2016 Georgia Democratic presidential primary
2016 Georgia Democratic presidential primary
Results by county
Clinton: 40-50% 50-60% 60-70% 70-80% 80-90% >90%Sanders: 50-60%
The 2016 Georgia Democratic presidential primary took place on March 1 in the U.S. state of Georgia as one of the Democratic Party 's primaries ahead of the 2016 presidential election . The primary was an open one.[ 1]
On the same day, dubbed "Super Tuesday ," Democratic primaries were held in ten other states plus American Samoa , while the Republican Party held primaries in eleven states including their own Georgia primary .
Clinton won every county in the state except for Echols County . She easily won Georgia in the primary by a wide margin of victory 43.10%. In 2008, Clinton lost the Georgia primary to then-senator from Illinois Barack Obama .
Clinton's overwhelming win was attributed mostly to the African American vote, and her endorsement from Civil Rights icon Congressman John Lewis .[ 2]
Opinion polling
Poll source
Date
1st
2nd
Other
Primary results[ 3]
March 1, 2016
Hillary Clinton 71.3%
Bernie Sanders 28.2%
Other 0.5%
SurveyMonkey[ 4]
Margin of error: ± ?
Sample size: 961
February 22–29, 2016
Hillary Clinton 59%
Bernie Sanders 36%
Others / Undecided 5%
WSB-TV/Landmark[ 5]
Margin of error: ± 3.5
Sample size: 800
February 28, 2016
Hillary Clinton 70%
Bernie Sanders 23%
Others / Undecided 7%
WSB-TV/Landmark[ 6]
Margin of error: ± 3.5%
Sample size: 800
February 26, 2016
Hillary Clinton 68%
Bernie Sanders 22%
Others / Undecided 10%
YouGov/CBS News[ 7]
Margin of error: ± 8.6%
Sample size: 492
February 22–26, 2016
Hillary Clinton 63%
Bernie Sanders 35%
Others / Undecided 2%
WABE 90.1[ 8]
Margin of error: ± 4.1%
Sample size: 400
February 22–24, 2016
Hillary Clinton 62%
Bernie Sanders 29%
Others / Undecided 9%
TEGNA/SurveyUSA[ 9]
Margin of error: ± 4.2%
Sample size: 501
February 22–23, 2016
Hillary Clinton 66%
Bernie Sanders 27%
Others / Undecided 7%
FOX 5 Atlanta[ 10]
Margin of error: ± 4.4%
Sample size: 491
February 22–23, 2016
Hillary Clinton 57%
Bernie Sanders 29%
Others / Undecided 14%
NBC News/Wall St. Jrnl[ 11]
Margin of error: ± 4.6%
Sample size: 461
February 18–23, 2016
Hillary Clinton 64%
Bernie Sanders 30%
Others / Undecided 6%
WSB-TV/Landmark[ 12]
Margin of error: ± 3.7%
Sample size: 700
February 21, 2016
Hillary Clinton 72%
Bernie Sanders 20%
Others / Undecided 8%
Public Policy Polling[ 13]
Margin of error: ± 4.4%
Sample size: 500
February 14–16, 2016
Hillary Clinton 60%
Bernie Sanders 26%
Landmark /RosettaStone [ 14]
Margin of error: ± 4.0%
Sample size: 600
February 4, 2016
Hillary Clinton 63.3%
Bernie Sanders 21.5%
Undecided 15.2%
WXIA-TV/SurveyUSA[ 15]
Margin of error: ± 4.8%
Sample size: 2075
October 15–26, 2015
Hillary Clinton 73%
Bernie Sanders 16%
Martin O'Malley 4% Undecided 5%
Opinion Savvy[ 16]
