdrawn) 2,363 0.20%
Rocky De La Fuente 870 0.07%
Total 1,205,552 100% 130 17 147
Source: The Green Papers
Michigan Democratic primary, March 8, 2016
District Delegates Votes Clinton Votes Sanders Votes Qualified Clinton delegates Sanders delegates
1 6 28,860 44,359 73,219 2 4
2 5 26,090 39,834 65,924 2 3
3 5 28,441 45,282 73,723 2 3
4 5 24,928 35,597 60,525 2 3
5 7 48,622 42,755 91,377 4 3
6 5 28,265 39,157 67,422 2 3
7 5 29,186 36,019 65,205 2 3
8 5 35,205 46,969 82,174 2 3
9 6 48,570 50,903 99,473 3 3
10 5 28,314 33,710 62,024 2 3
11 6 39,732 45,054 84,786 3 3
12 7 50,157 58,892 109,049 3 4
13 9 71,235 37,028 108,263 6 3
14 9 88,494 42,608 131,102 6 3
Total 85 581,775 598,943 1,180,718 41 44
PLEO 17 581,775 598,943 1,180,718 8 9
At Large 28 581,775 598,943 1,180,718 14 14
Gr. Total 130 581,775 598,943 1,180,718 63 67
Total vote 1,205,552 48.26% 49.68%
Source: Michigan Department of State Election results (District 13 and 14 Wayne County) partial

Results by county edit

County Clinton % Sanders % Others Totals Turnout Margin
Alcona 463 48.74% 455 47.89% 26 947 30.60% -0.84%
Alger 384 37.07% 622 60.64% 26 1,035 44.61% 23.00%
Allegan 3,511 38.01% 5,569 60.28% 16 9,050 11.28% 22.29%
Alpena 1,102 44.26% 1,347 54.10% 26 2,478 36.51% 9.89%
Antrim 867 36.09% 1,491 62.07% 39 2,400 32.72% 26.00%
Arenac 595 46.12% 663 51.40% 24 1,285 35.89% 5.29%
Baraga 270 40.36% 371 55.46% 25 669 37.93% 15.10%
Barry 1,736 35.41% 3,078 62.79% 74 4,891 31.62% 27.44%
Bay 5,937 45.98% 6,363 49.28% 555 12,858 47.83% 3.31%
Benzie 853 33.48% 1,650 64.76% 43 2,549 44.66% 31.27%
Berrien 6,698 51.54% 5,968 45.93% 285 12,954 36.25% -5.64%
Branch 1,010 43.44% 1,246 53.59% 59 2,318 27.23% 10.18%
Calhoun 5,231 46.36% 5,812 51.51% 201 11,247 41.28% 5.17%
Cass 1,657 48.37% 1,684 49.15% 69 3,413 31.70% 0.79%
Charlevoix 1,044 36.73% 1,730 60.87% 58 2,835 36.23% 24.20%
Cheboygan 1,010 42.62% 1,318 55.61% 36 2,367 34.21% 13.01%
Chippewa 1,230 39.83% 1,793 58.06% 55 3,081 38.49% 18.27%
Clare 1,090 45.76% 1,239 52.02% 43 2,375 35.01% 6.27%
Clinton 3,402 42.16% 4,496 55.72% 150 8,051 38.76% 13.59%
Crawford 494 42.33% 631 54.07% 36 1,164 33.90% 11.77%
Delta 1,409 43.34% 1,705 52.45% 122 3,239 39.53% 9.14%
Dickinson 908 43.51% 1,075 51.51% 99 2,085 30.20% 8.01%
Eaton 5,866 43.99% 7,125 53.43% 298 13,292 44.13% 9.47%
Emmet 1,369 33.91% 2,589 64.13% 68 4,029 14.48% 30.28%
Genesee 31,366 51.75% 28,171 46.48% 946 60,486 59.79% -5.28%
Gladwin 985 46.33% 1,083 50.94% 46 2,117 33.72%
Gogebic 678 44.90% 790 52.32% 38 1,509 46.65%
Grand Traverse 4,140 33.19% 8,091 64.86% 206 12,440 41.56%
Gratiot 1,185 38.87% 1,812 59.43% 42 3,042 38.52%
Hillsdale 977 40.17% 1,380 56.74% 59 2,419 24.31%
Houghton 1,109 34.79% 2,039 63.96% 35 3,186 41.79%
Huron 1,050 45.99% 1,184 51.86% 36 2,273 29.30%
Ingham 17,884 43.49% 22,580 54.91% 562 41,029 59.65%
Ionia 1,491 33.99% 2,812 64.11% 62 4,368 34.63%
Iosco 1,077 46.08% 1,202 51.43% 54 2,336 37.45%
Iron 527 48.30% 546 50.05% 18 1,094 36.11%
Isabella 2,032 33.19% 4,024 65.72% 55 6,114 49.53%
Jackson 5,288 42.72% 6,804 54.97% 230 12,325 37.16%
Kalamazoo 12,611 37.92% 20,162 60.63% 408 33,184 50.40%
