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2016 South Carolina Democratic presidential primary

The 2016 South Carolina Democratic presidential primary took place on February 27 in the U.S. state of South Carolina, marking the Democratic Party's fourth nominating contest in their series of presidential primaries ahead of the 2016 presidential election.

2016 South Carolina Democratic presidential primary

← 2008 February 27, 2016 (2016-02-27) 2020 →
 
Candidate Hillary Clinton Bernie Sanders
Home state New York Vermont
Delegate count 39 14
Popular vote 272,379 96,498
Percentage 73.44% 26.02%

County results
Clinton:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%      >90%

Clinton won the South Carolina Democratic primary by a landslide margin of more than 47%, receiving a larger percentage of the African American vote than Obama, the first black President, did in 2008.[1]

With the Republican Party having already held its South Carolina primary a week earlier on February 20, the Democratic primary in South Carolina was the only presidential primary on that day.

Debates and forums edit

November 2015 forum in Rock Hill edit

Rachel Maddow was selected to moderate the First in the South Candidates Forum with Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders, and Martin O'Malley, which was held at Winthrop University in Rock Hill, South Carolina, on November 6, co-sponsored by the Democratic Parties of 13 southern states.[2] The forum was not in debate format; instead, each candidate was interviewed individually and sequentially.[3] Lincoln Chafee and Jim Webb were also invited, but their campaigns never responded to the invitations,[4] and both have since withdrawn from the race. A Public Policy Poll of South Carolina Democratic voters conducted from November 7–8, after the forum, discovered that 67% of viewers thought Clinton won the forum, 16% thought Sanders won, and 6% thought O'Malley won, with 11% unsure.[5]

January 2016 debate in Charleston, South Carolina edit

On January 17, 2016, the Democratic Party held a fourth debate at the Gaillard Center in Charleston, South Carolina. Hosted by Lester Holt and Andrea Mitchell, the debate aired on NBC News and was streamed on YouTube. It was also sponsored by the Congressional Black Caucus. It was notable as being the final debate before the start of precinct caucuses and primary voting. Participants were Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders, and Martin O'Malley. It was the final debate appearance of O'Malley, who suspended his campaign on February 1.

Both before and after the debate, commentators said the debate was focused on Sanders and his voting record on gun control and slights against President Obama, among other issues. During the debate, O'Malley interrupted to take 30 seconds to talk about "homeland security and preparedness".[6] Also during the debate, Clinton and Sanders had some back-and-forth exchanges to define themselves on Wall Street, foreign policy, and gun control.[6]

Opinion polling edit

Delegate count: 53 Pledged, 6 Unpledged

Winner
  Hillary Clinton
Primary date
27 February 2016
Poll source Date 1st 2nd 3rd Other
Official Primary Results February 27, 2016 Hillary Clinton
73.4%
Bernie Sanders
26.0%
Others
0.6%
Clemson[7]

Margin of error: 3.0%
Sample size: 650

February 20–25, 2016 Hillary Clinton
64%
Bernie Sanders
14%
Others / Undecided
22%
Emerson College[8]

Margin of error: 6.0%
Sample size: 266

February 22–24, 2016 Hillary Clinton
60%
Bernie Sanders
37%
Others / Undecided
3%
NBC/WSJ/Marist[9]

Margin of error: 4.8%
Sample size: 425

February 15–17, 2016 Hillary Clinton
60%
Bernie Sanders
32%
Other
8%
Bloomberg Politics[10]

Margin of error: 4.9%
Sample size: 403

February 13–17,
2016
Hillary Clinton
53%
Bernie Sanders
31%
Not sure
16%
ARG[11]

Margin of error: 5%
Sample size: 400

February 14–16, 2016 Hillary Clinton
61%
Bernie Sanders
31%
Someone else 1% No opinion 7%
Public Policy Polling[12]

Margin of error: ± 4%
Sample size: 525

February 14–15, 2016 Hillary Clinton
55%
Bernie Sanders
34%
Undecided 12%
CNN/ORC[13]

Margin of error: 6%
Sample size: 289

February 10–15, 2016 Hillary Clinton
56%
Bernie Sanders
38%
Someone else 3% No opinion 4%
ARG[14]

Margin of error: ± 5.0%
Sample size: 400

February 12–13, 2016 Hillary Clinton
65%
Bernie Sanders
27%
Other 1%, Undecided 7%
YouGov/CBS News[15]

Margin of error: ± 8.7%
Sample size: 404

February 10–12, 2016 Hillary Clinton
59%
Bernie Sanders
40%
No Preference 1%
NBC/WSJ/Marist[16]

Margin of error: ± 4.6%
Sample size: 446

January 17–23, 2016 Hillary Clinton
64%
Bernie Sanders
27%
Martin O'Malley
2%
Undecided 7%
YouGov/CBS News[17]

