2016 Nevada Republican presidential caucuses

2016 Nevada Republican presidential caucuses

← 2012 February 23, 2016 (2016-02-23) 2020 →
← SC
AK →

30 pledged delegates to the Republican National Convention
 
Candidate Donald Trump Marco Rubio Ted Cruz
Home state New York Florida Texas
Delegate count 14 7 6
Popular vote 34,531 17,940 16,079
Percentage 45.91% 23.85% 21.38%

 
Candidate Ben Carson John Kasich
Home state Virginia Ohio
Delegate count 2 1
Popular vote 3,619 2,709
Percentage 4.81% 3.60%

The 2016 Nevada Republican presidential caucuses took place on February 23 in the U.S. state of Nevada, marking the Republican Party's fourth nominating contest in their series of presidential primaries ahead of the 2016 presidential election.

With the Democratic Party having already held its Nevada caucuses three days earlier on February 20, the Republican caucus in Nevada was the only presidential primary on that day.

During the 2015 legislative session, lawmakers attempted to change the caucus into a regular primary and at a much earlier date,[1] however the bill failed to advance to a vote.[2]

Candidates

Nine candidates were eligible:[3][4]

Debates and forums

December 15, 2015 – Las Vegas, Nevada

The fifth debate was held on December 15, 2015, at the Venetian Resort in Las Vegas, Nevada.[5] It was the second debate to air on CNN, and was also broadcast by Salem Radio. The debate was moderated solely by Wolf Blitzer with Dana Bash and Hugh Hewitt serving alongside as questioners.[6]

The debate was split into primetime and pre-primetime groups based on averaged polling numbers; in order to participate in the main debate, candidates had to meet one of three criteria in polls conducted between October 29 and December 13 which were recognized by CNN—either an average of at least 3.5% nationally, or at least 4% in either Iowa or New Hampshire.[7] The secondary debate featured candidates that had reached at least 1% in four separate national, Iowa, or New Hampshire polls that are recognized by CNN.[7] Paul was included in the main debate after not qualifying under the original rules because he received 5% support in Iowa in a Fox News poll.[6][8]

The debate lineup was announced on December 13 to include Trump, Cruz, Rubio, Carson, Bush, Fiorina, Christie, Paul, and Kasich in the primetime debate, and Huckabee, Santorum, Graham, and Pataki in the undercard debate.[6] Commentators suggested that the key confrontation would be between Trump and Cruz, based on their respective polling in Iowa.[9]

Eighteen million people watched the debate, making it the third-largest audience ever for a presidential primary debate.[10] During the debate, the audible coughing was attributed to Ben Carson. His campaign admitted that they all got sick a month prior and Carson had kept the cough for weeks. The cough was "almost gone" and Carson was not really sick at the time.[11]

The undercard debate was the fourth and final debate appearance of Senator Lindsey Graham and former Governor George Pataki, who suspended their campaigns on December 21[12] and December 29,[13] respectively.

Endorsements

Having been swept into numerous offices in the previous election, many new Nevada Republican officeholders came out in support of various candidates. Notably, there were splits among different groups of Republicans towards their endorsements. Legislators who had supported a controversial tax hike during the 2015 session came out in support of Jeb Bush and Marco Rubio, while those who opposed it supported Rand Paul, Ted Cruz or Donald Trump.

(Note: This list contains endorsements only for candidates who were still running at the time of the caucuses)

Ted Cruz
Statewide officials

State legislators

John Kasich
Statewide officials

State legislators

Local officials

Marco Rubio
Statewide officials

U.S. Senators

U.S. Representatives

State legislators

Local officials

  • Former Clark County Commissioner Bruce Woodbury
  • Former North Las Vegas Mayor Shari Buck
Donald Trump
State legislators

Polling

Aggregate polls

Source of poll

aggregation

Dates

administered

Dates

updated

Marco Rubio
Republican
Donald Trump
Republican
Ted Cruz
Republican
Margin
FiveThirtyEight[14] until February 23, 2016 February 23, 2016 27.1% 37.1% 21.0% Trump +10.0
Poll source Date 1st 2nd 3rd Other
Primary results[15] February 23, 2016 Donald Trump45.75% Marco Rubio23.77% Ted Cruz21.30% Ben Carson 4.79%, John Kasich 3.59%
CNN/ORC[16]