Kalkaska 590 35.53% 987 61.11% 30 1,610 30.46%
Kent 26,032 36.86% 43,444 61.52% 987 70,506
Keweenaw 128 39.75% 188 58.39% 6 325
Lake 548 50.14% 514 47.03% 30 1,095
Lapeer 3,325 40.39% 4,650 56.49% 221 8,199
Leelanau 1,459 37.67% 2,360 60.93% 44 3,866
Lenawee 3,455 43.73% 4,256 53.87% 163 7,877
Livingston 6,705 38.14% 10,435 59.35% 396 17,539
Luce 167 35.46% 291 61.78% 11 472
Mackinac 500 42.77% 633 54.15% 29 1,165
Macomb 47,599 48.80% 46,248 47.42% 2,534 71,008
Manistee 1,120 39.63% 1,646 58.24% 51 2,820
Marquette 3,188 35.59% 5,530 61.74% 203 8,924
Mason 1,223 40.56% 1,741 57.24% 38 2,772
Mecosta 1,173 38.88% 1,768 58.60% 63 3,007
Menominee 835 48.72% 805 46.97% 64 1,707
Midland 3,097 39.81% 4,568 58.71% 88 7,756
Missaukee 401 39.08% 591 57.60% 33 1,028
Monroe 6,716 47.25% 6,842 48.13% 595 14,156
Montcalm 1,681 36.85% 2,762 60.54%
Montmorency 392 48.70% 383 47.58%
Muskegon 8,807 44.53% 10,456 52.86%
Newaygo 1,295 36.49% 2,155 60.72%
Oakland 92,300 51.38% 84,163 46.85%
Oceana 791 38.21% 1,237 59.76%
Ogemaw 862 46.24% 926 49.68%
Ontonagon 327 44.37% 362 49.12%
Osceola 670 40.39% 953 57.44%
Oscoda 273 44.90% 315 51.81%
Otsego 786 37.97% 1,228 59.5%
Ottawa 7,473 34.39% 13,959 64.24%
Presque Isle 592 47.70% 606 48.83%
Roscommon 1,163 47.33% 1,187 48.31%
Saginaw 12,490 55.32% 9,676 42.86%
St. Clair 5,973 40.96% 8,347 56.54%
St. Joseph 1,382 37.66% 2,219 60.46%
Sanilac 1,160 42.00% 1,485 53.77%
Schoolcraft 312 45.75% 345 50.59%
Shiawassee 3,031 39.38% 4,452 57.84%
Tuscola 1,984 42.65% 2,532 54.43%
Van Buren 2,484 39.73% 3,656 58.48%
Washtenaw 30,022 43.70% 38,062 55.41%
Wayne 165,819 60.11% 105,487 38.24%
Wexford 909 32.95% 1,793 64.99%
Total 581,775 48.26% 598,943 49.68%

Analysis edit

Bernie Sanders's narrow, one-point win in Michigan was seen as a major upset for the Clinton campaign, since Bernie Sanders had never led a poll in that state. Many theories about the failure of the Michigan polling circulated throughout the media, with most centering on pollsters' erroneous assumptions about the composition of the electorate stemming from the 2008 primary in Michigan not having been contested due to an impasse between the state party and DNC.[73][74][75] Although Clinton expanded her delegate lead with a lopsided victory in Mississippi that same day, some journalists suggested Sanders' upset might presage her defeat in other delegate-rich Midwestern Rust Belt states,[76] such as Missouri, Ohio and Illinois, who voted a week later on March 15, along with North Carolina and Florida, where Clinton was more clearly favored.[77][78]

Sanders beat Clinton among white voters in Michigan, who made up 70% of the electorate, by a margin of 56–42, a margin perhaps larger than the Clinton campaign had anticipated. Independents, who made up 27% of the electorate, backed Sanders 71–28. As was true in other primaries, Clinton won the votes of women and African Americans, but Sanders's margins with Independents and rural voters, mostly working class whites who felt disaffected and disenfranchised by trade deals championed by Hillary Clinton and her husband,[20] were not able to be surpassed, even by Clinton's large leads in major cities such as Detroit and Flint. Among voters who said their primary concern was the U.S. economy, Sanders won 56–40, even though Clinton had hammered him on his 2009 vote against the auto-bailout which she believed would resonate in a state whose economy depended upon manufacturing and the auto industry. Among unions, Sanders had beaten Clinton 49–46, even though in previous contests union households had broken for Clinton.