(Thread) Interesting factoids about presidential elections. (user search)
       |           

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
May 17, 2024, 01:07:42 PM
News: Election Simulator 2.0 Released. Senate/Gubernatorial maps, proportional electoral votes, and more - Read more

  Talk Elections
  Presidential Elections - Analysis and Discussion
  U.S. Presidential Election Results (Moderator: Dereich)
  (Thread) Interesting factoids about presidential elections. (search mode)
Pages: [1]
Author Topic: (Thread) Interesting factoids about presidential elections.  (Read 62266 times)
Kevinstat
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 1,823


« on: December 03, 2019, 09:41:37 PM »

If Virginia and West Virginia never split, Trump's raw vote margin in West Virginia would have been enough to overcome the margin of defeat in Virginia, granting Trump the 13 electoral votes of Virginia

West Virginia would have handed Virginia to Mitt Romney in 2012 as well, if I am not mistaken. Ironically, Bill Clinton would have won the unified state in 1996, because of his strength in West Virginia (which he won 52-37% over Bob Dole that year). Dole won Virginia itself 47-45%. Jimmy Carter also would have won the unified Virginia in 1976.

You are right, it would tip Virginia to Romney. Interesting how there are four times when Virginia is tipped because of West, but I don't know of a single time west gets tipped because of regular virginia

1916 works.  It's rare historically because VA had the Deep South version of strict poll tax prior to 1964 (prior to 1966 in state level elections), so there were shockingly few votes despite the larger population.  From 1968-present, it has generally been decided by close margins, while WV basically went straight from Dem landslides to GOP landslides.

It's likely to happen in 2020 unless WV is like 75% Trump.
Also,

Virginia 1988:
George H.W. Bush 1,309,162 (59.74%)
Michael Dukakis 859,799 (39.23%)
Other 22,648 (1.03%)

West Virginia 1988:
Michael Dukakis 341,016 (52.20%)
George H.W. Bush 310,065 (47.46%)
Other 2,230 (0.34%)

1792-1863 Virginia 1988:
George H.W. Bush 1,619,227 (56.92%)
Michael Dukakis 1,200,815 (42.21%)
Other 24,878 (0.87%)

Virginia also outvoted W.V. in 1992 (in terms of raw vote margin; it would actually have been quite close; I'll do that next).
Logged
Kevinstat
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 1,823


« Reply #1 on: December 03, 2019, 10:20:54 PM »

Virginia 1992:
George H.W. Bush 1,150,517 (44.57%)
Bill Clinton 1,038,650 (40.59%)
Ross Perot 348,639 (13.63%)
Other 20,859 (0.82%)

West Virginia 1992:
Bill Clinton 331,001 (48.41%)
George H.W. Bush 241,974 (35.39%)
Ross Perot 108,829 (15.92%)
Other 1,907 (0.28%)

1792-1863 Virginia 1992:
George H.W. Bush 1,392,491 (42.95%)
Bill Clinton 1,369,651 (42.24%)
Ross Perot 457,468 (14.11%)
Other 22,766 (0.70%)

Kentucky 1992:
Bill Clinton 665,104 (44.55%)
George H.W. Bush 617,178 (41.34%)
Ross Perot 203,944 (13.66%)
Other 6,674 (0.45%)

Pre-1792 Virginia 1992:
Bill Clinton 2,034,755 (42.97%)
George H.W. Bush 2,009,669 (42.44%)
Ross Perot 661,412 (13.97%)
Other 29,440 (0.62%)
Logged
Kevinstat
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 1,823


« Reply #2 on: December 03, 2019, 10:29:30 PM »

Virginia would have also outvoted West Virginia (in raw vote totals) in 2008 (but not W.V. and Kentucky or even Kentucky just by itself), but I'm tired of composing all this.
Logged
Pages: [1]  
Jump to:  


Login with username, password and session length

Terms of Service - DMCA Agent and Policy - Privacy Policy and Cookies

Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines

Page created in 0.024 seconds with 10 queries.