Margin of error: ± 9.4%
Sample size: 388

January 17–21, 2016 Hillary Clinton
60%
Bernie Sanders
38%
Martin O'Malley
0%
Undecided 2%
SC New Democrats

Margin of error: ± ?%
Sample size: 583

January 12–15, 2016 Hillary Clinton
47%
Bernie Sanders
28%
Martin O'Malley
2%
Undecided 22%
Polls in 2015
Poll source Date 1st 2nd 3rd Other
YouGov/CBS News[18]

Margin of error: ± 5.0%
Sample size: 420

December 13–17, 2015 Hillary Clinton
67%
Bernie Sanders
31%
Martin O'Malley
2%
No Preference 0%
Fox News

Margin of error: ± 5.0%
Sample size: 364

December 5–8, 2015 Hillary Clinton
65%
Bernie Sanders
21%
Martin O'Malley
3%
Other 1%, None of the Above 7%, DK 3%
YouGov/CBS News[19]

Margin of error: ± 6.0%
Sample size: 420

November 15–19, 2015 Hillary Clinton
72%
Bernie Sanders
25%
Martin O'Malley
2%
Undecided 1%
Public Policy Polling[20]

Margin of error: ± 4.9%
Sample size: 400

November 7–8, 2015 Hillary Clinton
72%
Bernie Sanders
18%
Martin O'Malley
5%
Unsure 5%
Monmouth University[21]

Margin of error: ± 4.9%
Sample size: 400

November 5–8, 2015 Hillary Clinton
69%
Bernie Sanders
21%
Martin O'Malley
1%
Other 1% No Preference 8%
Winthrop University[22]

Margin of error: ± 3.4%
Sample size: 832

October 24 – November 1, 2015 Hillary Clinton
71%
Bernie Sanders
15%
Martin O'Malley
2%
Refused 2% Undecided 9% Wouldn't Vote 1%
YouGov/CBS News[23]

Margin of error: ± 8.2%
Sample size: 427

October 15–22, 2015 Hillary Clinton
68%
Bernie Sanders
25%
Martin O'Malley
1%
Jim Webb 1%, Lincoln Chafee 0%, Lawrence Lessig 0%, No preference 4%
Clemson Palmetto[24]

Margin of error: 4.0%
Sample size: 600

October 13–23, 2015 Hillary Clinton
43%
Bernie Sanders
6%
Martin O'Malley
1%
Undecided 50%
CNN/ORC[25]

Margin of error: 5.5%
Sample size: 301

October 3–10, 2015 Hillary Clinton
49%
Joe Biden
24%
Bernie Sanders
18%
Martin O'Malley 3%, Someone else 1%, None/No one 1%, No opinion 4%
Gravis Marketing[26]

Margin of error: ± ?%
Sample size: ?

September 25–27, 2015 Hillary Clinton
50%
Joe Biden
19%
Bernie Sanders
13%
Lincoln Chafee 1%, Jim Webb <1%, Martin O'Malley <1%, Unsure 17%
YouGov/CBS News[27]

Margin of error: ± 6.8%
Sample size: 528

Sep. 3–10, 2015 Hillary Clinton
46%
Bernie Sanders
23%
Joe Biden
22%
No preference 8%, Jim Webb 1%, Lincoln Chafee 0%, Martin O'Malley 0%
Public Policy Polling[28]

Margin of error: ± 5.6%
Sample size: 302

Sep. 3–6, 2015 Hillary Clinton
54%
Joe Biden
24%
Bernie Sanders
9%
Martin O’Malley, Jim Webb 2%; Lincoln Chafee 1%
Gravis Marketing[29]

Margin of error: ± 4.0%
Sample size: 209

July 29–30, 2015 Hillary Clinton
78%
Bernie Sanders
8%
Elizabeth Warren
6%
Joe Biden 6%, Jim Webb 1%, Martin O'Malley 1%, Lincoln Chafee 1%
Morning Consult[30]

Margin of error: ?
Sample size: 309

May 31 – June 8, 2015 Hillary Clinton
56%
Joe Biden
15%
Bernie Sanders
10%
Martin O'Malley 3%, Jim Webb 2%, Lincoln Chafee 1%, Someone else 2% Undecided 11%
Public Policy Polling

Margin of error: ± 6.2%
Sample size: 252

February 12–15, 2015 Hillary Clinton
59%
Joe Biden
18%
Elizabeth Warren
10%
Martin O'Malley 3%, Bernie Sanders 1%, Jim Webb 1%, Other/Undecided 8%
NBC News/Marist

Margin of error: ± 5.2%
Sample size: 352

February 3–10, 2015 Hillary Clinton
65%
Joe Biden
20%
Bernie Sanders
3%
Martin O'Malley 2%, Jim Webb 2%, Undecided 8%
Polls in 2014
Poll source Date 1st 2nd 3rd Other
Clemson University

