2016 United States presidential election in Iowa

The 2016 United States presidential election in Iowa was held on Tuesday, November 8, 2016, as part of the 2016 United States presidential election in which all 50 states plus the District of Columbia participated. Iowa voters chose electors to represent them in the Electoral College via a popular vote, pitting the Republican Party's nominee, businessman Donald Trump, and running mate Indiana Governor Mike Pence against Democratic Party nominee, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and her running mate Virginia Senator Tim Kaine. Iowa has six electoral votes in the Electoral College.[1]

2016 United States presidential election in Iowa

November 8, 2016
Turnout72.77% Decrease
 
Nominee Donald Trump Hillary Clinton
Party Republican Democratic
Home state New York New York
Running mate Mike Pence Tim Kaine
Electoral vote 6 0
Popular vote 800,983 653,669
Percentage 51.15% 41.74%


President before election

Barack Obama
Democratic

Elected President

Donald Trump
Republican

Treemap of the popular vote by county

Trump won the state with 51.2% of the vote, while Clinton received 41.7% (a margin of 9.41%). Clinton's performance in Iowa was the worst performance for a Democratic presidential candidate since 1980. Trump, besides being the first Republican to carry the state since George W. Bush in 2004, won over a dozen counties that had not voted Republican since Ronald Reagan was on the ticket; won two counties that had last voted Republican in Richard Nixon's landslide victory in 1972; and also won Dubuque County, that had last voted Republican in 1956.[2] Trump carried Iowa by the largest margin of any Republican candidate since Reagan in 1980, and he was the first Republican to win more than 50% of the popular vote since Reagan's 1984 landslide. Trump enjoyed the support of working-class whites in the agricultural industry, as well as the endorsement of Iowa's GOP establishment.[3][4]

Caucuses

The incumbent President of the United States, Barack Obama, a Democrat and former U.S. Senator from Illinois, was first elected to the presidency in 2008, running with U.S. Senator Joe Biden of Delaware. Defeating the Republican nominee, Senator John McCain of Arizona, with 52.9% of the popular vote and 68% of the electoral vote,[5][6] Obama succeeded two-term Republican President George W. Bush, the former Governor of Texas. Obama and Biden were reelected in the 2012 presidential election, defeating former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney with 51.1% of the popular vote and 61.7% of electoral votes.[7] Although Barack Obama's approval rating in the RealClearPolitics poll tracking average remained between 40 and 50 percent for most of his second term, it experienced a surge in early 2016 and reached its highest point since 2012 during June of that year.[8][9] Analyst Nate Cohn noted that a strong approval rating for President Obama would equate to a strong performance for the Democratic candidate, and vice versa.[10]

President Obama was not eligible to be re-elected after having served two terms. Obama's running-mate and two-term Vice President Biden decided not to enter the race for the Democratic presidential nomination either.[11]

Democratic caucus

Procedure

There is no ballot; instead, a unique form of debate and groupings chose delegates to county conventions supporting Hillary Clinton, Martin O'Malley, and Bernie Sanders. The Iowa Democratic Party does not release vote counts or the numbers of these delegates.

Results of the Democratic caucuses by county.
  Hillary Clinton
  Bernie Sanders
  Tie
 2016 Democratic Party's presidential nominating process in Iowa
– Summary of results –
Candidate State delegate equivalents Estimated delegates
Count Percentage Pledged Unpledged Total
Hillary Clinton 700.47 49.84% 23 6 29
Bernie Sanders 696.92 49.59% 21 0 21
Martin O'Malley 7.63 0.54% 0 0 0
Uncommitted 0.46 0.03% 0 1 1
Total 1,405.48 100% 44 7 51
Source: The Green Papers, Iowa Democrats

County Conventions

In early March, the delegates chosen in the Caucuses met chose delegates to the Congressional District Conventions.

Republican caucus

Election results by county.
  Ted Cruz
  Donald Trump
  Marco Rubio
  Tie between Cruz and Trump
Iowa Republican precinct caucuses, February 1, 2016
Candidate Votes Percentage Actual delegate count
Bound Unbound Total
Ted Cruz 51,666 27.64% 8 0 8
Donald Trump 45,427 24.3% 7 0 7
Marco Rubio 43,165 23.12% 7 0 7
Ben Carson 17,395 9.3% 3 0 3
Rand Paul 8,481 4.54% 1 0 1
Jeb Bush 5,238 2.8% 1 0 1
Carly Fiorina 3,485 1.86% 1 0 1
John Kasich 3,474 1.86% 1 0 1
Mike Huckabee 3,345 1.79% 1 0 1
Chris Christie 3,284 1.76% 0 0 0
Rick Santorum 1,783 0.95% 0 0 0
Other 117 0.06% 0 0 0
Jim Gilmore 12 0.01% 0 0 0
Unprojected delegates: 0 0 0
Total: 186,932 100.00% 30 0 30
Source: "Iowa". cnn.com. Retrieved November 23, 2016.

