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词条 2016 Oklahoma Democratic primary
释义

  1. Opinion polling

  2. Results

     Results by county 

  3. Analysis

  4. References

{{Infobox election
| election_name = Oklahoma Democratic primary, 2016
| country = Oklahoma
| type = presidential
| ongoing = no
| previous_election = United States presidential election in Oklahoma, 2012#Democratic primary
| previous_year = 2012
| election_date = {{Start date|2016|03|01}}
| next_election = United States presidential election in Oklahoma, 2020#Democratic primary
| next_year = 2020
| image1 =
| candidate1 = Bernie Sanders
| home_state1 = Vermont
| delegate_count1 = 22
| popular_vote1 = 174,228
| percentage1 = 51.88%
| map_image = Oklahoma Democratic Presidential Primary Election Results by County, 2016.svg
| map_size = 300px
| map_caption = Oklahoma results by county{{legend|#228B22|Bernie Sanders}}{{legend|#d4aa00|Hillary Clinton}}
| image2 =
| candidate2 = Hillary Clinton
| home_state2 = New York
| delegate_count2 = 18
| popular_vote2 = 139,443
| percentage2 = 41.52%
| color1 = 228B22
| color2 = d4aa00
}}{{ElectionsOK}}

The 2016 Oklahoma Democratic primary took place on March 1 in the U.S. state of Oklahoma as one of the Democratic Party's primaries ahead of the 2016 presidential election.

On the same day, dubbed "Super Tuesday," Democratic primaries were held in ten other states plus American Samoa, while the Republican Party held primaries in eleven states including their own Oklahoma primary.

Opinion polling

{{see also|Statewide opinion polling for the Democratic Party presidential primaries, 2016}}{{Oklahoma Democratic primary polls, 2016}}

Results

{{see also|Results of the Democratic Party presidential primaries, 2016}}

Primary date: March 1, 2016

National delegates: 91

{{2016OKDem}}

Results by county

County[1]ClintonVotesSandersVotes
Adair33.4% 582 55.8% 971
Alfalfa28.0% 92 58.1% 191
Atoka28.4% 370 55.4% 723
Beaver28.9% 52 52.2% 94
Beckham31.2% 464 55.4% 824
Blaine37.3% 313 51.8% 435
Bryan31.2% 1,050 56.8% 1,913
Caddo36.4% 1,060 53.0% 1,543
Canadian38.4% 3,357 56.3% 4,922
Carter32.3% 1,240 55.0% 2,113
Cherokee38.7% 2,023 55.4% 2,897
Choctaw29.0% 384 56.4% 745
Cimarron17.5% 22 54.0% 68
Cleveland37.6% 10,433 59.3% 16,428
Coal19.0% 136 63.6% 456
Comanche44.9% 3,523 48.5% 3,804
Cotton29.7% 204 56.4% 388
Craig35.8% 609 54.5% 926
Creek35.8% 609 50.9% 926
Custer33.6% 750 57.1% 1,273
Delaware41.2% 1,447 50.5% 1,773
Dewey27.5% 134 55.4% 270
Ellis23.3% 70 64.1% 193
Garfield41.3% 1,403 52.2% 1,771
Garvin32.7% 909 54.1% 1,505
Grady34.2% 1,629 56.2% 2,677
Grant31.9% 125 57.1% 224
Greer27.6% 164 55.8% 332
Harmon37.2% 122 50.9% 167
Harper26.1% 68 57.9% 151
Haskell32.8% 475 51.9% 752
Hughes33.0% 537 53.7% 873
Jackson38.6% 505 49.8% 652
Jefferson29.4% 197 51.7% 347
Johnston24.8% 260 57.8% 606
Kay38.5% 1,288 53.5% 1,791
Kingfisher33.2% 268 58.5% 472
Kiowa34.8% 331 54.0% 514
Latimer31.2% 499 53.3% 852
Le Flore33.1% 1,498 50.5% 2,283
Lincoln38.5% 1,161 53.8% 1,623
Logan42.1% 1,314 52.7% 1,645
Love32.0% 314 51.1% 502
Major34.7% 140 53.2% 215
Marshall30.3% 400 56.0% 738
Mayes40.0% 1,659 51.7% 2,144
McClain35.4% 1,157 57.1% 1,865
McCurtain28.3% 712 52.3% 1,314
McIntosh40.2% 1,022 49.6% 1,261
Murray32.7% 544 54.6% 909
Muskogee44.8% 3,381 46.6% 3,515
Noble35.3% 362 54.8% 562
Nowata38.2% 406 49.9% 530
Okfuskee36.9% 421 52.3% 1,261
Oklahoma50.1% 34,255 47.4% 32,368
Okmulgee45.7% 1,867 46.1% 1,882
Osage47.5% 2,390 46.2% 2,327
Ottawa39.3% 972 50.1% 1,238
Pawnee40.5% 603 51.1% 762
Payne38.9% 2,622 56.7% 3,829
Pittsburg31.6% 1,717 55.8% 3,026
Pontotoc29.6% 1,186 59.8% 2,392
Pottawatomie37.5% 2,300 55.5% 3,400
Roger Mills21.6% 100 58.0% 268
Rogers39.6% 2,810 52.9% 3,757
Seminole36.0% 932 50.1% 1,194
Sequoyah36.0% 1,359 49.6% 1,872
Stephens31.2% 1,174 56.1% 2,108
Texas31.7% 267 46.7% 393
Tillman33.2% 214 53.7% 346
Tulsa47.4% 25,372 49.6% 26,525
Wagoner43.5% 2,493 49.1% 2,813
Washington42.4% 1,649 51.6% 2,006
Washita25.1% 292 60.1% 700
Woods33.8% 217 56.5% 363
Woodward30.8% 343 62.4% 694
Total 41.5% 139,338 51.9% 174,054

Analysis

As he had managed in other primarily white Great Plains states including neighboring Kansas, Bernie Sanders won a convincing ten-point victory in Oklahoma. This marked a clear difference from 2008 when Hillary Clinton had won the state by 21 points against Barack Obama, winning 76 of the state's 77 counties. According to exit polls, Sanders won men 60-33, younger voters 76-23, white voters 56-36, and Independent voters 69-21. Clinton, for her part, won women 48-46, older voters 50-41, non-white voters 56-40, and Democrats 52-43. A majority of voters in the primary said they thought Clinton was not honest or trustworthy, 51-47.[1]

Sanders swept 75 of Oklahoma's 77 counties. He performed strongly in the major cities of Norman, Stillwater, Enid, and Moore. He narrowly edged out Clinton in Tulsa County by a margin of 2.28%. Clinton narrowly won in Oklahoma County (the only county to vote for Obama in the 2008 primary), home to Oklahoma City, and Osage County, home of the Osage Native American tribe.

Sanders won most of the rural, majority white and deeply conservative counties of the state, including those in the Oklahoma Panhandle, Little Dixie, and Southwestern Oklahoma which are among the most radically conservative areas of the nation. The Little Dixie region in particular was the base of President Bill Clinton's support in the 1992 and 1996 elections, as this area consists of socially conservative but economically liberal Democrats, many of whom were drawn to Sanders's opposition to trade deals like NAFTA.

References

1. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.cnn.com/election/2016/primaries/counties/ok/Dem|title=2016 Election Center|work=CNN|accessdate=June 4, 2018}}
{{2016 Democratic primaries}}

3 : 2016 United States Democratic presidential primaries by state|2016 Oklahoma elections|Oklahoma Democratic primaries

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