Margin of error: ±6%
Sample size: 400

May 26 – June 2, 2014 Hillary Clinton
50%
Joe Biden
12%
Andrew Cuomo
2%
Martin O'Malley 1%, Deval Patrick 0%, Brian Schweitzer 0%, Undecided/Don't know 35%


Results edit

South Carolina Democratic primary, February 27, 2016
Candidate Popular vote Estimated delegates
Count Percentage Pledged Unpledged Total
Hillary Clinton 272,379 73.44% 39 5 44
Bernie Sanders 96,498 26.02% 14 0 14
Willie Wilson 1,314 0.35%
Martin O'Malley (withdrawn) 713 0.19%
Uncommitted 0 1 1
Total votes 370,904 100% 53 6 59
Sources: The Green Papers, South Carolina State Election Commission

Results by county edit

Clinton won every county.[31]

County Clinton % Sanders % Others Total votes cast Turnout as % of total registered electors Margin as % of votes cast in primary
Abbeville 1,508 81.91% 312 16.95% 21 1,841 12.45% 64.96%
Aiken 6,889 70.17% 2,877 29.31% 51 9,883 9.41% 40.87%
Allendale 1,022 90.84% 95 8.44% 8 1,137 19.43% 82.40%
Anderson 5,576 66.79% 2,712 32.48% 61 8,401 7.54% 34.30%
Bamberg 1,710 89.20% 197 10.28% 10 1,928 20.08% 78.93%
Barnwell 1,561 87.45% 209 11.71% 15 1,800 13.50% 75.74%
Beaufort 9,970 73.30% 3,575 26.28% 56 13,664 13.21% 47.02%
Berkeley 9,485 71.96% 3,592 27.25% 104 13,264 12.04% 44.71%
Calhoun 1,536 86.05% 241 13.50% 8 1,809 17.31% 72.55%
Charleston 26,625 65.97% 13,527 33.47% 228 40,508 15.34% 32.50%
Cherokee 1,877 77.95% 514 21.35% 17 2,427 7.91% 56.60%
Chester 1,962 79.63% 492 19.97% 10 2,477 12.23% 59.66%
Chesterfield 2,209 82.80% 446 16.72% 13 2,696 10.71% 66.08%
Clarendon 3,571 90.87% 337 8.58% 22 3,976 17.17% 82.29%
Colleton 2,939 81.86% 584 16.40% 37 3,592 14.89% 66.15%
Darlington 4,990 81.86% 1,081 17.73% 25 6,148 14.49% 64.12%
Dillon 1,659 84.00% 302 15.29% 14 1,993 10.33% 68.71%
Dorchester 6,934 70.21% 2,885 29.21% 57 9,929 10.54% 41.00%
Edgefield 1,474 81.80% 301 16.70% 27 1,822 11.46% 65.09%
Fairfield 3,265 87.46% 440 11.76% 28 3,754 24.35% 75.68%
Florence 9,433 78.00% 2,594 21.45% 67 12,196 14.53% 55.55%
Georgetown 4,941 77.82% 1,350 21.26% 58 6,402 15.69% 56.56%
Greenville 19,966 63.95% 11,118 35.61% 138 31,398 10.56% 28.34%
Greenwood 3,623 77.46% 987 21.10% 67 4,710 11.82% 56.36%
Hampton 1,933 87.98% 241 10.97% 23 2,202 17.27% 77.01%
Horry 11,316 67.25% 5,457 32.43% 54 16,916 8.95% 34.82%
Jasper 2,195 85.08% 355 13.76% 30 2,594 15.48% 71.32%
Kershaw 3,761 77.10% 1,093 22.41% 24 4,914 12.32% 54.69%
Lancaster 3,346 72.96% 1,221 26.62% 19 4,615 8.98% 46.34%
Laurens 2,978 78.53% 801 21.12% 13 3,831 10.25% 57.41%
Lee 2,209 87.66% 288 11.43% 23 2,548 21.40% 76.23%
Lexington 8,847 60.93% 5,611 38.65% 61 14,572 8.69% 22.29%
Marion 3,361 85.37% 552 14.05% 23 3,978 18.42% 71.32%
Marlboro 2,137 88.97% 253 10.53% 12 2,412 13.60% 78.43%
McCormick 973 85.05% 162 14.16% 9 1,161 17.18% 70.89%
Newberry 2,121 80.92% 471 17.97% 29 2,641 11.77% 62.95%
Oconee 1,960 59.61% 1,304 39.66% 24 3,305 6.93% 19.95%
Orangeburg 11,872 88.64% 1,473 11.00% 49 13,515 23.74% 77.64%
Pickens 2,503 55.43% 1,995 44.18% 18 4,528 6.90% 11.25%
Richland 39,332 75.75% 12,354 23.79% 238 52,136 21.73% 51.96%
Saluda 1,023 83.72% 192 15.71% 7 1,237 10.97% 68.00%
Spartanburg 10,674 70.27% 4,467 29.41% 49 1,237 9.17% 40.86%
Sumter 9,830 86.61% 1,443 12.71% 77 15,239 17.42% 73.89%
Union 1,690 83.37% 332 16.38% 5 11,432 11.99% 67.00%
Williamsburg 4,613 88.52% 557 10.69% 41 5,272 23.90% 77.84%
York 8,890 63.40% 5,127 36.20% 57 14,216 9.26% 27.20%
Total 272,379 73.44% 96,498 26.02% 2,027 373,063 12.60% 47.42%

