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2016 Wisconsin Democratic presidential primary

The 2016 Wisconsin Democratic presidential primary was held on April 5 in the U.S. state of Wisconsin as one of the Democratic Party's primaries ahead of the 2016 presidential election. Vermont senator Bernie Sanders won the contest with 56.5%, distancing nationwide frontrunner Hillary Clinton by 13 percentage points.

2016 Wisconsin Democratic presidential primary

← 2008 April 5, 2016 (2016-04-05) 2020 →
 
Candidate Bernie Sanders Hillary Clinton
Home state Vermont New York
Delegate count 48 38
Popular vote 570,192[1] 433,739
Percentage 56.59% 43.05%

Results by county:
Sanders:      50-60%      60-70%
Clinton:      50-60%
Results by precinct:
  Bernie Sanders
  Hillary Clinton
  Tie
  No data

The Wisconsin Republican primary, held on the same day in conjunction with the Democratic primary, yielded a win for Ted Cruz, who distanced nationwide frontrunner Donald Trump by 13%. With no other primaries being scheduled for that day by either party and just two weeks ahead of the important New York primary, the Wisconsin primary was in the national spotlight.

The two parties' primaries were held in conjunction with this year's Wisconsin judicial elections, where Wisconsin Supreme Court justice Rebecca Bradley was confirmed for a 10-year elected term, winning over Appeals Court judge JoAnne Kloppenburg.[2]

Wisconsin provided a friendly setting for Sanders's brand of economic populism.[3] Liberals made up two-thirds of the majority-white primary electorate, and the economy, followed by income inequality, were of top concern to voters, according to exit polls.[3]

Clinton lost Wisconsin by a narrow margin in the general election, against Republican nominee Donald Trump.

Procedure edit

State primary procedure edit

As Wisconsin held an open primary, residents could choose freely which party's primary they wished to participate in, when showing up at the polls on election day, regardless of their official registration with either party or none. Polling stations were opened between 7 a.m. and 8 p.m. Central Time.[4]

The two parties' primaries were held in conjunction with this year's Wisconsin judicial elections that included the election of the Wisconsin Supreme Court justice.[2]

Democratic nomination procedure edit

The Democratic Party of Wisconsin pledges only 86 out of 96 delegates to the 2016 Democratic National Convention based on the popular vote at the primary election on the basis of proportional apportion. However, only the 18 at-large delegates and 10 pledged "Party Leaders and Elected Officials" (PLEOs) are apportioned according to the statewide vote, while the 57 district delegates are apportioned according to the vote within each of the state's eight congressional districts. The remaining ten Wisconsin delegates are unpledged "Party Leaders and Elected Officials" (PLEOs), or "Superdelegates", who may vote for whomever they wish at the party's upcoming National Convention.[5]

Candidates edit

While three candidates appeared on the Democratic primary ballot,[6] only Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton actively campaigned for the Wisconsin contest, after Martin O'Malley had already suspended his campaign.

Presidential debate in Milwaukee, February 2016 edit

The Democratic Party held its sixth presidential debate on February 11, 2016 in Milwaukee, at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. Moderated by PBS NewsHour anchors Gwen Ifill and Judy Woodruff, the debate aired on PBS and was simulcast by CNN. Participants were Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders.

Opinion polling edit

Poll source Date 1st 2nd 3rd Other
Official Primary Results April 5, 2016 Bernie Sanders
56.6%
Hillary Clinton
43.1%
Others / Uncommitted
0.4%
ARG[7]

Margin of error: ± 5.0%
Sample size: 400

April 1–3, 2016 Hillary Clinton
49%
Bernie Sanders
48%
Others / Undecided
3%
Emerson[8]

Margin of error: ± 4.2%
Sample size: 542

March 30 – April 3, 2016 Bernie Sanders
51%
Hillary Clinton
43%
Others / Undecided
6%
CBS News/YouGov[9]

Margin of error: ± 3.7%
Sample size: 653

March 29 – April 1, 2016 Bernie Sanders
49%
Hillary Clinton
47%
Others / Undecided
4%
FOX Business[10]

Margin of error: ± 3.0%
Sample size: 860

March 28–30, 2016 Bernie Sanders
48%
Hillary Clinton
43%
Others / Undecided
10%
Loras College[11]

Margin of error: ± 4.8%
Sample size: 416

March 28–29, 2016 Hillary Clinton
47%
Bernie Sanders
41%
Others / Undecided
12%
Public Policy Polling[12]

Margin of error: ± 3.7%
Sample size: 720

March 28–29, 2016 Bernie Sanders
49%
Hillary Clinton
43%
Others / Undecided
8%
MULaw Poll[13]