[21] Hand-wringing began on the Clinton side, with the campaign worrying they turned their attention to the general election too soon, as Hillary Clinton had pleaded "the sooner I could become your nominee, the more I could begin to turn my attention to the Republicans."[20]

Sanders thanked supporters after his surprise win, "What tonight means is that the Bernie Sanders campaign, the people's revolution that we're talking about, the political revolution that we're talking about, is strong in every part of the country [...] And, frankly, we believe our strongest areas are yet to happen."[20]

Clinton went on to win the next five states in the Democratic primary, including Ohio, Illinois and Missouri.

Alongside Wisconsin, Michigan was among the two "Blue Wall" states won by Bernie Sanders in the primary election that Donald Trump would ultimately flip in the 2016 United States Presidential Election.

References edit

  1. ^ "Election 2016 - Michigan Democratic Presidential Primary". realclearpolitics.com. Retrieved May 28, 2016.
  2. ^ "Flint gets Democratic presidential debate on March 6". Detroit News. February 3, 2016. Retrieved February 3, 2016.
  3. ^ Feldman, Josh. . MSN. Archived from the original on March 7, 2016. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  4. ^ "Michigan Democratic Presidential Primary".
  5. ^ "Clinton Opens Up Huge Lead in Michigan" (PDF).
  6. ^ "MICHIGAN: TRUMP, CLINTON IN FRONT" (PDF).
  7. ^ a b "Michigan Democratic Presidential Primary".
  8. ^ "Clinton's lead on Sanders shrinks heading into Michigan Primary".
  9. ^ "Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton Hold Big Leads in Michigan: Poll".
  10. ^ "TRUMP LEADS GOP FIELD IN MICHIGAN; DEMOCRATIC RACE CLOSE".
  11. ^ "Clinton, Trump maintain large leads ahead of debates, primary".
  12. ^ "Trump & Clinton Poised to Take Michigan" (PDF).
  13. ^ "Clinton Leads Sanders by 34% February 23, 2016" (PDF).
  14. ^ "ARG POll February 19–20, 2016".
  15. ^ "Clinton Leads Sanders by 33%" (PDF). realclearpolitics.com. Retrieved February 20, 2016.
  16. ^ "Subject: Clinton leads in 10 of 12 Early March Primaries; Benefits From Overwhelming Black Support" (PDF).
  17. ^ a b "IMP/Target Insyght Poll: Clinton Dominates Dem Primary". insidemichiganpolitics.com. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
  18. ^ "Hillary up 19 over Biden and Sanders". mrgmi.com. Retrieved September 16, 2015.
  19. ^ "PPP MI" (PDF). publicpolicypolling.com. Retrieved July 9, 2015.
  20. ^ a b c Lee, MJ; Zeleny, Jeff; Bash, Dana; Merica, Dan. "What went wrong for Hillary Clinton?". CNN. Retrieved September 25, 2016.
  21. ^ "2016 Election Center". CNN. Retrieved September 25, 2016.