Delegates: The South Carolina Democratic Party - State Election Results

Analysis edit

As South Carolina's majority-black Democratic electorate had dealt a severe death-blow to Clinton's 2008 presidential effort against Barack Obama, it gave her campaign new life in 2016. Clinton won the primary in a 47-point routing thanks to ardent support from African American voters. According to exit polls, Clinton won the black vote 86-14, which comprised 61% of the Democratic electorate in South Carolina; she won among black women 89-11 who comprised 37% of the electorate. Clinton's near-unanimous support from black voters was fueled by their interest in a continuation of President Obama's policies,[32] and by black women who wanted to see a woman elected.[33]

Clinton won every county statewide. She won in upcountry 66-34, Piedmont 74-25, Central South Carolina, including the region which is majority African American 78-22, Pee dee/Waccamaw 83-17, and lowcountry 70-30.[34] She also swept the major cities of Charleston, Columbia, Greenville, and Rock Hill.

References edit

  1. ^ "Black Voters Boost Clinton in South Carolina". ABC News. February 28, 2016. Retrieved May 20, 2016.
  2. ^ "MSNBC's Rachel Maddow to moderate 2016 Democratic forum at Winthrop". The State. October 7, 2015.
  3. ^ "MSNBC's Rachel Maddow will bring Southern focus to forum". Charlotte Observer. November 4, 2015.
  4. ^ "S.C. Democrats to host three presidential candidates in Rock Hill". Greenvilleonline.com. October 7, 2015. Retrieved January 17, 2016.
  5. ^ "Three Republican candidates speak at anti-gay pastor's rally". MSNBC. Retrieved November 23, 2015.
  6. ^ a b Fix, Team (January 17, 2016). "The 4th Democratic debate transcript, annotated: Who said what and what it meant". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved January 18, 2016.
  7. ^ "Clemson University Palmetto Poll Democratic primary summary". Retrieved February 26, 2016.
  8. ^ "EMERSON POLL: CLINTON LEADS SANDERS BY A WIDE MARGIN IN SOUTH CAROLINA, WITH STRONG SUPPORT FROM AFRICAN AMERICANS" (PDF). Retrieved February 26, 2016.
  9. ^ "Donald Trump's Lead Slashed in South Carolina: Poll". Retrieved February 19, 2016.
  10. ^ "Clinton Strong in South Carolina But Warning Signs Ahead, Bloomberg Poll Shows". Retrieved February 18, 2016.
  11. ^ "South Carolina primary: ARG Poll". Retrieved February 17, 2016.
  12. ^ http://www.thestate.com/news/politics-government/politics-columns-blogs/the-buzz/article60547281.html
  13. ^ "South Carolina primary: CNN/ORC poll full results". Retrieved February 16, 2016.
  14. ^ http://elections.huffingtonpost.com/pollster/polls/arg-23748
  15. ^ "CBS News 2016 Battleground Tracker South Carolina" (PDF). CBS News. February 14, 2016. Retrieved February 14, 2016.
  16. ^ "NBC News/WSJ/Marist Poll January 2016 South Carolina Questionnaire" (PDF). Retrieved February 5, 2016.
  17. ^ "CBS News 2016 Battleground Tracker South Carolina" (PDF). CBS News. January 24, 2016. Retrieved January 24, 2016.
  18. ^ "CBS News 2016 Battleground Tracker South Carolina" (PDF).
  19. ^ "CBS News 2016 Battleground Tracker Iowa" (PDF).
  20. ^ "Trump Still Leads But Declining in SC; Clinton Dominant" (PDF). Public Policy Polling. November 10, 2015. Retrieved January 22, 2016.
  21. ^ "South Carolina: Clinton with Big Lead" (PDF). Monmouth University Poll. November 10, 2015. Retrieved January 22, 2015.
  22. ^ "Winthrop University: Winthrop Poll – Current Findings". winthrop.edu.
  23. ^ "PDF file" (PDF). Retrieved October 12, 2015.
  24. ^ "SC Poll". Retrieved November 5, 2015.
  25. ^ "CNN SC poll". Retrieved November 5, 2015.
  26. ^ "The Buzz". Retrieved October 1, 2015.
  27. ^ Will Jordan. "Sanders up big in New Hampshire and Iowa; Carson trails Trump". YouGov.
  28. ^ "The Buzz". Retrieved September 9, 2015.
  29. ^ "SC polling" (PDF). Retrieved August 4, 2015.
  30. ^ "Morning Consult SC" (PDF). morningconsult.com. Retrieved July 9, 2015.
  31. ^ "South Carolina Election Results 2016: President Live Map by County, Real-Time Voting Updates - POLITICO".
  32. ^ Chozick, Amy; Healy, Patrick (February 27, 2016). "Hillary Clinton Wins South Carolina Primary". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved October 18, 2016.
  33. ^ Hannah-jones, Nikole (February 26, 2016). "For Black Women in South Carolina, It's Clinton's Turn". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved October 18, 2016.
  34. ^ "2016 Election Center". CNN. Retrieved October 18, 2016.