Margin of error: ± 6.3%
Sample size: 405

March 24–28, 2016 Bernie Sanders
49%
Hillary Clinton
45%
Others / Undecided
6%
Emerson College[14]

Margin of error: ± 4.6%
Sample size: 439

March 20–22, 2016 Hillary Clinton
50%
Bernie Sanders
44%
Others / Undecided
6%
MULaw Poll[15]

Margin of error: ± 6.9%
Sample size: 343

February 18–21, 2016 Bernie Sanders
44%
Hillary Clinton
43%
Others / Undecided
13%
MULaw Poll[16]

Margin of error: ± 6.5%
Sample size: 312

January 21–24, 2016 Hillary Clinton
45%
Bernie Sanders
43%
Martin O'Malley
1%
Not Reported
Polls in 2015
Poll source Date 1st 2nd 3rd Other
Marquette Law School[17]

Margin of error: ± 6.1%
Sample size: 374

November 12–15, 2015 Hillary Clinton
50%
Bernie Sanders
41%
Martin O'Malley
2%
Undecided 7%
St. Norbert College[18]

Margin of error: ± 6%
Sample size: ?

October 14–17, 2015 Hillary Clinton
35%
Bernie Sanders
33%
Joe Biden
21%
Martin O'Malley 1%, Lincoln Chafee 0%, Jim Webb 0%, Not Sure 10%
Hillary Clinton
47%
Bernie Sanders
42%
Martin O'Malley 1%, Lincoln Chafee 1%, Jim Webb <1%, Not Sure 7%
Marquette University[19]

Margin of error: ± 5.9%
Sample size: 394

September 24–28, 2015 Hillary Clinton
42%
Bernie Sanders
30%
Joe Biden
17%
Martin O'Malley 1%, Lincoln Chafee 0%, Jim Webb 0%
Marquette University[20]

Margin of error: ± 6.1%
Sample size: 396

August 13–16, 2015 Hillary Clinton
44%
Bernie Sanders
32%
Joe Biden
12%
Lincoln Chafee 1%, Martin O'Malley 1%, Jim Webb 1%
Marquette University[21]

Margin of error: ± 5.1%
Sample size: 391

April 7–10, 2015 Hillary Clinton
58.2%
Elizabeth Warren
14.3%
Joe Biden
12%
Martin O'Malley 0.9%, Jim Webb 0.9%, Someone else 3.7%, Don't know 8.9%
Public Policy Polling

Margin of error: ± 4.4%
Sample size: 504

March 6–8, 2015 Hillary Clinton
60%
Joe Biden
14%
Elizabeth Warren
12%
Bernie Sanders 5%, Martin O'Malley 1%, Jim Webb 1%, Other/Undecided 7%
Polls in 2014
Poll source Date 1st 2nd 3rd Other
Public Policy Polling

Margin of error: ± 4.1%
Sample size: 579

April 17–20, 2014 Hillary Clinton
57%
Russ Feingold
19%
Joe Biden
8%
Elizabeth Warren 5%, Cory Booker 1%, Andrew Cuomo 1%, Mark Warner 1%, Kirsten Gillibrand 0%, Martin O'Malley 0%, Someone else/Not sure 8%
Polls in 2013
Poll source Date 1st 2nd 3rd Other
Marquette University

Margin of error: ± 5%
Sample size: 392

October 21–27, 2013 Hillary Clinton
64%
Elizabeth Warren
10.8%
Joe Biden
10.6%
Andrew Cuomo 1.9%, Martin O'Malley 0.8%, Someone else 2.1%, Don't know 9.2%
Public Policy Polling

Margin of error: ± 4.6%
Sample size: 449

September 13–16, 2013 Hillary Clinton
50%
Russ Feingold
20%
Joe Biden
11%
Elizabeth Warren 4%, Cory Booker 3%, Andrew Cuomo 2%, Kirsten Gillibrand 0%, Martin O'Malley 0%, Mark Warner 0%, Someone else/Not sure 9%
Marquette University

Margin of error: ± 5.5%
Sample size: 333

May 6–9, 2013 Hillary Clinton
61.5%
Joe Biden
13%
Elizabeth Warren
4.8%
Andrew Cuomo 4.2%, Deval Patrick 1.5%, Martin O'Malley 1.1%, Mark Warner 0.7%, Someone else 1.5%, Don't Know 11%
Public Policy Polling

Margin of error:
Sample size:

February 21–24, 2013 Hillary Clinton
50%
Russ Feingold
25%
Joe Biden
11%
Andrew Cuomo 3%, Elizabeth Warren 2%, Martin O'Malley 1%, Deval Patrick 1%, Brian Schweitzer 0%, Mark Warner 0%, Someone Else/Undecided 8%

