2016 United States presidential election in Arizona

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Flag of Arizona.

The 2016 United States presidential election in Arizona was held on 8 November 2016. It was part of the 2016 United States presidential election, in which all other states plus the District of Columbia voted.

On 22 March and 5 April 2016, the state also voted for who they wanted to be the nominee of their respective parties.

Presidential[change | change source]

Polling[change | change source]

Below is a table with the polling results in Arizona. Arizona has voted Republican in the general election since 2000.

Poll source Date administered Democrat % Republican % Lead margin Sample size Margin of error
NBC News/Wall Street Journal/Marist[1] October 30 – November 1, 2016 Hillary Clinton 41% Donald Trump 46% 5 719 ± 3.7%
CNN/ORC[2] October 27 – November 1, 2016 Hillary Clinton 46% Donald Trump 51% 5 769 ± 3.5%
Ipsos/Reuters[3] October 6–18, 2016 Hillary Clinton 38% Donald Trump 45% 7 1,538 ± 2.8%
NBC News/Wall Street Journal/Marist[4] September 6–8, 2016 Hillary Clinton 41% Donald Trump 42% 1 649 ± 3.8%
Results by Arizona's counties
  Clinton—80-90%
  Clinton—70-80%
  Clinton—60-70%
  Clinton—50-60%
  Clinton—<50%
  Trump—<50%
  Trump—50-60%
  Trump—60-70%
  Trump—70-80%
  Trump—80-90%

Results[change | change source]

[5] Turnout was 74.17%.

Presidential election
Choice Votes %
Donald Trump (REP) 1,252,401 49.03%
Hillary Clinton (DEM) 1,161,167 45.46%
Gary Johnson 106,327 4.16%
Jill Stein 34,345 1.34%
Total votes 2,554,240 100.0%

Results by county[change | change source]

[5]

County Trump# Trump% Clinton# Clinton% Johnson# Johnson% Stein# Stein% Total Votes
Apache 8,240 30.50% 17,083 63.24% 1,221 4.52% 469 1.74% 27,013
Cochise 28,092 57.41% 17,450 35.66% 2,394 4.89% 993 2.03% 48,929
Coconino 21,108 36.45% 32,404 56.44% 2,978 5.14% 1,414 2.44% 57,904
Gila 14,182 63.88% 7,003 31.55% 803 3.62% 212 0.95% 22,200
Graham 8,025 67.22% 3,301 27.65% 497 4.16% 116 0.97% 11,939
Greenlee 1,892 58.34% 1,092 33.67% 200 6.17% 59 1.82% 3,243
La Paz 4,003 68.29% 1,575 26.87% 211 3.60% 73 1.25% 5,862
Maricopa 747,361 48.63% 702,907 45.74% 67,043 4.36% 19,432 1.26% 1,536,743
Mohave 58,282 73.67% 17,455 22.06% 2,639 3.34% 740 0.94% 79,116
Navajo 20,577 52.56% 16,459 42.04% 1,410 3.60% 703 1.80% 39,149
Pima 167,428 40.45% 224,661 54.28% 15,620 3.77% 6,200 1.50% 413,909
Pinal 72,819 57.25% 47,892 37.65% 5,010 3.94% 1,467 1.15% 127,197
Santa Cruz 3,897 24.45% 11,690 71.58% 432 2.66% 221 1.36% 16,240
Yavapai 71,330 63.40% 35,590 31.63% 3,996 3.55% 1,588 1.41% 112,504
Yuma 25,165 48.12% 24,605 47.05% 1,873 3.58% 649 1.24% 52,292

Primaries[change | change source]

Democratic[change | change source]

The Democratic primary occurred on 5 April 2016.

Presidential election
Choice Votes % Delegates
Hillary Clinton 262,459 56.29% 48
Bernie Sanders 192,962 41.39% 34
Martin O'Malley (withdrawn) 3,877 0.83% 0
Rocky De La Fuente 2,797 0.60% 0
Michael Steinberg 2,295 0.49% 0
Henry Hewes 1,845 0.40% 0
Uncommitted 3
Total votes 466,235 100% 85

Republican[change | change source]

The Republican primary occurred on 22 March 2016.

Presidential election
Choice Votes % Delegates
Donald Trump 286,743 45.95% 58
Ted Cruz 172,294 27.61% 0
Marco Rubio (withdrawn) 72,304 11.59% 0
John Kasich 65,965 10.57% 0
Ben Carson (withdrawn) 14,940 2.39% 0
Others 11,793 1.89% 0
Total votes 624,039 100% 58

Related pages[change | change source]

References[change | change source]

  1. "Polls: Trump Ahead in Arizona and Texas, Deadlocked in Georgia". Wall Street Journal/Marist College. NBC News. November 3, 2016. Retrieved November 4, 2016.
  2. "CNN/ORC International Poll Arizona" (PDF). ORC International. CNN. November 2, 2016. Retrieved November 3, 2016.
  3. "State Poll: Arizona". Reuters. Ipsos. October 19, 2016. Archived from the original on October 26, 2016. Retrieved October 25, 2016.
  4. "Clinton, Trump Deadlocked in Battleground States: Polls". Marist. NBC News/Wall Street Journal. September 11, 2016. Retrieved September 11, 2016.
  5. 5.0 5.1 "Arizona Secretary of State Election Night Reporting". Results.arizona.vote. Retrieved 2016-11-20.

Other websites[change | change source]