2016, south, carolina, democratic, presidential, primary, took, place, february, state, south, carolina, marking, democratic, party, fourth, nominating, contest, their, series, presidential, primaries, ahead, 2016, presidential, election, 2008, february, 2016,. The 2016 South Carolina Democratic presidential primary took place on February 27 in the U S state of South Carolina marking the Democratic Party s fourth nominating contest in their series of presidential primaries ahead of the 2016 presidential election 2016 South Carolina Democratic presidential primary 2008 February 27 2016 2016 02 27 2020 Candidate Hillary Clinton Bernie SandersHome state New York VermontDelegate count 39 14Popular vote 272 379 96 498Percentage 73 44 26 02 County results Clinton 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 gt 90 Clinton won the South Carolina Democratic primary by a landslide margin of more than 47 receiving a larger percentage of the African American vote than Obama the first black President did in 2008 1 With the Republican Party having already held its South Carolina primary a week earlier on February 20 the Democratic primary in South Carolina was the only presidential primary on that day Contents 1 Debates and forums 1 1 November 2015 forum in Rock Hill 1 2 January 2016 debate in Charleston South Carolina 2 Opinion polling 3 Results 3 1 Results by county 4 Analysis 5 ReferencesDebates and forums editNovember 2015 forum in Rock Hill edit See also Democratic Party presidential debates 2016 Rachel Maddow was selected to moderate the First in the South Candidates Forum with Hillary Clinton Bernie Sanders and Martin O Malley which was held at Winthrop University in Rock Hill South Carolina on November 6 co sponsored by the Democratic Parties of 13 southern states 2 The forum was not in debate format instead each candidate was interviewed individually and sequentially 3 Lincoln Chafee and Jim Webb were also invited but their campaigns never responded to the invitations 4 and both have since withdrawn from the race A Public Policy Poll of South Carolina Democratic voters conducted from November 7 8 after the forum discovered that 67 of viewers thought Clinton won the forum 16 thought Sanders won and 6 thought O Malley won with 11 unsure 5 January 2016 debate in Charleston South Carolina edit Main article Fourth Democratic Party presidential debate January 2016 in Charleston South Carolina On January 17 2016 the Democratic Party held a fourth debate at the Gaillard Center in Charleston South Carolina Hosted by Lester Holt and Andrea Mitchell the debate aired on NBC News and was streamed on YouTube It was also sponsored by the Congressional Black Caucus It was notable as being the final debate before the start of precinct caucuses and primary voting Participants were Hillary Clinton Bernie Sanders and Martin O Malley It was the final debate appearance of O Malley who suspended his campaign on February 1 Both before and after the debate commentators said the debate was focused on Sanders and his voting record on gun control and slights against President Obama among other issues During the debate O Malley interrupted to take 30 seconds to talk about homeland security and preparedness 6 Also during the debate Clinton and Sanders had some back and forth exchanges to define themselves on Wall Street foreign policy and gun control 6 Opinion polling editSee also Statewide opinion polling for the Democratic Party presidential primaries 2016 Delegate count 53 Pledged 6 Unpledged Winner nbsp Hillary Clinton Primary date 27 February 2016Poll source Date 1st 2nd 3rd OtherOfficial Primary Results February 27 2016 Hillary Clinton73 4 Bernie Sanders26 0 Others0 6 Clemson 7 Margin of error 3 0 Sample size 650 February 20 25 2016 Hillary Clinton64 Bernie Sanders14 Others