Results edit

Wisconsin Democratic primary, April 5, 2016
Candidate Popular vote Estimated delegates
Count Percentage Pledged Unpledged Total
Bernie Sanders 570,192 56.59% 48 1 49
Hillary Clinton 433,739 43.05% 38 9 47
Martin O'Malley (withdrawn) 1,732 0.17%
Roque "Rocky" De La Fuente (write-in) 18 0.00%
Scattering 431 0.04%
Uncommitted 1,488 0.15% 0 0 0
Total 1,007,600 100% 86 10 96
Source: The Green Papers, Wisconsin Secretary of State

Results by county edit

County Clinton % Sanders %
Adams 1,375 47.22% 1,515 52.03%
Ashland 1,248 36.00% 2,204 63.57%
Barron 5,572 46.11% 2,965 53.16%
Bayfield 1,488 36.09% 2,619 63.52%
Brown 16,701 42.40% 22,559 57.27%
Buffalo 825 41.46% 1,149 57.74%
Burnett 918 49.04% 936 50.00%
Calumet 3,028 42.86% 4,017 56.86%
Chippewa 4,022 43.77% 5,127 55.79%
Clark 1,473 42.67% 1,969 57.04%
Columbia 4,187 39.21% 6,460 60.49%
Crawford 1,146 41.61% 1,592 57.81%
Dane 61,405 37.27% 102,986 62.51%
Dodge 4,505 41.75% 6,249 57.91%
Door 2,943 46.06% 3,426 53.62%
Douglas 3,577 43.82% 4,512 55.27%
Dunn 2,421 35.95% 4,279 63.54%
Eau Claire 7,689 35.88% 13,674 63.81%
Florence 175 36.92% 293 61.81%
Fond du Lac 5,519 42.65% 7,385 57.07%
Forest 610 47.25% 667 51.67%
Grant 3,068 40.37% 4,491 59.10%
Green 2,766 38.59% 4,368 60.95%
Green Lake 871 42.89% 1,148 56.52%
Iowa 2,164 40.14% 3,202 59.40%
Iron 437 42.93% 563 55.30%
Jackson 1,294 40.64 1,872 58.79%
Jefferson 4,775 38.60% 7,555 61.07%
Juneau 1,355 42.21% 1,839 57.29%
Kenosha 10,897 42.49% 14,653 57.13%
Kewaunee 1,497 47.06% 1,667 52.40%
La Crosse 8,908 36.93% 15,156 62.84%
Lafayette 1,170 46.37% 1,331 52.75%
Langlade 1,192 44.83% 1,447 54.42%
Lincoln 1,732 41.33% 2,442 58.27%
Manitowoc 4,999 43.37% 6,458 56.03%
Marathon 8,061 40.66% 11,673 58.87%
Marinette 2,580 48.59% 2,698 50.81%
Marquette 994 42.62% 1,321 56.56%
Menominee 204 36.36% 355 63.28%
Milwaukee 100,798 51.68% 93,688 48.02%
Monroe 2,269 38.86% 3,539 60.61%
Oconto 2,422 47.99% 2,590 51.32%
Oneida 2,500 39.40% 3,813 60.09%
Outagamie 11,228 39.62% 17,021 60.07%
Ozaukee 6,587 48.75% 6,897 51.04%
Pepin 435 43.54% 561 56.16%
Pierce 2,343 41.82% 3,208 57.27%
Polk 2,165 46.21% 2,476 52.85%
Portage 5,088 35.08% 9,351 64.46%
Price 862 37.56% 1,418 61.79%
Racine 14,111 48.84% 14,681 50.82%
Richland 1,276 41.55% 1,786 58.16%
Rock 11,262 39.20% 17,360 60.42%
Rusk 816 42.52% 1,092 56.90%
St. Croix 4,895 45.90% 5,679 53.25%
Sauk 4,527 38.48% 7,203 61.22%
Sawyer 976 36.86% 1,654 62.46%
Shawano 2,117 41.19% 3,303 58.44%
Sheboygan 7,145 44.13% 8,952 55.30%
Taylor 852 39.68% 1,279 59.57%
Trempealeau 1,989 44.76% 2,430 54.68%
Vernon 1,936 35.60% 3,481 64.01%
Vilas 1,414 36.36% 2,147 60.09%
Walworth 5,188 37.96% 8,426 61.65%
Washburn 1,058 42.32% 1,419 56.76%
Washington 6,388 45.24% 7,690 54.46%
Waukesha 24,835 48.28% 26,442 51.40%
Waupaca 2,585 39.68% 3,894 59.77%
Waushara 1,241 43.45% 1,600 56.02%
Winnebago 11,212 38.44% 17,854 61.22%
Wood 4,428 39.46% 6,756 60.20%
Total 433,739 43.05% 570,192 56.59%