Margin of error: ± 4.8
Sample size: 413
Published September 3, 2015
Hillary Clinton 51%
Bernie Sanders 24%
Joe Biden 15% Lincoln Chafee 5% Martin O'Malley 0% Jim Webb 0% Someone else 1% Undecided 5%
Results
Primary date: March 1, 2016
National delegates: 60
Georgia Democratic primary, March 1, 2016
District
Delegates available
Votes
Delegates
Clinton
Sanders
O'Malley
Steinberg
Total
Qualified total
Clinton
Sanders
1
5
32,408
12,343
180
166
45,097
44,751
4
1
2
5
48,705
8,817
185
168
57,875
57,522
4
1
3
4
30,311
11,691
160
135
42,297
42,002
3
1
4
6
73,739
23,827
148
105
97,819
97,566
5
1
5
7
81,636
32,474
176
89
114,375
114,110
5
2
6
5
34,287
22,632
133
60
57,112
56,919
3
2
7
4
27,483
15,461
106
63
43,113
42,944
3
1
8
4
27,632
8,539
168
153
36,492
36,171
3
1
9
4
14,263
9,727
146
130
24,266
23,990
2
2
10
4
33,303
15,274
142
169
48,888
48,577
3
1
11
4
26,137
17,511
123
89
43,860
43,648
2
2
12
5
33,308
9,361
176
151
42,996
42,669
4
1
13
6
68,652
19,128
152
114
88,046
87,780
5
1
14
4
13,810
9,012
134
174
23,130
22,822
2
2
Total
67
545,674
215,797
2,129
1,766
765,366
761,471
48
19
PLEO
13
9
4
At Large
22
16
6
Gr. Total
102
73
29
Total vote
71.30%
28.20%
0.28%
0.23%
100.00%
99,49%
Source: Georgia Secretary of State Presidential Preference Primary Congressional District Results (Democrat)
Results by county
County[ 18]
Clinton
Votes
Sanders
Votes
Appling
75.6%
490
21.9%
142
Atkinson
79.8%
201
19.4%
49
Bacon
63.8%
113
32.8%
58
Baker
85.1%
303
13.5%
48
Baldwin
79.4%
3,034
19.9%
762
Banks
49.0%
172
48.1%
169
Barrow
61.7%
1,457
37.2%
879
Bartow
59.0%
2,216
39.7%
1,490
Ben Hill
80.2%
779
18.4%
179
Berrien
66.7%
325
30.0%
146
Bibb
82.8%
12,944
16.8%
2,632
Bleckley
77.7%
370
20.6%
98
Brantley
49.1%
137
44.1%
123
Brooks
77.6%
714
21.5%
198
Bryan
63.3%
893
35.5%
501
Bulloch
60.7%
1,910
38.8%
1,221
Burke
89.5%
1,659
9.9%
184
Butts
81.7%
922
16.9%
191
Calhoun
88.9%
499
10.9%
61
Camden
66.6%
1,405
32.6%
688
Candler
78.3%
434
19.9%
110
Carroll
61.7%
3,173
37.6%
1,933
Catoosa
50.8%
1,082
48.1%
1,026
Charlton
73.7%
275
22.5%
84
Chatham
72.3%
19,898
27.2%
7,496
Chattahoochee
81.3%
182
17.9%
40
Chattooga
63.7%
566
34.0%
302
Cherokee
51.8%
4,837
47.6%
4,438
Clarke
50.7%
7,089
49.0%
6,845
Clay
85.8%
297
12.7%
44
Clayton
81.6%
25,130
18.0%
5,551
Clinch
79.5%
167
18.1%
38
Cobb
63.5%
39,277
36.2%
22,390
Coffee
77.0%
1,094
21.7%
309
Colquitt
76.1%
1,035
22.2%
302
Columbia
66.9%
4,805
32.5%
2,333
Cook
76.2%
580
22.5%
171
Coweta
66.5%
4,536
32.7%
2,233
Crawford
79.1%
493
19.3%
120
Crisp
80.1%
729
18.9%
172
Dade
50.3%
241
48.0%
230
Dawson
53.0%
312
45.5%
268
Decatur
79.0%
1,316
20.0%
333
DeKalb
71.5%
82,348
28.3%
32,572
Dodge
79.5%
579
19.4%
141
Dooly
88.4%
737
10.9%
91
Dougherty
85.7%
8,891
13.8%
1,435
Douglas
74.6%
9,375
25.0%
3,139
Early
89.2%
671
10.1%
76
Echols
45.7%
32
51.4%
36
Effingham
64.5%
1,178
33.9%
620
Elbert
75.0%
805
24.0%