Undecided22 Emerson College 8 Margin of error 6 0 Sample size 266 February 22 24 2016 Hillary Clinton60 Bernie Sanders37 Others Undecided3 NBC WSJ Marist 9 Margin of error 4 8 Sample size 425 February 15 17 2016 Hillary Clinton60 Bernie Sanders32 Other8 Bloomberg Politics 10 Margin of error 4 9 Sample size 403 February 13 17 2016 Hillary Clinton53 Bernie Sanders31 Not sure16 ARG 11 Margin of error 5 Sample size 400 February 14 16 2016 Hillary Clinton61 Bernie Sanders31 Someone else 1 No opinion 7 Public Policy Polling 12 Margin of error 4 Sample size 525 February 14 15 2016 Hillary Clinton55 Bernie Sanders34 Undecided 12 CNN ORC 13 Margin of error 6 Sample size 289 February 10 15 2016 Hillary Clinton56 Bernie Sanders38 Someone else 3 No opinion 4 ARG 14 Margin of error 5 0 Sample size 400 February 12 13 2016 Hillary Clinton65 Bernie Sanders27 Other 1 Undecided 7 YouGov CBS News 15 Margin of error 8 7 Sample size 404 February 10 12 2016 Hillary Clinton59 Bernie Sanders40 No Preference 1 NBC WSJ Marist 16 Margin of error 4 6 Sample size 446 January 17 23 2016 Hillary Clinton64 Bernie Sanders27 Martin O Malley 2 Undecided 7 YouGov CBS News 17 Margin of error 9 4 Sample size 388 January 17 21 2016 Hillary Clinton60 Bernie Sanders38 Martin O Malley 0 Undecided 2 SC New Democrats Margin of error Sample size 583 January 12 15 2016 Hillary Clinton47 Bernie Sanders28 Martin O Malley 2 Undecided 22 Polls in 2015Poll source Date 1st 2nd 3rd OtherYouGov CBS News 18 Margin of error 5 0 Sample size 420 December 13 17 2015 Hillary Clinton 67 Bernie Sanders31 Martin O Malley 2 No Preference 0 Fox News Margin of error 5 0 Sample size 364 December 5 8 2015 Hillary Clinton65 Bernie Sanders21 Martin O Malley3 Other 1 None of the Above 7 DK 3 YouGov CBS News 19 Margin of error 6 0 Sample size 420 November 15 19 2015 Hillary Clinton72 Bernie Sanders25 Martin O Malley 2 Undecided 1 Public Policy Polling 20 Margin of error 4 9 Sample size 400 November 7 8 2015 Hillary Clinton72 Bernie Sanders18 Martin O Malley 5 Unsure 5 Monmouth University 21 Margin of error 4 9 Sample size 400 November 5 8 2015 Hillary Clinton69 Bernie Sanders21 Martin O Malley 1 Other 1 No Preference 8 Winthrop University 22 Margin of error 3 4 Sample size 832 October 24 November 1 2015 Hillary Clinton71 Bernie Sanders15 Martin O Malley 2 Refused 2 Undecided 9 Wouldn t Vote 1 YouGov CBS News 23 Margin of error 8 2 Sample size 427 October 15 22 2015 Hillary Clinton68 Bernie Sanders25 Martin O Malley1 Jim Webb 1 Lincoln Chafee 0 Lawrence Lessig 0 No preference 4 Clemson Palmetto 24 Margin of error 4 0 Sample size 600 October 13 23 2015 Hillary Clinton43 Bernie Sanders6 Martin O Malley1 Undecided 50 CNN ORC 25 Margin of error 5 5 Sample size 301 October 3 10 2015 Hillary Clinton49 Joe Biden24 Bernie Sanders18 Martin O Malley 3 Someone else 1 None No one 1 No opinion 4 Gravis Marketing 26 Margin of error Sample size September 25 27 2015 Hillary Clinton50 Joe Biden19 Bernie Sanders13 Lincoln Chafee 1 Jim Webb lt 1 Martin O Malley lt 1 Unsure 17 YouGov CBS News 27 Margin of error 6 8 Sample size 528 Sep 3 10 2015 Hillary Clinton46 Bernie Sanders23 Joe Biden22 No preference 8 Jim Webb 1 Lincoln Chafee 0 Martin O Malley 0 Public Policy Polling 28 Margin of error 5 6 Sample size 302 Sep 3 6 2015 Hillary Clinton54 Joe Biden24 Bernie Sanders9 Martin O Malley Jim Webb 2 Lincoln Chafee 1 Gravis Marketing 29 Margin of error 4 0 Sample size 209 July 29 30 2015 Hillary Clinton78 Bernie Sanders8 Elizabeth Warren6 Joe Biden 6 Jim Webb 1 Martin O Malley 1 Lincoln Chafee 1 Morning Consult 30 Margin of error Sample size 309 May 31 June 8 2015 Hillary Clinton56 Joe Biden15 Bernie Sanders10 Martin O Malley 3 Jim Webb 2 Lincoln Chafee 1 Someone else 2 Undecided 11 Public Policy Polling Margin of error 6 2 Sample size 252 February 12 15 