Detailed results per congressional district edit

Detailed results for the Wisconsin Democratic primary, April 5, 2016[22]
District Total Bernie Sanders Hillary Clinton
Votes Delegates Votes Delegates Votes Delegates
1st district 104,747 6 57,327 3 47,420 3
2nd district 204,897 11 127,466 7 77,431 4
3rd district 117,465 7 72,043 4 45,422 3
4th district 144,659 10 68,255 5 76,404 5
5th district 100,823 5 54,809 3 46,014 2
6th district 105,348 6 60,490 3 44,858 3
7th district 98,860 6 56,683 3 42,177 3
8th district 107,841 6 61,965 3 45,876 3
At-large delegates 1,002,036 19 567,865 11 434,171 8
Pledged PLEOs 1,002,036 10 567,865 6 434,171 4
Total 1,002,036 86 567,865 48 434,171 38

Analysis edit

Liberals & Conservatives Line Up for Bernie Sanders’ Wisconsin Rally

Bernie Sanders scored a large victory in Wisconsin, a largely liberal and big manufacturing state. He was bolstered by a 73-26 showing among younger voters, a 64-35 showing among men, a 72-28 showing among self-identified Independents, and a 59-40 showing among white voters who comprised 83% of the electorate in the Cheese State. Sanders also won women 50–49, but lost African American voters to Clinton, 69–31. Sanders swept all income and educational attainment levels in Wisconsin.

Sanders won unions 54–46, a key demographic in the industrial Rust Belt.

Sanders swept all counties in Wisconsin but one. He was victorious in the southeast 55–45, in the southwest 62–38, and in rural northeastern and northwestern Wisconsin 57–42. He carried the major cities of Madison, which has a younger electorate, as well as Eau Claire, Green Bay, Oshkosh, and Kenosha. Clinton won in Milwaukee 51–48, likely thanks to her ardent African-American support.[23]

References edit

  1. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 10, 2016. Retrieved June 16, 2016.
  2. ^ a b Patrick Marley (April 6, 2016). "Rebecca Bradley beats JoAnne Kloppenburg in high court race". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Retrieved April 6, 2016.
  3. ^ a b Chozick, Amy (April 5, 2016). "Bernie Sanders Wins Wisconsin Democratic Primary, Adding to Momentum (Published 2016)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 23, 2021.
  4. ^ Michele Gorman (April 5, 2016). "How to follow voting results in Wisconsin". Newsweek. Retrieved April 6, 2016.
  5. ^ "Wisconsin Democratic primary, 2016". The Green Papers. Retrieved April 6, 2016.
  6. ^ (PDF). Wisconsin Government Accountability Board. March 29, 2016. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 15, 2016. Retrieved April 6, 2016.
  7. ^ "ARC Wisconsin Poll April 1-3, 2016". Retrieved April 4, 2016.
  8. ^ "Wisconsin Feels the Bern While Cruz has Momentum Going into Primaries" (PDF). Retrieved April 4, 2016.
  9. ^ "CBS News 2016 Battleground TrackerWisconsin". Retrieved April 3, 2016.
  10. ^ "FOX Business Network Poll: Sanders Tops Clinton by Five in Wisconsin". Retrieved March 31, 2016.
  11. ^ "Loras College Poll finds Cruz tops Trump, Clinton leads Sanders, tight race for state supreme court in Wisconsin". Retrieved April 2, 2016.
  12. ^ "Sanders leads in Wisconsin; GOP Race Close; VA Privatization Issue Hurts Johnson" (PDF). Retrieved March 31, 2016.
  13. ^ "Marquette Law School Poll – March 24-28, 2016" (PDF). Retrieved March 30, 2016.
  14. ^ "EMERSON POLL: WISCONSIN PRIMARY IN PLAY FOR BOTH PARTIES; CRUZ LEADS TRUMP BY A POINT; CLINTON UP 6 OVER SANDERS; CRUZ FARES BETTER THAN TRUMP IN GENERAL AGAINST CLINTON" (PDF). Retrieved March 24, 2016.
  15. ^ "@MULawPoll: In Dem prez race in WI, it's Sanders 44%, Clinton 43%. In @mulawpoll in January, it was Clinton 45%, Sanders 43%. #mulawpoll". Twitter. February 25, 2016. Retrieved February 25, 2016.
  16. ^ "For Democrats in WI: Hillary Clinton 45%, Bernie Sanders 43%, Martin O'Malley 1% among those intending to vote". Twitter. January 28, 2016. Retrieved February 5, 2016.
  17. ^ "New Marquette Law School Poll finds Carson, Trump and Rubio atop tight Wisconsin GOP primary race".
  18. ^ "The Wisconsin Survey fall 2015 | The Wisconsin Survey fall 2015" (PDF). Retrieved October 21, 2015.
  19. ^ "Marquette Law School Poll finds Walker job approval at 37 percent, following presidential run | Marquette Law School Poll". law.marquette.edu. Retrieved September 30, 2015.
  20. ^ "Marquette Law School Poll finds Walker, Clinton leading primary fields among Wisconsin voters | Marquette Law School Poll". law.marquette.edu. Retrieved August 20, 2015.
  21. ^ "Marquette Law School Poll finds Walker job approval down | Marquette Law School Poll". law.marquette.edu. Retrieved July 9, 2015.
  22. ^ The Green Papers
  23. ^ "2016 Election Center". CNN. Retrieved October 18, 2016.

