2016 Louisiana Democratic presidential primary
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Results by parish Clinton: 40-50% 50-60% 60-70% 70-80% 80-90% Sanders: 40-50% |
Elections in Louisiana |
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Government |
The 2016 Louisiana Democratic presidential primary took place on March 5 in the U.S. state of Louisiana as one of the Democratic Party's primaries ahead of the 2016 presidential election.
On the same day, Democratic primaries were held in Kansas and in Nebraska, while the Republican Party held primaries in four states, including their own Louisiana primary.
Clinton won every parish in the state except for Cameron and LaSalle Parishes.
Opinion polling
[edit]Poll source | Date | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | Other |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Certified Primary results[1] | March 5, 2016 | Hillary Clinton 71.1% | Bernie Sanders 23.2% | Others 5.7% | |
Magellan Strategies[2] Margin of error: ± 3.3% | March 1, 2016 | Hillary Clinton 61% | Bernie Sanders 14% | Others / Undecided 25% | |
Public Policy Polling[3] Margin of error: ± 4.4 | February 14–16, 2016 | Hillary Clinton 60% | Bernie Sanders 29% | ||
WWL-TV-Clarus[4] Margin of error: ? | September 20–23, 2015 | Hillary Clinton 57% | Joe Biden 22% | Bernie Sanders 7% | Martin O'Malley 2%, Jim Webb 1%, Lincoln Chafee 0% |
Results
[edit]Clinton dominated in Louisiana winning all but two of the states parishes. Clinton was declared the winner in Louisiana right when the polls closed.
Louisiana Democratic primary, March 5, 2016 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Popular vote | Estimated delegates | |||
Count | Percentage | Pledged | Unpledged | Total | |
Hillary Clinton | 221,733 | 71.12% | 37 | 7 | 44 |
Bernie Sanders | 72,276 | 23.18% | 14 | 0 | 14 |
Steve Burke | 4,785 | 1.53% | |||
John Wolfe Jr. | 4,512 | 1.45% | |||
Martin O'Malley (withdrawn) | 2,550 | 0.82% | |||
Willie Wilson | 1,423 | 0.46% | |||
Keith Russell Judd | 1,357 | 0.44% | |||
Rocky De La Fuente | 1,341 | 0.43% | |||
Michael Steinberg | 993 | 0.32% | |||
Henry Hewes | 806 | 0.26% | |||
Uncommitted | — | 0 | 1 | 1 | |
Total | 311,776 | 100% | 51 | 8 | 59 |
Source: [5][6] |
Results by parish
[edit]Parish[7] | Clinton | Votes | Sanders | Votes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Acadia | 53.7% | 1,862 | 31.4% | 1,087 |
Allen | 55.1% | 536 | 30.6% | 297 |
Ascension | 71.1% | 4,221 | 23.3% | 1,384 |
Assumption | 71.4% | 1,139 | 19.5% | 312 |
Avoyelles | 64.0% | 1,181 | 24.7% | 455 |
Beauregard | 53.5% | 679 | 30.8% | 391 |
Bienville | 76.9% | 1,056 | 16.2% | 222 |
Bossier | 66.5% | 2,919 | 27.0% | 1,187 |
Caddo | 79.8% | 16,666 | 16.8% | 3,513 |
Calcasieu | 65.7% | 6,594 | 26.2% | 2,625 |
Caldwell | 56.4% | 250 | 26.9% | 119 |
Cameron | 37.4% | 123 | 40.1% | 132 |
Catahoula | 60.6% | 431 | 27.3% | 194 |
Claiborne | 76.3% | 768 | 15.7% | 158 |
Concordia | 76.7% | 1,830 | 13.8% | 329 |
DeSoto | 77.1% | 1,508 | 16.3% | 318 |
East Baton Rouge | 78.4% | 32,960 | 19.0% | 7,970 |
East Carroll | 88.0% | 508 | 8.1% | 47 |
East Feliciana | 77.6% | 1,847 | 14.6% | 347 |
Evangeline | 63.1% | 1,319 | 23.8% | 498 |