257
Emanuel
83.1%
755
15.9%
144
Evans
78.5%
347
19.2%
85
Fannin
59.9%
545
39.1%
356
Fayette
71.1%
7,257
28.6%
2,918
Floyd
64.5%
2,555
34.2%
1,356
Forsyth
53.8%
3,701
45.7%
3,142
Franklin
62.7%
352
36.2%
203
Fulton
71.1%
82,576
28.7%
33,320
Gilmer
53.0%
489
45.7%
421
Glascock
62.3%
38
31.1%
19
Glynn
68.7%
2,870
30.6%
1,277
Gordon
57.5%
776
41.0%
553
Grady
75.9%
887
22.3%
261
Greene
85.8%
37,465
33.4%
18,883
Gwinnett
66.2%
1,076
13.5%
169
Habersham
52.0%
608
47.3%
553
Hall
60.3%
3,482
38.9%
2,245
Hancock
87.4%
1,112
11.4%
145
Haralson
55.1%
413
41.5%
311
Harris
75.0%
1,372
24.5%
448
Hart
72.3%
740
27.0%
276
Heard
70.1%
276
28.2%
111
Henry
77.7%
15,639
21.9%
4,406
Houston
76.0%
6,274
23.6%
1,946
Irwin
79.9%
326
18.1%
74
Jackson
61.4%
1,193
37.5%
729
Jasper
81.4%
632
17.1%
133
Jeff Davis
76.6%
400
20.3%
106
Jefferson
88.5%
1,519
11.0%
189
Jenkins
84.1%
355
15.2%
64
Johnson
85.1%
388
14.0%
64
Jones
80.2%
1,585
18.8%
371
Lamar
79.9%
868
19.1%
208
Lanier
76.5%
234
22.5%
69
Laurens
82.2%
2,294
16.2%
453
Lee
74.2%
1,009
24.6%
335
Liberty
79.7%
2,783
19.4%
678
Lincoln
84.5%
538
14.6%
93
Long
68.5%
261
29.1%
111
Lowndes
68.0%
3,891
31.3%
1,791
Lumpkin
50.6%
560
48.1%
532
Macon
89.9%
977
9.7%
105
Madison
55.7%
656
42.9%
505
Marion
76.3%
431
21.2%
120
McDuffie
84.7%
1,274
14.8%
223
McIntosh
84.4%
863
14.6%
149
Meriwether
85.4%
1,463
13.8%
237
Miller
77.6%
159
18.0%
37
Mitchell
85.8%
1,338
13.0%
203
Monroe
80.1%
1,250
19.2%
300
Montgomery
78.2%
287
19.6%
72
Morgan
77.5%
910
22.1%
259
Murray
51.2%
444
46.9%
407
Muscogee
79.1%
12,801
20.5%
3,319
Newton
78.0%
7,269
21.5%
2,001
Oconee
52.5%
1,223
47.1%
1,098
Oglethorpe
60.5%
561
38.6%
358
Paulding
65.6%
4,095
33.8%
2,111
Peach
83.7%
1,675
15.8%
316
Pickens
53.1%
431
45.6%
370
Pierce
67.0%
219
31.8%
104
Pike
68.4%
417
30.7%
187
Polk
68.6%
944
29.3%
403
Pulaski
86.0%
376
13.7%
60
Putnam
80.2%
871
19.0%
206
Quitman
91.0%
193
7.1%
15
Rabun
54.1%
397
44.4%
326
Randolph
89.5%
690
9.2%
71
Richmond
81.7%
16,269
18.0%
3,578
Rockdale
78.0%
7,930
21.8%
2,212
Schley
83.4%
146
14.3%
25
Screven
81.1%
771
17.5%
166
Seminole
84.4%
470
14.5%
81
Spalding
78.6%
3,129
20.6%
820
Stephens
60.7%
460
9.0%
284
Stewart
90.0%
460
9.0%
46
Sumter
82.4%
1,960
17.0%
404
Talbot
86.7%
852
12.2%
120
Taliaferro
86.4%
236
12.8%
35
Tattnall
76.1%
518
22.5%
153
Taylor
87.7%
476
11.4%
62
Telfair
81.1%
426
17.3%
91
Terrell
88.1%
804
11.5%
105
Thomas
78.2%
2,053
21.0%
551
Tift
75.9%
1,151
22.7%
344
Toombs
76.2%
562
22.5%
166
Towns
52.9%
312
45.1%
266
Treutlen
82.2%
300
15.9%
58
Troup
78.9%
3,357
20.0%
850
Turner
78.9%
330
19.4%
81
Twiggs
86.4%
818
12.5%
118
Union
56.3%
573
41.0%
417
Upson
80.8%
1,236
18.3%
280
Walker
53.0%
1,009
45.5%
867
Walton
69.9%
2,309
29.4%
969
Ware
75.0%
919
23.2%
284
Warren
89.5%
468
9.4%
49
Washington
86.4%
1,741
12.7%
256
Wayne
73.2%
700
24.7%
236
Webster
89.5%
170
9.5%
18
Wheeler