2016, wisconsin, democratic, presidential, primary, held, april, state, wisconsin, democratic, party, primaries, ahead, 2016, presidential, election, vermont, senator, bernie, sanders, contest, with, distancing, nationwide, frontrunner, hillary, clinton, perce. The 2016 Wisconsin Democratic presidential primary was held on April 5 in the U S state of Wisconsin as one of the Democratic Party s primaries ahead of the 2016 presidential election Vermont senator Bernie Sanders won the contest with 56 5 distancing nationwide frontrunner Hillary Clinton by 13 percentage points 2016 Wisconsin Democratic presidential primary 2008 April 5 2016 2016 04 05 2020 Candidate Bernie Sanders Hillary ClintonHome state Vermont New YorkDelegate count 48 38Popular vote 570 192 1 433 739Percentage 56 59 43 05 Results by countyResults by precinctResults by county Sanders 50 60 60 70 Clinton 50 60 Results by precinct Bernie Sanders Hillary Clinton Tie No dataThe Wisconsin Republican primary held on the same day in conjunction with the Democratic primary yielded a win for Ted Cruz who distanced nationwide frontrunner Donald Trump by 13 With no other primaries being scheduled for that day by either party and just two weeks ahead of the important New York primary the Wisconsin primary was in the national spotlight The two parties primaries were held in conjunction with this year s Wisconsin judicial elections where Wisconsin Supreme Court justice Rebecca Bradley was confirmed for a 10 year elected term winning over Appeals Court judge JoAnne Kloppenburg 2 Wisconsin provided a friendly setting for Sanders s brand of economic populism 3 Liberals made up two thirds of the majority white primary electorate and the economy followed by income inequality were of top concern to voters according to exit polls 3 Clinton lost Wisconsin by a narrow margin in the general election against Republican nominee Donald Trump Contents 1 Procedure 1 1 State primary procedure 1 2 Democratic nomination procedure 2 Candidates 2 1 Presidential debate in Milwaukee February 2016 2 2 Opinion polling 3 Results 3 1 Results by county 3 2 Detailed results per congressional district 4 Analysis 5 ReferencesProcedure editState primary procedure edit As Wisconsin held an open primary residents could choose freely which party s primary they wished to participate in when showing up at the polls on election day regardless of their official registration with either party or none Polling stations were opened between 7 a m and 8 p m Central Time 4 The two parties primaries were held in conjunction with this year s Wisconsin judicial elections that included the election of the Wisconsin Supreme Court justice 2 Democratic nomination procedure edit The Democratic Party of Wisconsin pledges only 86 out of 96 delegates to the 2016 Democratic National Convention based on the popular vote at the primary election on the basis of proportional apportion However only the 18 at large delegates and 10 pledged Party Leaders and Elected Officials PLEOs are apportioned according to the statewide vote while the 57 district delegates are apportioned according to the vote within each of the state s eight congressional districts The remaining ten Wisconsin delegates are unpledged Party Leaders and Elected Officials PLEOs or Superdelegates who may vote for whomever they wish at the party s upcoming National Convention 5 Candidates editWhile three candidates appeared on the Democratic primary ballot 6 only Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton actively campaigned for the Wisconsin contest after Martin O Malley had already suspended his campaign Presidential debate in Milwaukee February 2016 edit Main article Sixth Democratic Party presidential debate February 2016 in Milwaukee Wisconsin The Democratic Party held its sixth presidential debate on February 11 2016 in Milwaukee