Franklin | 65.5% | 650 | 22.0% | 218 |
Grant | 48.6% | 367 | 32.7% | 247 |
Iberia | 66.4% | 2,171 | 24.7% | 806 |
Iberville | 69.6% | 3,699 | 19.6% | 1,042 |
Jackson | 65.9% | 827 | 21.3% | 267 |
Jefferson | 67.7% | 17,581 | 27.1% | 7,024 |
Jefferson Davis | 56.0% | 738 | 31.7% | 418 |
Lafayette | 59.7% | 5,920 | 35.5% | 3,523 |
Lafourche | 50.5% | 2,512 | 36.0% | 1,789 |
LaSalle | 30.2% | 136 | 40.8% | 184 |
Lincoln | 75.3% | 1,692 | 19.4% | 436 |
Livingston | 45.4% | 1,633 | 38.7% | 1,392 |
Madison | 82.3% | 722 | 11.2% | 98 |
Morehouse | 78.8% | 1,513 | 15.5% | 298 |
Natchitoches | 68.1% | 2,545 | 22.6% | 846 |
Orleans | 74.7% | 40,601 | 24.1% | 13,086 |
Ouachita | 78.6% | 8,995 | 15.8% | 1,803 |
Plaquemines | 71.6% | 674 | 22.7% | 214 |
Pointe Coupee | 76.7% | 1,680 | 16.1% | 352 |
Rapides | 71.3% | 4,722 | 21.9% | 1,451 |
Red River | 75.3% | 530 | 16.6% | 117 |
Richland | 76.1% | 696 | 14.8% | 135 |
Sabine | 49.8% | 387 | 33.3% | 259 |
St. Bernard | 62.3% | 1,057 | 31.1% | 527 |
St. Charles | 69.2% | 2,245 | 24.2% | 787 |
St. Helena | 83.8% | 1,407 | 11.1% | 186 |
St. James | 82.2% | 2,114 | 12.6% | 324 |
St. John the Baptist | 84.8% | 3,818 | 12.5% | 564 |
St. Landry | 74.1% | 4,606 | 19.1% | 1,184 |
St. Martin | 66.5% | 1,869 | 24.6% | 690 |
St. Mary | 72.93% | 1,996 | 19.55% | 535 |
St. Tammany | 57.2% | 5,996 | 36.3% | 3,800 |
Tangipahoa | 65.7% | 4,267 | 25.5% | 1,656 |
Tensas | 82.8% | 492 | 10.3% | 61 |
Terrebonne | 66.7% | 2,647 | 25.8% | 1,023 |
Union | 68.7% | 822 | 18.1% | 217 |
Vermilion | 54.0% | 1,002 | 34.9% | 648 |
Vernon | 49.5% | 610 | 35.8% | 441 |
Washington | 69.3% | 1,663 | 21.4% | 513 |
Webster | 74.8% | 1,878 | 17.4% | 436 |
West Baton Rouge | 73.4% | 2,178 | 19.9% | 589 |
West Carroll | 49.0% | 171 | 31.5% | 110 |
West Feliciana | 80.1% | 902 | 14.7% | 166 |
Winn | 63.5% | 488 | 25.1% | 193 |
Total | 71.1% | 221,615 | 23.2% | 72,240 |
Analysis
[edit]A state Hillary Clinton lost solidly to Barack Obama in 2008, she progressed to victory in 2016. With its heavily African American population, Hillary Clinton solidly defeated Bernie Sanders in Louisiana. The electorate in Louisiana was expected to be about half African American, as it was about 48% African American in 2008. Clinton won overwhelmingly in the major cities of New Orleans, Baton Rouge, Lafayette, and Shreveport, all with significant minority populations. Clinton also did well in the areas north of New Orleans and east of Baton Rouge in the 1st Congressional District, which is among the most conservative in Louisiana and the South at large. She also performed well in rural counties in Central Louisiana and those along the Louisiana-Texas border that are majority white as she had likewise done eight years prior.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Certified Primary results
- ^ "LOUISIANA PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY SURVEY TOPLINE RESULTS" (PDF).
- ^ "Subject: Clinton leads in 10 of 12 Early March Primaries; Benefits From Overwhelming Black Support" (PDF).
- ^ "WWL-TV/Advocate poll: Carson the favorite of state's Republicans". Retrieved October 16, 2015.
- ^ The Green Papers
- ^ Louisiana Secretary of States
- ^ "2016 Election Center". CNN. Retrieved June 4, 2018.