2016 Maryland Democratic presidential primary
2016 Maryland Democratic presidential primary
Election results by county.
Clinton
40 – 50%
50 – 60%
60 – 70%
70 – 80%
Sanders
40 – 50%
The 2016 Maryland Democratic presidential primary was held on April 26 in the U.S. state of Maryland as one of the Democratic Party's primaries ahead of the 2016 presidential election .
The Democratic Party 's primaries in Connecticut , Delaware , Pennsylvania and Rhode Island were held the same day, as were Republican primaries in the same five states, including their own Maryland primary .
Opinion polling
Poll source
Date
1st
2nd
3rd
Other
Official Primary results
April 26, 2016
Hillary Clinton 62.5%
Bernie Sanders 33.8%
Others / Uncommitted 3.7%
ARG[ 2]
Margin of error: ± 5.0%
Sample size: 400
April 21-24, 2016
Hillary Clinton 50%
Bernie Sanders 44%
Others / Undecided 6%
Monmouth[ 3]
Margin of error: ± 5.7%
Sample size: 300
April 18-20, 2016
Hillary Clinton 57%
Bernie Sanders 32%
Others / Undecided 11%
Public Policy Polling[ 4]
Margin of error: ± 4.4%
Sample size: 492
April 15-17, 2016
Hillary Clinton 58%
Bernie Sanders 33%
Others / Undecided 9%
NBC 4/Marist[ 5]
Margin of error: ± 3.5%
Sample size: 775
April 5-9, 2016
Hillary Clinton 58%
Bernie Sanders 36%
Others / Undecided 6%
University of Maryland/Washington Post[ 6]
Margin of error: ± 5.5%
Sample size: 539
March 30 - April 4, 2016
Hillary Clinton 55%
Bernie Sanders 40%
Others / Undecided 5%
Baltimore Sun[ 7]
Margin of error: ± 4.9%
Sample size: 400
March 4-8, 2016
Hillary Clinton 61%
Bernie Sanders 28%
Others / Undecided 11%
Gonzales/Arscott Research[ 8]
Margin of error: ± 5.0
Sample size: 411
February 29-March 4, 2016
Hillary Clinton 57%
Bernie Sanders 26%
Others / Undecided 17%
Goucher[ 9]
Margin of error: ± 3.5
Sample size: 794
February 13–18, 2016
Hillary Clinton 58%
Bernie Sanders 28%
Others / Undecided 14%
Baltimore Sun/University of Baltimore
Margin of error: ± 5%
Sample size: 402
January 11–16, 2016
Hillary Clinton 40%
Bernie Sanders 27%
Others / Undecided 33%
Polls in 2015
Poll source
Date
1st
2nd
3rd
Other
Baltimore Sun/University of Baltimore
Margin of error: ± 4.8%
Sample size: 419
November 13–17, 2015
Hillary Clinton 56%
Bernie Sanders 23%
Martin O'Malley 7%
Other/Unsure 14%
Washington Post
Margin of error: ± 5%
Sample size: 490
October 8–11, 2015
Hillary Clinton 43%
Joe Biden 26%
Bernie Sanders 20%
Martin O'Malley 4%, Jim Webb 1%, Lincoln Chafee 0%, None/Any/Other 3%, No Opinion 2%
Goucher[ 10]
Margin of error: ± 5.7%
Sample size: 300
September 26 – October 1, 2015
Hillary Clinton 43%
Joe Biden 23%
Bernie Sanders 17%
Martin O'Malley 2%, Jim Webb 2%, Lincoln Chafee 0%, None/Any/Other 2%, Undecided 11%
Polls in 2014
Poll source
Date
1st
2nd
3rd
Other
Washington Post[ 11]
Margin of error: ± 5%
Sample size: 538
February 13–16, 2014
Hillary Clinton 72%
Joe Biden 9%
Martin O'Malley 6%
Elizabeth Warren 3%, Andrew Cuomo 2%, None 1%, Undecided 7%
Baltimore Sun
Margin of error: ± 4.4%
Sample size: 500
February 8–12, 2014
Hillary Clinton 59%
Joe Biden 14%
Martin O'Malley 6%
Andrew Cuomo 4%, Undecided/Other 17%
Polls in 2013
Poll source
Date
1st
2nd
3rd
Other
Washington Post
Margin of error:
Sample size:
February 21–24, 2013
Hillary Clinton 56%
Joe Biden 18%
Martin O'Malley 8%
Andrew Cuomo 4%, None/other/any of them 4%, No opinion 9%
Results
Maryland Democratic primary, April 26, 2016
Candidate
Popular vote
Estimated delegates
Count
Percentage
Pledged
Unpledged
Total
Hillary Clinton
573,242
62.53%
60
17
77
Bernie Sanders
309,990
33.81%
35
1
36
Rocky De La Fuente
3,582
0.39%
—
Uncommitted
29,949
3.27%
0
6
6
Total
916,763
100%
95
24
119
Source: The Green Papers , Maryland State Board of Elections - Official Primary Results , MDP Announces DNC Delegates, Alternates and State DNC Members ,MDP Announces District-Level Delegate Winners
Results by county
Hillary Clinton won every county (and the independent city of Baltimore ) with the exceptions of Allegany , Carroll , Cecil , and Garrett counties, which went for Bernie Sanders .[ 12]
County[ 13]
Clinton
%
Sanders
%
Others
Totals
Turnout
Margin
Allegany
2,476
41.29%
2,727
45.48%
793
5,996
40.48%
-4.19%
Anne Arundel
37,726
56.19%
26,205
39.03%
3,210
67,141
43.57%
17.16%
Baltimore (City)
87,762
65.26%
42,285
31.44%
4,434
134,481
45.59%
33.82%
Baltimore (County)