2016, michigan, democratic, presidential, primary, held, march, state, michigan, democratic, party, primaries, ahead, 2016, presidential, election, 2008, march, 2016, 2016, 2020, candidate, bernie, sanders, hillary, clintonhome, state, vermont, yorkdelegate, c. The 2016 Michigan Democratic presidential primary was held on March 8 in the U S state of Michigan as one of the Democratic Party s primaries ahead of the 2016 presidential election 2016 Michigan Democratic presidential primary 2008 March 8 2016 2016 03 08 2020 Candidate Bernie Sanders Hillary ClintonHome state Vermont New YorkDelegate count 67 63Popular vote 598 943 581 775Percentage 49 68 48 26 Results by countyCongressional district resultsSanders 40 50 50 60 60 70 Clinton 40 50 50 60 60 70 Bernie Sanders Hillary ClintonOn the same day the Democratic Party held a second primary in Mississippi while the Republican Party held primaries in four states including their own Michigan primary Bernie Sanders narrow win was a massive upset with polling before the primary showing him trailing Hillary Clinton by an average of 21 4 points 1 Clinton lost Michigan by a narrow margin of 0 23 in the general election against Republican nominee Donald Trump Contents 1 Forums and debates 1 1 March 2016 debate in Flint 1 2 March 2016 forum in Detroit 2 Opinion polling 3 Results 3 1 Results by county 4 Analysis 5 ReferencesForums and debates editMarch 2016 debate in Flint edit Main article Seventh Democratic Party presidential debate March 2016 in Flint Michigan On March 6 2016 the Democratic Party held a seventh presidential debate at The Whiting at the Flint Cultural Center Flint Michigan was chosen as the center of the ongoing Flint water crisis 2 The debate was hosted by Anderson Cooper and aired on CNN Participants were Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders At the end of the debate Cooper announced a labor union fund had committed 25 million in low interest loans towards repairing the water system March 2016 forum in Detroit edit See also 2016 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums The next day on March 7 2016 a Town Hall event was held as the eighth democratic forum It started at 6 00 p m E S T at the Gem Theatre in Detroit Michigan and was aired by the Fox News Channel 3 The forum was moderated by Bret Baier Opinion polling editSee also Statewide opinion polling for the 2016 Democratic Party presidential primaries Poll source Date 1st 2nd 3rd OtherOfficial Primary results March 8 2016 Bernie Sanders49 7 Hillary Clinton48 3 Others Uncommitted2 1 FOX 2 Detroit Mitchell 4 Margin of error 4 5 Sample size 482 March 7 2016 Hillary Clinton61 Bernie Sanders34 Others Undecided5 FOX 2 Detroit Mitchell 5 Margin of error 4 5 Sample size 475 March 6 2016 Hillary Clinton66 Bernie Sanders29 Others Undecided5 Monmouth 6 Margin of error 5 6 Sample size 302 March 3 6 2016 Hillary Clinton55 Bernie Sanders42 Others Undecided4 ARG 7 Margin of error 5 0 Sample size 400 March 4 5 2016 Hillary Clinton60 Bernie Sanders36 Others Undecided4 CBS News YouGov 7 Margin of error 7 7 Sample size 597 March 2 4 2016 Hillary Clinton55 Bernie Sanders44 Others Undecided1 Mitchell FOX 2 8 Margin of error 4 0 Sample size 610 March 2 3 2016 Hillary Clinton55 Bernie Sanders37 Others Undecided8 NBC News Wall St Jrnl 9 Margin of error 4 2 Sample size 546 March 1 3 2016 Hillary Clinton57 Bernie Sanders40 Others Undecided3 MSU 10 Margin of error 6 1 Sample size 262 January 25 March 3 2016 Hillary Clinton52 Bernie Sanders47 Others Undecided1 FOX 2 Detroit Mitchell 11 Margin of