In the year of 2000, the then-Vice President Al Gore earned about 500,000 more votes over Republican nominee George W. Bush. At the time, it was the largest advantage in the popular vote for a candidate who lost the Electoral College vote in the U.S. presidential election. Clinton is ...
in his popularity in red states. Let’s compare Trump’s net approval rating in each state to his 2016 margin there. In doing so, we’re basically pretending that the 2016 vote was a big job approval poll, with a vote for Trump being “approve” and a vote for Clinton “disapprove”...
as noted above, that Trump’s share of white male voters would need to reach 70 percent in order to capture a majority of the popular vote. That’s higher even than the 68 percent of white guys won by Richard Nixon in 1972 and by Reagan in 1984, in their respective 49-state landslide...
Trump’s share of the vote in the 2016 election in the member’s state or district minus Clinton’s Predicted score How often Manchin is expected to support Trump based on Trump’s 2016 margin Trump plus-minus Difference between Manchin’s actual and predicted Trump-support scores Career 50.4...
Most U.S. states have laws compelling electors to follow their state's popular vote result. However, there is no federal or Constitutional directive for that. Local media said only nine U.S. electors in the past 100 years broke from their states' Election Day results. ...
114. That’s a 22.6% increase over his 2016 vote. That’s a pretty popular guy. And we must always keep in mind that in all three elections, Democrats stuffed ballot boxes. It is what they do – they insert as many fake ballots into the system as they can…this is especially ...
"I didn't vote for Trump in the 2016 presidential election. And I don't like Trump's style as U.S. President. But we have to admit that he has done not badly," said a Los Angeles taxi driver in his thirties who identified himself as Martin. ...
But they have also voted for third-party candidates at higher rates, including in 2016, when Trump won the presidency despite losing the popular vote. According toestimates from Catalist, the Democratic data firm, 10 percent of voters under 30 chose a third-party candidate eight years ago, co...
“You don’t have to agree with Trump 100 percent of the time to vote for him,” Haley said. “Take it from me. I haven’t always agreed with President Trump. But we agree more often than we disagree.” CORRECTION: This post initially miscounted the number of Donald Trump's 2016 ...