at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Moderated by PBS NewsHour anchors Gwen Ifill and Judy Woodruff the debate aired on PBS and was simulcast by CNN Participants were Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders Opinion polling edit See also Statewide opinion polling for the 2016 Democratic Party presidential primaries Poll source Date 1st 2nd 3rd OtherOfficial Primary Results April 5 2016 Bernie Sanders56 6 Hillary Clinton43 1 Others Uncommitted0 4 ARG 7 Margin of error 5 0 Sample size 400 April 1 3 2016 Hillary Clinton49 Bernie Sanders48 Others Undecided3 Emerson 8 Margin of error 4 2 Sample size 542 March 30 April 3 2016 Bernie Sanders51 Hillary Clinton43 Others Undecided6 CBS News YouGov 9 Margin of error 3 7 Sample size 653 March 29 April 1 2016 Bernie Sanders49 Hillary Clinton47 Others Undecided4 FOX Business 10 Margin of error 3 0 Sample size 860 March 28 30 2016 Bernie Sanders48 Hillary Clinton43 Others Undecided10 Loras College 11 Margin of error 4 8 Sample size 416 March 28 29 2016 Hillary Clinton47 Bernie Sanders41 Others Undecided12 Public Policy Polling 12 Margin of error 3 7 Sample size 720 March 28 29 2016 Bernie Sanders49 Hillary Clinton43 Others Undecided8 MULaw Poll 13 Margin of error 6 3 Sample size 405 March 24 28 2016 Bernie Sanders49 Hillary Clinton45 Others Undecided6 Emerson College 14 Margin of error 4 6 Sample size 439 March 20 22 2016 Hillary Clinton50 Bernie Sanders44 Others Undecided6 MULaw Poll 15 Margin of error 6 9 Sample size 343 February 18 21 2016 Bernie Sanders 44 Hillary Clinton43 Others Undecided13 MULaw Poll 16 Margin of error 6 5 Sample size 312 January 21 24 2016 Hillary Clinton45 Bernie Sanders 43 Martin O Malley 1 Not ReportedPolls in 2015Poll source Date 1st 2nd 3rd OtherMarquette Law School 17 Margin of error 6 1 Sample size 374 November 12 15 2015 Hillary Clinton50 Bernie Sanders41 Martin O Malley2 Undecided 7 St Norbert College 18 Margin of error 6 Sample size October 14 17 2015 Hillary Clinton35 Bernie Sanders33 Joe Biden21 Martin O Malley 1 Lincoln Chafee 0 Jim Webb 0 Not Sure 10 Hillary Clinton47 Bernie Sanders42 Martin O Malley 1 Lincoln Chafee 1 Jim Webb lt 1 Not Sure 7 Marquette University 19 Margin of error 5 9 Sample size 394 September 24 28 2015 Hillary Clinton42 Bernie Sanders30 Joe Biden17 Martin O Malley 1 Lincoln Chafee 0 Jim Webb 0 Marquette University 20 Margin of error 6 1 Sample size 396 August 13 16 2015 Hillary Clinton44 Bernie Sanders32 Joe Biden12 Lincoln Chafee 1 Martin O Malley 1 Jim Webb 1 Marquette University 21 Margin of error 5 1 Sample size 391 April 7 10 2015 Hillary Clinton58 2 Elizabeth Warren14 3 Joe Biden12 Martin O Malley 0 9 Jim Webb 0 9 Someone else 3 7 Don t know 8 9 Public Policy Polling Margin of error 4 4 Sample size 504 March 6 8 2015 Hillary Clinton60 Joe Biden14 Elizabeth Warren12 Bernie Sanders 5 Martin O Malley 1 Jim Webb 1 Other Undecided 7 Polls in 2014Poll source Date 1st 2nd 3rd OtherPublic Policy Polling Margin of error 4 1 Sample size 579 April 17 20 2014 Hillary Clinton57 Russ Feingold19 Joe Biden8 Elizabeth Warren 5 Cory Booker 1 Andrew Cuomo 1 Mark Warner 1 Kirsten Gillibrand 0 Martin O Malley 0 Someone else Not sure 8 Polls in 2013Poll source Date 1st 2nd 3rd OtherMarquette University Margin of error 5 Sample size 392 October 21 27 2013 Hillary Clinton64 Elizabeth Warren10 8 Joe Biden10 6 Andrew Cuomo 1 9 Martin O Malley 0 8 Someone else 2 1 Don t know 9 2 Public Policy Polling Margin of error 4 6 Sample size 449 September 13 16 2013 Hillary Clinton50 Russ Feingold20 Joe Biden11 Elizabeth Warren 4 Cory Booker 3 Andrew Cuomo 2 Kirsten Gillibrand 0 Martin O Malley 0 Mark Warner 0 Someone else Not sure 9 Marquette University Margin of error 5 5 Sample size 333 May 6 9 2013 Hillary Clinton61 5 Joe Biden13 Elizabeth Warren4 8 Andrew Cuomo 4 2 Deval Patrick 1 5 Martin O Malley 1 1 Mark Warner 0 7 Someone else 