error 4 7 Sample size 427 March 1 2016 Hillary Clinton61 Bernie Sanders33 Others Undecided6 MRG 12 Margin of error 4 0 Sample size 218 February 22 27 2016 Hillary Clinton56 Bernie Sanders36 Others Undecided8 FOX 2 Detroit Mitchell 13 Margin of error 5 3 Sample size 344 February 23 2016 Hillary Clinton65 Bernie Sanders31 Others Undecided4 ARG 14 Margin of error 5 Sample size 400 February 19 20 2016 Hillary Clinton53 Bernie Sanders40 Others Undecided7 Fox 2 Detroit Mitchell 15 Margin of error 4 69 Sample size 430 February 15 2016 Hillary Clinton60 Bernie Sanders27 Others Undecided 13 Public Policy Polling 16 Margin of error 4 4 Sample size 500 February 14 16 2016 Hillary Clinton50 Bernie Sanders 40 Fox 2 Detroit Mitchell 17 Margin of error 5 5 Sample size 321 February 4 2016 Hillary Clinton57 Bernie Sanders28 Others Undecided 15 IMP Target Insyght 17 Margin of error 5 0 Sample size 400 February 2 4 2016 Hillary Clinton62 Bernie Sanders30 Others Undecided 8 Marketing Resource Group 18 Margin of error 4 Sample size 600 September 9 14 2015 Hillary Clinton41 Bernie Sanders22 Joe Biden 22 Martin O Malley 1 Undecided 12 Public Policy Polling 19 Margin of error 4 7 Sample size 431 June 25 28 2015 Hillary Clinton57 Bernie Sanders25 Lincoln Chafee 5 Jim Webb 2 Martin O Malley 1 Not sure 10 Suffolk Margin of error Sample size 212 September 6 10 2014 Hillary Clinton61 Joe Biden17 Elizabeth Warren7 Andrew Cuomo 4 Martin O Malley 1 Undecided 9 Refused 1 Results editSee also Results of the 2016 Democratic Party presidential primaries Michigan Democratic primary March 8 2016Candidate Popular vote Estimated delegatesCount Percentage Pledged Unpledged TotalBernie Sanders 598 943 49 68 67 0 67Hillary Clinton 581 775 48 26 63 10 73Uncommitted 21 601 1 79 0 7 7Martin O Malley withdrawn 2 363 0 20 Rocky De La Fuente 870 0 07 Total 1 205 552 100 130 17 147Source The Green PapersMichigan Democratic primary March 8 2016District Delegates Votes Clinton Votes Sanders Votes Qualified Clinton delegates Sanders delegates1 6 28 860 44 359 73 219 2 42 5 26 090 39 834 65 924 2 33 5 28 441 45 282 73 723 2 34 5 24 928 35 597 60 525 2 35 7 48 622 42 755 91 377 4 36 5 28 265 39 157 67 422 2 37 5 29 186 36 019 65 205 2 38 5 35 205 46 969 82 174 2 39 6 48 570 50 903 99 473 3 310 5 28 314 33 710 62 024 2 311 6 39 732 45 054 84 786 3 312 7 50 157 58 892 109 049 3 413 9 71 235 37 028 108 263 6 314 9 88 494 42 608 131 102 6 3Total 85 581 775 598 943 1 180 718 41 44PLEO 17 581 775 598 943 1 180 718 8 9At Large 28 581 775 598 943 1 180 718 14 14Gr Total 130 581 775 598 943 1 180 718 63 67Total vote 1 205 552 48 26 49 68 Source Michigan Department of State Election results District 13 and 14 Wayne County partialResults by county edit County Clinton Sanders Others Totals Turnout MarginAlcona 463 48 74 455 47 89 26 947 30 60 0 84 Alger 384 37 07 622 60 64 26 1 035 44 61 23 00 Allegan 3 511 38 01 5 569 60 28 16 9 050 11 28 22 29 Alpena 1 102 44 26 1 347 54 10 26 2 478 36 51 9 89 Antrim 867 36 09 1 491 62 07 39 2 400 32 72 26 00 Arenac 595 46 12 663 51 40 24 1 285 35 89 5 29 Baraga 270 40 36 371 55 46 25 669 37 93 15 10 Barry 1 736 35 41 3 078 62 79 74 4 891 31 62 27 44 Bay 5 937 45 98 6 363 49 28 555 12 858 47 83 3 31 Benzie 853 33 48 1 650 64 76 43 2 549 44 66 31 27 Berrien 6 698 51 54 5 968 45 93 285 12 954 36 25 5 64 Branch 1 010 43 44 1 246 53 59 59 2 318 27 23 10 18 Calhoun 5 231 46 36 5 812 51 51 201 11 247 41 28 5 17 Cass 1 657 48 37 1 684 49 15 69 3 413 31 70 0 79 Charlevoix 1 044 36 73 1 730 60 87 58 2 835 36 23 24 20 Cheboygan 1 010 42 62 1 318 55 61 36 