2015 Hillary Clinton59 Joe Biden18 Elizabeth Warren10 Martin O Malley 3 Bernie Sanders 1 Jim Webb 1 Other Undecided 8 NBC News Marist Margin of error 5 2 Sample size 352 February 3 10 2015 Hillary Clinton65 Joe Biden20 Bernie Sanders3 Martin O Malley 2 Jim Webb 2 Undecided 8 Polls in 2014Poll source Date 1st 2nd 3rd OtherClemson University Margin of error 6 Sample size 400 May 26 June 2 2014 Hillary Clinton50 Joe Biden12 Andrew Cuomo2 Martin O Malley 1 Deval Patrick 0 Brian Schweitzer 0 Undecided Don t know 35 Results editSouth Carolina Democratic primary February 27 2016Candidate Popular vote Estimated delegatesCount Percentage Pledged Unpledged TotalHillary Clinton 272 379 73 44 39 5 44Bernie Sanders 96 498 26 02 14 0 14Willie Wilson 1 314 0 35 Martin O Malley withdrawn 713 0 19 Uncommitted 0 1 1Total votes 370 904 100 53 6 59Sources The Green Papers South Carolina State Election CommissionResults by county edit Clinton won every county 31 County Clinton Sanders Others Total votes cast Turnout as of total registered electors Margin as of votes cast in primaryAbbeville 1 508 81 91 312 16 95 21 1 841 12 45 64 96 Aiken 6 889 70 17 2 877 29 31 51 9 883 9 41 40 87 Allendale 1 022 90 84 95 8 44 8 1 137 19 43 82 40 Anderson 5 576 66 79 2 712 32 48 61 8 401 7 54 34 30 Bamberg 1 710 89 20 197 10 28 10 1 928 20 08 78 93 Barnwell 1 561 87 45 209 11 71 15 1 800 13 50 75 74 Beaufort 9 970 73 30 3 575 26 28 56 13 664 13 21 47 02 Berkeley 9 485 71 96 3 592 27 25 104 13 264 12 04 44 71 Calhoun 1 536 86 05 241 13 50 8 1 809 17 31 72 55 Charleston 26 625 65 97 13 527 33 47 228 40 508 15 34 32 50 Cherokee 1 877 77 95 514 21 35 17 2 427 7 91 56 60 Chester 1 962 79 63 492 19 97 10 2 477 12 23 59 66 Chesterfield 2 209 82 80 446 16 72 13 2 696 10 71 66 08 Clarendon 3 571 90 87 337 8 58 22 3 976 17 17 82 29 Colleton 2 939 81 86 584 16 40 37 3 592 14 89 66 15 Darlington 4 990 81 86 1 081 17 73 25 6 148 14 49 64 12 Dillon 1 659 84 00 302 15 29 14 1 993 10 33 68 71 Dorchester 6 934 70 21 2 885 29 21 57 9 929 10 54 41 00 Edgefield 1 474 81 80 301 16 70 27 1 822 11 46 65 09 Fairfield 3 265 87 46 440 11 76 28 3 754 24 35 75 68 Florence 9 433 78 00 2 594 21 45 67 12 196 14 53 55 55 Georgetown 4 941 77 82 1 350 21 26 58 6 402 15 69 56 56 Greenville 19 966 63 95 11 118 35 61 138 31 398 10 56 28 34 Greenwood 3 623 77 46 987 21 10 67 4 710 11 82 56 36 Hampton 1 933 87 98 241 10 97 23 2 202 17 27 77 01 Horry 11 316 67 25 5 457 32 43 54 16 916 8 95 34 82 Jasper 2 195 85 08 355 13 76 30 2 594 15 48 71 32 Kershaw 3 761 77 10 1 093 22 41 24 4 914 12 32 54 69 Lancaster 3 346 72 96 1 221 26 62 19 4 615 8 98 46 34 Laurens 2 978 78 53 801 21 12 13 3 831 10 25 57 41 Lee 2 209 87 66 288 11 43 23 2 548 21 40 76 23 Lexington 8 847 60 93 5 611 38 65 61 14 572 8 69 22 29 Marion 3 361 85 37 552 14 05 23 3 978 18 42 71 32 Marlboro 2 137 88 97 253 10 53 12 2 412 13 60 78 43 McCormick 973 85 05 162 14 16 9 1 161 17 18 70 89 Newberry 2 121 80 92 471 17 97 29 2 641 11 77 62 95 Oconee 1 960 59 61 1 304 39 66 24 3 305 6 93 19 95 Orangeburg 11 872 88 64 1 473 11 00 49 13 515 23 74 77 64 Pickens 2 503 55 43 1 995 44 18 18 4 528 6 90 11 25 Richland 39 332 75 75 12 354 23 79 238 52 136 21 73 51 96 Saluda 1 023 83 72 192 15 71 7 1 237 10 97 68 00 Spartanburg 10 674 70 27 4 467 29 41 49 1 237 9 17 40 86 Sumter 9 830 86 61 1 443 12 71 77 15 239 17 42 73 89 Union 1 690 83 37 332 16 38 5 11 432 11 99 67 00 Williamsburg 4 613 88 52 557 10 69 41 5 272 23 90 77 84 York 8 890 63 40 5 127 36 20 57 14 216 9 26 27 20 Total 272 379 73 44 96 498 26 02 2 027 373 063 12 60 47 42 Delegates The South Carolina Democratic Party State Election ResultsAnalysis editAs South Carolina s majority black Democratic electorate had dealt a severe death blow to Clinton s 2008 presidential effort against Barack Obama it gave her campaign new life