1 5 Don t Know 11 Public Policy Polling Margin of error Sample size February 21 24 2013 Hillary Clinton50 Russ Feingold25 Joe Biden11 Andrew Cuomo 3 Elizabeth Warren 2 Martin O Malley 1 Deval Patrick 1 Brian Schweitzer 0 Mark Warner 0 Someone Else Undecided 8 vteResults editSee also Results of the 2016 Democratic Party presidential primaries Wisconsin Democratic primary April 5 2016Candidate Popular vote Estimated delegatesCount Percentage Pledged Unpledged TotalBernie Sanders 570 192 56 59 48 1 49Hillary Clinton 433 739 43 05 38 9 47Martin O Malley withdrawn 1 732 0 17 Roque Rocky De La Fuente write in 18 0 00 Scattering 431 0 04 Uncommitted 1 488 0 15 0 0 0Total 1 007 600 100 86 10 96Source The Green Papers Wisconsin Secretary of StateResults by county edit County Clinton Sanders Adams 1 375 47 22 1 515 52 03 Ashland 1 248 36 00 2 204 63 57 Barron 5 572 46 11 2 965 53 16 Bayfield 1 488 36 09 2 619 63 52 Brown 16 701 42 40 22 559 57 27 Buffalo 825 41 46 1 149 57 74 Burnett 918 49 04 936 50 00 Calumet 3 028 42 86 4 017 56 86 Chippewa 4 022 43 77 5 127 55 79 Clark 1 473 42 67 1 969 57 04 Columbia 4 187 39 21 6 460 60 49 Crawford 1 146 41 61 1 592 57 81 Dane 61 405 37 27 102 986 62 51 Dodge 4 505 41 75 6 249 57 91 Door 2 943 46 06 3 426 53 62 Douglas 3 577 43 82 4 512 55 27 Dunn 2 421 35 95 4 279 63 54 Eau Claire 7 689 35 88 13 674 63 81 Florence 175 36 92 293 61 81 Fond du Lac 5 519 42 65 7 385 57 07 Forest 610 47 25 667 51 67 Grant 3 068 40 37 4 491 59 10 Green 2 766 38 59 4 368 60 95 Green Lake 871 42 89 1 148 56 52 Iowa 2 164 40 14 3 202 59 40 Iron 437 42 93 563 55 30 Jackson 1 294 40 64 1 872 58 79 Jefferson 4 775 38 60 7 555 61 07 Juneau 1 355 42 21 1 839 57 29 Kenosha 10 897 42 49 14 653 57 13 Kewaunee 1 497 47 06 1 667 52 40 La Crosse 8 908 36 93 15 156 62 84 Lafayette 1 170 46 37 1 331 52 75 Langlade 1 192 44 83 1 447 54 42 Lincoln 1 732 41 33 2 442 58 27 Manitowoc 4 999 43 37 6 458 56 03 Marathon 8 061 40 66 11 673 58 87 Marinette 2 580 48 59 2 698 50 81 Marquette 994 42 62 1 321 56 56 Menominee 204 36 36 355 63 28 Milwaukee 100 798 51 68 93 688 48 02 Monroe 2 269 38 86 3 539 60 61 Oconto 2 422 47 99 2 590 51 32 Oneida 2 500 39 40 3 813 60 09 Outagamie 11 228 39 62 17 021 60 07 Ozaukee 6 587 48 75 6 897 51 04 Pepin 435 43 54 561 56 16 Pierce 2 343 41 82 3 208 57 27 Polk 2 165 46 21 2 476 52 85 Portage 5 088 35 08 9 351 64 46 Price 862 37 56 1 418 61 79 Racine 14 111 48 84 14 681 50 82 Richland 1 276 41 55 1 786 58 16 Rock 11 262 39 20 17 360 60 42 Rusk 816 42 52 1 092 56 90 St Croix 4 895 45 90 5 679 53 25 Sauk 4 527 38 48 7 203 61 22 Sawyer 976 36 86 1 654 62 46 Shawano 2 117 41 19 3 303 58 44 Sheboygan 7 145 44 13 8 952 55 30 Taylor 852 39 68 1 279 59 57 Trempealeau 1 989 44 76 2 430 54 68 Vernon 1 936 35 60 3 481 64 01 Vilas 1 414 36 36 2 147 60 09 Walworth 5 188 37 96 8 426 61 65 Washburn 1 058 42 32 1 419 56 76 Washington 6 388 45 24 7 690 54 46 Waukesha 24 835 48 28 26 442 51 40 Waupaca 2 585 39 68 3 894 59 77 Waushara 1 241 43 45 1 600 56 02 Winnebago 11 212 38 44 17 854 61 22 Wood 4 428 39 46 6 756 60 20 Total 433 739 43 05 570 192 56 59 Detailed results per congressional district edit Detailed results for the Wisconsin Democratic primary April 5 2016 22 District Total Bernie Sanders Hillary ClintonVotes Delegates Votes Delegates Votes Delegates1st district 104 747 6 57 327 3 47 420 32nd district 204 897 11 127 466 7 77 431 43rd district 117 465 7 72 043 4 45 422 34th district 144 659 10 68 255 5 76 404 55th district 100 823 5 54 809 3 46 014 26th district 105 348 6 60 490 3 44 858 37th district 98 860 6 56 683 3 42 177 38th district 107 841 6 61 965 3 45 876 3At large delegates 1 002 036 19 567 865 11 434 171 8Pledged PLEOs 1 002 036 10 567 865 6 434 171 4Total 1 002 036 86 567 865 48 434 171 38Analysis edit source source source source source source source source Liberals amp Conservatives Line Up for