Margin of error: ± 6.5%

Sample size: 245

February 10–15, 2016 Donald Trump
45%
Marco Rubio

19%

Ted Cruz

17%

Ben Carson 7%, John Kasich 5%, Jeb Bush 1%, Someone else 2%, No opinion 4%
Gravis Marketing[17]

Margin of error: ± 5%

Sample size: 406

December 23–27, 2015 Donald Trump
33%
Ted Cruz

20%

Marco Rubio

11%

Ben Carson 6%, Carly Fiorina 5%, Jeb Bush 5%, Chris Christie 5%, Rand Paul 1%, Rick Santorum 1%, John Kasich 0%, Mike Huckabee 0%, Unsure 12%
Morning Consult[18]

Margin of error: ± 4%

Sample size: 249

November 10–16, 2015 Donald Trump
38%
Ben Carson

18%

Marco Rubio

12%

Ted Cruz 7%, Jeb Bush 6%, Carly Fiorina 2%, Mike Huckabee 2%, Rand Paul 2%, Chris Christie 1%, John Kasich 1%, Lindsey Graham 1%, Rick Santorum 0%, Someone else 1%, Don't know/No opinion 8%
CNN/ORC[19]

Margin of error: ± 6%

Sample size: 285

October 3–10, 2015 Donald Trump
38%
Ben Carson

22%

Carly Fiorina

8%

Marco Rubio 7%, Jeb Bush 6%, Ted Cruz 4%, Mike Huckabee 4%, Rand Paul 2%, Jim Gilmore 1%, Chris Christie 1%, George Pataki 1%, John Kasich 1%, Lindsey Graham 0%, Bobby Jindal 0%, Rick Santorum 0%, None 3%, No opinion 3%
Gravis Marketing[20]

Margin of error: ± 4%

Sample size: 623

July 12–13, 2015 Donald Trump
28%
Scott Walker

15%

Ben Carson

8%

Jeb Bush 7%, Marco Rubio 5%, Rand Paul 4%, Ted Cruz 4%, Rick Perry 3%, Bobby Jindal 2%, Mike Huckabee 2%, Chris Christie 2%, George Pataki 1%, Carly Fiorina 0%, Lindsey Graham 0%, Rick Santorum 0%, Undecided 20%
Gravis Marketing[21]

Margin of error: ± 5%

Sample size: 443

March 27, 2015 Ted Cruz
18%
Scott Walker
18%
Jeb Bush
16%
Marco Rubio 7%, Ben Carson 6%, Rand Paul 5%, Chris Christie 4%, Mike Huckabee 4%, Rick Santorum 2%, Carly Fiorina 1%, Undecided 20%
Gravis Marketing[22]

Margin of error: ± 5%

Sample size: 438

February 21–22, 2015 Scott Walker
27%
Jeb Bush

19%

Chris Christie

8%

Ted Cruz 6%, Mike Huckabee 6%, Rick Perry 6%, Marco Rubio 4%, Rick Santorum 4%, Rand Paul 3%, Bobby Jindal 1%, Undecided 16%

Results

Primary date: February 23, 2016
County conventions: March 12 - April 2, 2016 (presumably)
State convention: May 7–8, 2016 (presumably)
National delegates: 30

Nevada Republican precinct caucuses, February 23, 2016
Candidate Votes Percentage Actual delegate count
Bound Unbound Total
Donald Trump 34,531 45.75% 14 0 14
Marco Rubio 17,940 23.77% 7 0 7
Ted Cruz 16,079 21.30% 6 0 6
Ben Carson 3,619 4.79% 2 0 2
John Kasich 2,709 3.59% 1 0 1
Invalid 266 0.35% 0 0 0
Rand Paul (withdrawn) 170 0.23% 0 0 0
Jeb Bush (withdrawn) 64 0.08% 0 0 0
Chris Christie (withdrawn) 50 0.07% 0 0 0
Carly Fiorina (withdrawn) 22 0.03% 0 0 0
Mike Huckabee (withdrawn) 21 0.03% 0 0 0
Rick Santorum (withdrawn) 11 0.01% 0 0 0
Jim Gilmore (withdrawn) 0 0 0
Unprojected delegates: 0 0 0
Total: 75,482 100.00% 30 0 30
Source: The Green Papers

Delegates were awarded to candidates who got more than 3.33% of the vote proportionally.