in 2016 Clinton won the primary in a 47 point routing thanks to ardent support from African American voters According to exit polls Clinton won the black vote 86 14 which comprised 61 of the Democratic electorate in South Carolina she won among black women 89 11 who comprised 37 of the electorate Clinton s near unanimous support from black voters was fueled by their interest in a continuation of President Obama s policies 32 and by black women who wanted to see a woman elected 33 Clinton won every county statewide She won in upcountry 66 34 Piedmont 74 25 Central South Carolina including the region which is majority African American 78 22 Pee dee Waccamaw 83 17 and lowcountry 70 30 34 She also swept the major cities of Charleston Columbia Greenville and Rock Hill References edit Black Voters Boost Clinton in South Carolina ABC News February 28 2016 Retrieved May 20 2016 MSNBC s Rachel Maddow to moderate 2016 Democratic forum at Winthrop The State October 7 2015 MSNBC s Rachel Maddow will bring Southern focus to forum Charlotte Observer November 4 2015 S C Democrats to host three presidential candidates in Rock Hill Greenvilleonline com October 7 2015 Retrieved January 17 2016 Three Republican candidates speak at anti gay pastor s rally MSNBC Retrieved November 23 2015 a b Fix Team January 17 2016 The 4th Democratic debate transcript annotated Who said what and what it meant The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved January 18 2016 Clemson University Palmetto Poll Democratic primary summary Retrieved February 26 2016 EMERSON POLL CLINTON LEADS SANDERS BY A WIDE MARGIN IN SOUTH CAROLINA WITH STRONG SUPPORT FROM AFRICAN AMERICANS PDF Retrieved February 26 2016 Donald Trump s Lead Slashed in South Carolina Poll Retrieved February 19 2016 Clinton Strong in South Carolina But Warning Signs Ahead Bloomberg Poll Shows Retrieved February 18 2016 South Carolina primary ARG Poll Retrieved February 17 2016 http www thestate com news politics government politics columns blogs the buzz article60547281 html South Carolina primary CNN ORC poll full results Retrieved February 16 2016 http elections huffingtonpost com pollster polls arg 23748 CBS News 2016 Battleground Tracker South Carolina PDF CBS News February 14 2016 Retrieved February 14 2016 NBC News WSJ Marist Poll January 2016 South Carolina Questionnaire PDF Retrieved February 5 2016 CBS News 2016 Battleground Tracker South Carolina PDF CBS News January 24 2016 Retrieved January 24 2016 CBS News 2016 Battleground Tracker South Carolina PDF CBS News 2016 Battleground Tracker Iowa PDF Trump Still Leads But Declining in SC Clinton Dominant PDF Public Policy Polling November 10 2015 Retrieved January 22 2016 South Carolina Clinton with Big Lead PDF Monmouth University Poll November 10 2015 Retrieved January 22 2015 Winthrop University Winthrop Poll Current Findings winthrop edu PDF file PDF Retrieved October 12 2015 SC Poll Retrieved November 5 2015 CNN SC poll Retrieved November 5 2015 The Buzz Retrieved October 1 2015 Will Jordan Sanders up big in New Hampshire and Iowa Carson trails Trump YouGov The Buzz Retrieved September 9 2015 SC polling PDF Retrieved August 4 2015 Morning Consult SC PDF morningconsult com Retrieved July 9 2015 South Carolina Election Results 2016 President Live Map by County Real Time Voting Updates POLITICO Chozick Amy Healy Patrick February 27 2016 Hillary Clinton Wins South Carolina Primary The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 18 2016 Hannah jones Nikole February 26 2016 For Black Women in South Carolina It s Clinton s Turn The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 18 2016 2016 Election Center CNN Retrieved October 18 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2016 South Carolina 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