85.9%
177
12.6%
26
White
52.4%
498
46.3%
440
Whitfield
53.3%
1,536
45.4%
1,307
Wilcox
86.8%
302
11.8%
41
Wilkes
82.1%
702
16.5%
141
Wilkinson
83.3%
832
15.5%
155
Worth
79.4%
684
19.3%
166
Total
71.3%
543,008
28.2%
214,332
Analysis
After losing in Georgia by 36 points to Barack Obama in 2008 , Hillary Clinton bounced back with a lopsided 43-point win against rival Bernie Sanders. The victory was fueled primarily by African American voters, who comprised 51% of the electorate and backed Clinton by a margin of 85-14, compared to white voters who backed Clinton by a margin of 58-41. Clinton won across all income levels and educational attainment levels in Georgia.
Clinton performed extremely well throughout the state of Georgia and won all of its counties but one. She ran particularly strongly in Atlanta where she won 74 percent of the vote as well as its suburbs which backed her 66-34. Central Georgia , particularly the region known as the Cotton Belt which has a large African American population, also strongly favored Clinton by a margin of 79-19. Clinton also performed well in North Georgia , mostly in the more rural, white and conservative parts of the state which are considered to be an extreme part of Appalachia where she defeated Sanders by a margin of 64-36.[ 19]
After his landslide defeat, the Sanders campaign reported that Hillary Clinton had notched wins in southern states including Georgia because Bernie Sanders did not compete with her, although this claim was disputed.[6]
References
^ "STATE PRIMARY ELECTION TYPES" . NCSL . Retrieved May 17, 2017 .
^ Temple-West, Patrick (February 15, 2016). "Hillary Clinton's secret weapon: John Lewis" . POLITICO . Retrieved May 3, 2019 .
^ Primary results
^ "Trump's Lead Looks Steady in Run-Up to Super Tuesday" .
^ "POLL: Trump, Clinton widen leads ahead of Super Tuesday" .
^ "Landmark/RosettaStone Poll 800 Likely Georgia Democratic Voters" (PDF) .
^ "CBS News 2016 Battleground TrackerGeorgia" .
^ "WABE Poll: Hillary Clinton Has Commanding Support Among Ga. Democratic Voters" .
^ "Poll: Results of SurveyUSA Election Poll #22709" (PDF) .
^ "Poll: Georgia Democratic Presidential Primary Poll" (PDF) .
^ "NBC News/WSJ/Marist Poll" (PDF) .
^ "Poll: Cruz, Rubio in fight for second, Clinton with huge primary lead" .
^ "Subject: Clinton leads in 10 of 12 Early March Primaries; Benefits From Overwhelming Black Support" (PDF) .
^ Landmark/RosettaStone
^ "EXCLUSIVE POLL: Georgia wants Trump as president" . 11Alive . November 2, 2015.
^ "Trump, Clinton still in lead in Georgia, but leads are shrinking, poll shows" . The Florida Times-Union. Retrieved September 4, 2015 .
^ The Green Papers
^ "2016 Election Center" . CNN . Retrieved June 5, 2018 .
^ "2016 Election Center" . CNN . Retrieved September 25, 2016 .
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