Sorenroy
Jr. Member
Posts: 1,702
Political Matrix E: -5.55, S: -5.91
|
|
« on: August 11, 2016, 11:17:55 AM » |
|
Breakdown by demographic:
Overall (+2R) — 100% Trump — 41 Clinton — 39 Johnson — 5 Stein — 2 Undecided — 13
Gender:
Female (+7D) — 53% Clinton — 43 Trump — 36 Johnson — 5 Stein — 2 Undecided — 14
Male (+13R) — 47% Trump — 47 Clinton — 33 Johnson — 6 Stein — 2 Undecided — 13
Race:
White (+37R) — 66% Trump — 57 Clinton — 20 Johnson — 7 Stein — 1 Undecided — 15
African-American (+75D) — 29% Clinton — 80 Trump — 5 Stein — 3 Johnson — 2 Undecided — 9
Other (+8R) — 5% Trump — 40 Clinton — 32 Stein — 4 Johnson — 2 Undecided — 21
Age:
18-29 (+32D) — 15% Clinton — 51 Trump — 19 Stein — 7 Johnson — 6 Undecided — 16
30-45 (+12D) — 24% Clinton — 40 Trump — 28 Johnson — 8 Stein — 0 Undecided — 24
45-65 (+10R) — 36% Trump — 48 Clinton — 38 Johnson — 4 Stein — 1 Undecided — 9
65+ (+28R) — 25% Trump — 58 Clinton — 30 Johnson — 3 Stein — 1 Undecided — 8
Education:
Some High School (+38D) — 7% Clinton — 65 Trump — 27 Johnson — 5 Stein — 1 Undecided — 2
High School (+2D) — 17% Clinton — 40 Trump — 38 Stein — 2 Johnson 1 Undecided — 18
Technical/Vocational (+16R) — 14% Trump — 45 Clinton — 29 Stein — 5 Johnson — 4 Undecided — 16
Some College (+11R) — 17% Trump — 47 Clinton — 36 Johnson — 5 Stein — 1 Undecided — 11
College Graduate (+13R) — 26% Trump — 45 Clinton — 32 Johnson — 6 Stein — 1 Undecided — 17
Postgraduate (+8D) — 17% Clinton — 44 Trump — 36 Johnson — 10 Stein — 1 Undecided — 8
I decided not to do "Do not care to say", but it was Clinton +8, 13% undecided and 3% of voters.
So in conclusion (sorry every English teacher ever), the winner definitely comes from where the undecideds break and, depending on what demographic you look at, they break very differently. The undecideds in race and education seem to favor Trump, but the undecideds in age favor Clinton.
|