2 367 34 21 13 01 Chippewa 1 230 39 83 1 793 58 06 55 3 081 38 49 18 27 Clare 1 090 45 76 1 239 52 02 43 2 375 35 01 6 27 Clinton 3 402 42 16 4 496 55 72 150 8 051 38 76 13 59 Crawford 494 42 33 631 54 07 36 1 164 33 90 11 77 Delta 1 409 43 34 1 705 52 45 122 3 239 39 53 9 14 Dickinson 908 43 51 1 075 51 51 99 2 085 30 20 8 01 Eaton 5 866 43 99 7 125 53 43 298 13 292 44 13 9 47 Emmet 1 369 33 91 2 589 64 13 68 4 029 14 48 30 28 Genesee 31 366 51 75 28 171 46 48 946 60 486 59 79 5 28 Gladwin 985 46 33 1 083 50 94 46 2 117 33 72 Gogebic 678 44 90 790 52 32 38 1 509 46 65 Grand Traverse 4 140 33 19 8 091 64 86 206 12 440 41 56 Gratiot 1 185 38 87 1 812 59 43 42 3 042 38 52 Hillsdale 977 40 17 1 380 56 74 59 2 419 24 31 Houghton 1 109 34 79 2 039 63 96 35 3 186 41 79 Huron 1 050 45 99 1 184 51 86 36 2 273 29 30 Ingham 17 884 43 49 22 580 54 91 562 41 029 59 65 Ionia 1 491 33 99 2 812 64 11 62 4 368 34 63 Iosco 1 077 46 08 1 202 51 43 54 2 336 37 45 Iron 527 48 30 546 50 05 18 1 094 36 11 Isabella 2 032 33 19 4 024 65 72 55 6 114 49 53 Jackson 5 288 42 72 6 804 54 97 230 12 325 37 16 Kalamazoo 12 611 37 92 20 162 60 63 408 33 184 50 40 Kalkaska 590 35 53 987 61 11 30 1 610 30 46 Kent 26 032 36 86 43 444 61 52 987 70 506Keweenaw 128 39 75 188 58 39 6 325Lake 548 50 14 514 47 03 30 1 095Lapeer 3 325 40 39 4 650 56 49 221 8 199Leelanau 1 459 37 67 2 360 60 93 44 3 866Lenawee 3 455 43 73 4 256 53 87 163 7 877Livingston 6 705 38 14 10 435 59 35 396 17 539Luce 167 35 46 291 61 78 11 472Mackinac 500 42 77 633 54 15 29 1 165Macomb 47 599 48 80 46 248 47 42 2 534 71 008Manistee 1 120 39 63 1 646 58 24 51 2 820Marquette 3 188 35 59 5 530 61 74 203 8 924Mason 1 223 40 56 1 741 57 24 38 2 772Mecosta 1 173 38 88 1 768 58 60 63 3 007Menominee 835 48 72 805 46 97 64 1 707Midland 3 097 39 81 4 568 58 71 88 7 756Missaukee 401 39 08 591 57 60 33 1 028Monroe 6 716 47 25 6 842 48 13 595 14 156Montcalm 1 681 36 85 2 762 60 54 Montmorency 392 48 70 383 47 58 Muskegon 8 807 44 53 10 456 52 86 Newaygo 1 295 36 49 2 155 60 72 Oakland 92 300 51 38 84 163 46 85 Oceana 791 38 21 1 237 59 76 Ogemaw 862 46 24 926 49 68 Ontonagon 327 44 37 362 49 12 Osceola 670 40 39 953 57 44 Oscoda 273 44 90 315 51 81 Otsego 786 37 97 1 228 59 5 Ottawa 7 473 34 39 13 959 64 24 Presque Isle 592 47 70 606 48 83 Roscommon 1 163 47 33 1 187 48 31 Saginaw 12 490 55 32 9 676 42 86 St Clair 5 973 40 96 8 347 56 54 St Joseph 1 382 37 66 2 219 60 46 Sanilac 1 160 42 00 1 485 53 77 Schoolcraft 312 45 75 345 50 59 Shiawassee 3 031 39 38 4 452 57 84 Tuscola 1 984 42 65 2 532 54 43 Van Buren 2 484 39 73 3 656 58 48 Washtenaw 30 022 43 70 38 062 55 41 Wayne 165 819 60 11 105 487 38 24 Wexford 909 32 95 1 793 64 99 Total 581 775 48 26 598 943 49 68 Analysis editBernie Sanders s narrow one point win in Michigan was seen as a major upset for the Clinton campaign since Bernie Sanders had never led a poll in that state Many theories about the failure of the Michigan polling circulated throughout the media with most centering on pollsters erroneous assumptions about the composition of the electorate stemming from the 2008 primary in Michigan not having been contested due to an impasse between the state party and DNC 73 74 75 Although Clinton expanded her delegate lead with a lopsided victory in Mississippi that same day some journalists suggested Sanders upset might presage her defeat in other delegate rich Midwestern Rust Belt states 76 such as Missouri Ohio and Illinois who voted a week later on March 15 along with North Carolina and Florida where Clinton was more clearly favored 