Donald Trump received more votes than the combined total of the 2012 Nevada caucuses, while also beating Mitt Romney's previous two records.[23] On the eve of the caucuses, Trump stopped by Palo Verde High School in Summerlin to greet voters.[24]

Results by county

County Cruz Rubio Trump
Carson City 18.8% 24.4% 43.4%
Churchill 23.13% 25.35% 39.88%
Clark 19.10% 24.58% 48.93%
Douglas 25.88% 27.09% 36.44%
Elko 43.84% 21.22% 25.32%
Esmeralda 12.16% 10.81% 62.16%
Eureka 34.36% 15.90% 41.54%
Humboldt 21.90% 21.09% 41.83%
Lander 35.66% 17.35% 39.76%
Lincoln 44.56% 16.14% 28.77%
Lyon 24.52% 17.45% 48.24%
Mineral 19.37% 19.90% 50.79%
Nye 23.52% 12.68% 56.48%
Pershing 28.28% 19.66% 40.69%
Storey 21.07% 15.20% 42.93%
Washoe 20.87% 24.58% 44.13%
White Pine 26.90% 22.53% 39.54%
TOTAL 21.38% 23.85% 45.91%
Source: https://uselectionatlas.org/RESULTS/state.php?fips=32&year=2016&f=0&off=0&elect=2

Analysis

Donald Trump overwhelmingly won the caucuses, with Marco Rubio, who for a time lived in Nevada, coming in a distant second. According to exit polls by Edison Research, Trump won among ideologically moderate (50%) and somewhat conservative (55%) voters.[25] Trump carried white caucus-goers with 47% and Latino caucus-goers with 45%.[25][26]

Ted Cruz won two counties, Elko and Nye, the latter of which has a large LDS population.[27] Mormon voters continued to be a strong constituency for Cruz throughout the primary.

References

  1. ^ "AB302". www.leg.state.nv.us. Retrieved April 23, 2016.
  2. ^ "Nevada plan to dump presidential caucus falls short". Politico. Retrieved April 23, 2016.
  3. ^ WRAL: NC approves 27 candidates for presidential primary ballots
  4. ^ NC State Board of Elections presidential primary candidates' list (preliminary)[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ "2016 Presidential Debates Fast Facts". CNN. August 20, 2015. Retrieved September 13, 2015.
  6. ^ a b c Scott, Eugene (December 14, 2015). "Stage set for final GOP debate of 2015". CNN. Retrieved December 15, 2015.
  7. ^ a b "CNN Republican presidential debate criteria announced". CNN. November 20, 2015. Retrieved November 20, 2015.
  8. ^ "How Rand Paul barely made it into Tuesday's main debate". www.cbsnews.com. Retrieved January 2, 2016.
  9. ^ Sahil Kapur; Michael C Bender; Kevin Cirilli (December 15, 2015). "How the Fifth Republican Debate Could Reshape the Race". Bloomberg.com/politics.
  10. ^ "18 million watched Republican debate". USA TODAY. Retrieved December 17, 2015.
  11. ^ "The Cough That Consumed the GOP Debate". ABC News. December 16, 2015. Retrieved December 17, 2015.
  12. ^ "First on CNN: Graham ends his campaign for the White House". CNN. December 21, 2015.
  13. ^ "Former ny gov. george pataki says he's planning to drop white house bid". abc13. December 29, 2015. Archived from the original on January 4, 2016. Retrieved December 29, 2015.
  14. ^ FiveThirtyEight
  15. ^ Primary results
  16. ^ "CNN/ORC Poll" (PDF). ORC International. Retrieved February 17, 2016.
  17. ^ Gravis Marketing
  18. ^ Morning Consult
  19. ^ "CNN/ORC Poll". ORC International. Retrieved February 17, 2016.
  20. ^ Gravis Marketing
  21. ^ Gravis Marketing
  22. ^ Gravis Marketing
  23. ^ "Trump Has Won More Votes Than Romney Had At This Point in 2012". Weekly Standard. February 24, 2016. Archived from the original on February 25, 2016. Retrieved April 22, 2016.
  24. ^ Segal, Cheryl. "Trump takes caucus site by surprise". The Hill. Retrieved April 22, 2016.
  25. ^ a b "2016 Election Center". CNN. Retrieved June 18, 2022.
  26. ^ "Donald Trump apparently won the Latino vote in Nevada. It doesn't mean Latinos suddenly love him". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved June 18, 2022.
  27. ^ "LDS Enclaves". American Communities Project. Retrieved June 18, 2022.