Bernie Sanders Wisconsin RallyBernie Sanders scored a large victory in Wisconsin a largely liberal and big manufacturing state He was bolstered by a 73 26 showing among younger voters a 64 35 showing among men a 72 28 showing among self identified Independents and a 59 40 showing among white voters who comprised 83 of the electorate in the Cheese State Sanders also won women 50 49 but lost African American voters to Clinton 69 31 Sanders swept all income and educational attainment levels in Wisconsin Sanders won unions 54 46 a key demographic in the industrial Rust Belt Sanders swept all counties in Wisconsin but one He was victorious in the southeast 55 45 in the southwest 62 38 and in rural northeastern and northwestern Wisconsin 57 42 He carried the major cities of Madison which has a younger electorate as well as Eau Claire Green Bay Oshkosh and Kenosha Clinton won in Milwaukee 51 48 likely thanks to her ardent African American support 23 References edit Wisconsin Official Primary Results PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 10 2016 Retrieved June 16 2016 a b Patrick Marley April 6 2016 Rebecca Bradley beats JoAnne Kloppenburg in high court race Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved April 6 2016 a b Chozick Amy April 5 2016 Bernie Sanders Wins Wisconsin Democratic Primary Adding to Momentum Published 2016 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 23 2021 Michele Gorman April 5 2016 How to follow voting results in Wisconsin Newsweek Retrieved April 6 2016 Wisconsin Democratic primary 2016 The Green Papers Retrieved April 6 2016 Candidates on ballot 2016 spring election and presidential preference vote PDF Wisconsin Government Accountability Board March 29 2016 Archived from the original PDF on April 15 2016 Retrieved April 6 2016 ARC Wisconsin Poll April 1 3 2016 Retrieved April 4 2016 Wisconsin Feels the Bern While Cruz has Momentum Going into Primaries PDF Retrieved April 4 2016 CBS News 2016 Battleground TrackerWisconsin Retrieved April 3 2016 FOX Business Network Poll Sanders Tops Clinton by Five in Wisconsin Retrieved March 31 2016 Loras College Poll finds Cruz tops Trump Clinton leads Sanders tight race for state supreme court in Wisconsin Retrieved April 2 2016 Sanders leads in Wisconsin GOP Race Close VA Privatization Issue Hurts Johnson PDF Retrieved March 31 2016 Marquette Law School Poll March 24 28 2016 PDF Retrieved March 30 2016 EMERSON POLL WISCONSIN PRIMARY IN PLAY FOR BOTH PARTIES CRUZ LEADS TRUMP BY A POINT CLINTON UP 6 OVER SANDERS CRUZ FARES BETTER THAN TRUMP IN GENERAL AGAINST CLINTON PDF Retrieved March 24 2016 MULawPoll In Dem prez race in WI it s Sanders 44 Clinton 43 In mulawpoll in January it was Clinton 45 Sanders 43 mulawpoll Twitter February 25 2016 Retrieved February 25 2016 For Democrats in WI Hillary Clinton 45 Bernie Sanders 43 Martin O Malley 1 among those intending to vote Twitter January 28 2016 Retrieved February 5 2016 New Marquette Law School Poll finds Carson Trump and Rubio atop tight Wisconsin GOP primary race The Wisconsin Survey fall 2015 The Wisconsin Survey fall 2015 PDF Retrieved October 21 2015 Marquette Law School Poll finds Walker job approval at 37 percent following presidential run Marquette Law School Poll law marquette edu Retrieved September 30 2015 Marquette Law School Poll finds Walker Clinton leading primary fields among Wisconsin voters Marquette Law School Poll law marquette edu Retrieved August 20 2015 Marquette Law School Poll finds Walker job approval down Marquette Law School Poll law marquette edu Retrieved July 9 2015 The Green Papers 2016 Election Center CNN Retrieved October 18 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2016 Wisconsin Democratic presidential primary amp oldid 1187762766, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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