77 78 Sanders beat Clinton among white voters in Michigan who made up 70 of the electorate by a margin of 56 42 a margin perhaps larger than the Clinton campaign had anticipated Independents who made up 27 of the electorate backed Sanders 71 28 As was true in other primaries Clinton won the votes of women and African Americans but Sanders s margins with Independents and rural voters mostly working class whites who felt disaffected and disenfranchised by trade deals championed by Hillary Clinton and her husband 20 were not able to be surpassed even by Clinton s large leads in major cities such as Detroit and Flint Among voters who said their primary concern was the U S economy Sanders won 56 40 even though Clinton had hammered him on his 2009 vote against the auto bailout which she believed would resonate in a state whose economy depended upon manufacturing and the auto industry Among unions Sanders had beaten Clinton 49 46 even though in previous contests union households had broken for Clinton 21 Hand wringing began on the Clinton side with the campaign worrying they turned their attention to the general election too soon as Hillary Clinton had pleaded the sooner I could become your nominee the more I could begin to turn my attention to the Republicans 20 Sanders thanked supporters after his surprise win What tonight means is that the Bernie Sanders campaign the people s revolution that we re talking about the political revolution that we re talking about is strong in every part of the country And frankly we believe our strongest areas are yet to happen 20 Clinton went on to win the next five states in the Democratic primary including Ohio Illinois and Missouri Alongside Wisconsin Michigan was among the two Blue Wall states won by Bernie Sanders in the primary election that Donald Trump would ultimately flip in the 2016 United States Presidential Election References edit Election 2016 Michigan Democratic Presidential Primary realclearpolitics com Retrieved May 28 2016 Flint gets Democratic presidential debate on March 6 Detroit News February 3 2016 Retrieved February 3 2016 Feldman Josh Fox News Will Hold Democratic Town Hall Next Week Only One Candidate Set to Appear MSN Archived from the original on March 7 2016 Retrieved March 4 2016 Michigan Democratic Presidential Primary Clinton Opens Up Huge Lead in Michigan PDF MICHIGAN TRUMP CLINTON IN FRONT PDF a b Michigan Democratic Presidential Primary Clinton s lead on Sanders shrinks heading into Michigan Primary Donald Trump Hillary Clinton Hold Big Leads in Michigan Poll TRUMP LEADS GOP FIELD IN MICHIGAN DEMOCRATIC RACE CLOSE Clinton Trump maintain large leads ahead of debates primary Trump amp Clinton Poised to Take Michigan PDF Clinton Leads Sanders by 34 February 23 2016 PDF ARG POll February 19 20 2016 Clinton Leads Sanders by 33 PDF realclearpolitics com Retrieved February 20 2016 Subject Clinton leads in 10 of 12 Early March Primaries Benefits From Overwhelming Black Support PDF a b IMP Target Insyght Poll Clinton Dominates Dem Primary insidemichiganpolitics com Retrieved February 8 2016 Hillary up 19 over Biden and Sanders mrgmi com Retrieved September 16 2015 PPP MI PDF publicpolicypolling com Retrieved July 9 2015 a b c Lee MJ Zeleny Jeff Bash Dana Merica Dan What went wrong for Hillary Clinton CNN Retrieved September 25 2016 2016 Election Center CNN Retrieved September 25 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2016 Michigan Democratic presidential primary amp oldid 1187892360, wikipedia, 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