77,052
57.24%
50,641
37.62%
6,919
134,612
44.18%
19.62%
Calvert
5,440
57.10%
3,490
36.63%
597
9,527
40.53%
20.47%
Caroline
1,167
50.94%
959
41.86%
165
2,291
33.47%
9.08%
Carroll
7,017
46.00%
7,299
47.85%
938
15,254
46.81%
-1.85%
Cecil
3,534
45.27%
3,562
45.63%
710
7,806
34.84%
-0.36%
Charles
15,685
67.84%
6,623
28.64%
813
23,121
37.58%
39.19%
Dorchester
2,149
61.68%
1,080
31.00%
255
3,484
34.17%
30.68%
Frederick
14,735
51.09%
12,844
44.53%
1,262
28,841
49.09%
6.56%
Garrett
821
41.17%
939
47.09%
234
1,994
44.21%
-5.92%
Harford
13,913
51.21%
11,489
42.29%
1,765
27,167
42.84%
8.92%
Howard
32,139
59.44%
20,316
37.57%
1,619
54,074
54.35%
21.86%
Kent
1,532
54.85%
1,080
38.67%
181
2,793
45.93%
16.18%
Montgomery
122,881
66.25%
59,157
31.89%
3,445
185,483
50.28%
34.36%
Prince George's
120,978
73.60%
40,815
24.83%
2,580
164,373
37.63%
48.77%
Queen Anne's
2,458
53.49%
1,851
40.28%
286
4,595
43.17%
13.21%
Somerset
4,892
52.44%
3,725
39.93%
711
9,328
36.63%
12.51%
St. Mary's
1,207
59.60%
668
32.99%
150
2,025
32.61%
26.62%
Talbot
2,710
60.74%
1,550
34.74%
202
4,462
45.05%
26.00%
Washington
6,211
49.25%
5,189
41.15%
1,210
12,610
39.10%
8.10%
Wicomico
5,543
58.14%
3,410
35.77%
581
9,534
37.09%
22.37%
Worcester
3,214
55.69%
2,086
36.15%
471
5,771
40.08%
19.55%
Total
573,242
62.53%
309,990
33.81%
33,531
916,763
43.90%
28.72%
Note: Maryland is a closed primary state. Turnout is based on registered democrats before the primary on April 26, 2016. Others vote totals consist of votes for Rocky De La Fuente and Uncommitted
Analysis
With its coalition of African Americans and college-educated, affluent white progressive /liberal professionals, Maryland was a state Hillary Clinton was expected to win in the so-called "Acela Primaries" on April 26. She swept the state on election day, winning the primary by 29 points, a clear difference from 2008 when she lost Maryland to Barack Obama . According to exit polls, 43 percent of voters in the Maryland Democratic Primary were white and they opted for Clinton by a margin of 52-42 compared to the 46 percent of African American voters who backed Clinton by a margin of 75-22. Clinton swept all socioeconomic/income classes and educational attainment categories in Maryland as well. She won the votes of people over the age of 45, 75-20, but lost the youth vote to Sanders 52-46. She won both men (55-40) and women (68-29).
In terms of party identification, of the 80 percent of self-identified Democrats who voted in the primary, 69 percent backed Clinton while 30 percent supported Bernie Sanders; Independents , who made up 17 percent of the voters, backed Sanders by a 51-39 margin. Clinton also won all ideological groups.
Clinton performed well in the urban and suburban parts of the state in and around Baltimore (which she won 63-34), and the Washington, D.C. suburbs (which she won 71-27), and she also won in the more rural parts of the state like the Eastern Shore (which she won 57-37) and Western Maryland (which she won 53-47), which includes parts of Appalachia .[ 14]
See also
References
^ Maryland State Board of Elections - Official Primary Results
^ "Maryland poll April 21-24, 2016" . American Research Group. Retrieved April 25, 2016 .
^ "MARYLAND: CLINTON LEADS SANDERS BY 25" (PDF) . Retrieved April 22, 2016 .
^ "Maryland Likely To Continue Momentum for Trump, Clinton" (PDF) . Retrieved April 19, 2016 .
^ "NBC4/Marist Poll April 2016 Maryland Questionnaire" (PDF) . Retrieved April 13, 2016 .
^ "Washington Post-University of Maryland poll, March 30-April 3, 2016" . Retrieved April 7, 2016 .
^ "Hillary Clinton has 33-point lead in Maryland Democratic primary, new poll shows" .
^ "Maryland Poll" (PDF) .
^ "Goucher poll February 13–18, 2016" (PDF) .
^ "Goucher poll September 26 – October 1, 2015" (PDF) .
^ "(Among Democrats and independents who lean Democratic) Thinking ahead to 2016, between (Martin O'Malley), (Hillary Clinton), (Joe Biden), (Andrew Cuomo) and (Elizabeth Warren) whom would you like to be the next Democratic presidential nominee?" . Washington Post . February 22, 2014. Retrieved July 9, 2015 .
^ "Maryland Election Results 2016" . The New York Times . August 2017.
^ "Maryland Certified Election Results" . CNN . May 9, 2017. Retrieved April 5, 2017 .
^ "2016 Election Center" . CNN . Retrieved September 25, 2016 .