General election

Polling

Up until late August 2016, the election was close, with both Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton winning polls but neither taking a serious lead. In September 2016, Trump gained momentum, by winning a poll 44% to 39% in early September and then winning 3 more polls in a row by margins larger than 5%. From late September 2016 till election day, Trump won every poll but one. The final poll average showed Donald Trump ahead 44% to 41%, with many undecided voters that mostly swung to Donald Trump on election night.[12] The latest poll also showed Trump ahead by 46% to 39%.[13]

Predictions

Source Ranking As of
CNN[14] Lean R (flip) November 4, 2016
Cook Political Report[15] Lean R (flip) November 7, 2016
Electoral-vote.com[16] Likely R (flip) November 8, 2016
NBC[17] Lean R (flip) November 7, 2016
RealClearPolitics[18] Tossup November 7, 2016
Rothenberg Political Report[19] Tilt R (flip) November 7, 2016
Sabato's Crystal Ball[20] Lean R (flip) November 7, 2016

Results

Chart of popular vote

  Trump (51.15%)
  Clinton (41.74%)
  Johnson (3.78%)
  Write-ins (1.13%)
  McMullin (0.79%)
  Stein (0.73%)
  Others (0.67%)
2016 United States presidential election in Iowa
Party Candidate Running mate Votes Percentage Electoral votes
Republican Donald Trump Mike Pence 800,983 51.15% 6
Democratic Hillary Clinton Tim Kaine 653,669 41.74% 0
Libertarian Gary Johnson William Weld 59,186 3.78% 0
Write-in Various Various 17,746 1.13% 0
Independent Evan McMullin Nathan Johnson 12,366 0.79% 0
Green Jill Stein Ajamu Baraka 11,479 0.73% 0
Constitution Darrell Castle Scott Bradley 5,335 0.34% 0
New Independent Lynn Kahn Jay Stolba 2,247 0.14% 0
Legal Marijuana Now Dan Vacek Mark Elworth 2,246 0.14% 0
Independent Rocky De La Fuente Michael Steinberg 451 0.03% 0
Socialism and Liberation Gloria La Riva Dennis J. Banks 323 0.02% 0
Totals 1,566,031 100.00% 6
Voter turnout (Voting age population) 72.0%
Source: Iowa Secretary of State

By county

County Trump # Trump
%
Clinton # Clinton
%
Others # Others
%
Margin # Margin % Total
Adair2,46164.58%1,13329.73%2175.69% 1,328 34.85%3,811
Adams1,39566.24%56526.83%1466.93% 830 39.41%2,106
Allamakee4,09359.12%2,42134.97%4095.91% 1,672 24.15%6,923
Appanoose4,03365.73%1,81429.56%2894.71% 2,219 36.17%6,136
Audubon2,13662.60%1,08031.65%1965.74% 1,056 30.95%3,412
Benton8,23259.46%4,67833.79%9346.75% 3,554 25.67%13,844
Black Hawk27,47642.66%32,23350.05%4,6967.29% -4,757 -7.39%64,405
Boone7,48452.72%5,54139.03%1,1718.25% 1,943 13.69%14,196
Bremer7,20853.24%5,35639.56%9747.19% 1,852 13.68%13,538
Buchanan5,51053.75%3,97038.72%7727.53% 1,540 15.03%10,252
Buena Vista4,90359.23%2,85634.50%5196.27% 2,047 24.73%8,278
Butler4,92165.50%2,15728.71%4355.79% 2,764 36.79%7,513
Calhoun3,46867.22%1,39827.10%2935.68% 2,070 40.12%5,159
Carroll6,63862.96%3,30931.38%5975.66% 3,329 31.58%10,544
Cass4,76166.82%1,95127.38%4135.80% 2,810 39.44%7,125
Cedar5,29555.50%3,59937.72%6476.78% 1,696 17.78%9,541
Cerro Gordo11,62150.60%9,86242.94%1,4826.45% 1,759 7.66%22,965
Cherokee4,19266.99%1,67926.83%3876.18% 2,513 40.16%6,258
Chickasaw3,74258.15%2,26635.21%4276.64% 1,476 22.94%6,435
Clarke2,71360.91%1,46532.89%2766.20% 1,248 28.02%4,454
Clay5,87768.20%2,24926.10%4915.70% 3,628 42.10%8,617
Clayton5,31758.24%3,23735.46%5756.30% 2,080 22.78%9,129
Clinton11,27648.88%10,09543.76%1,6967.35% 1,181 5.12%23,067
Crawford4,61766.58%1,99128.71%3274.72% 2,626 37.87%6,935
Dallas19,33950.56%15,70141.05%3,2128.40% 3,638 9.51%38,252
Davis2,72370.14%97725.17%1824.69% 1,746 44.97%3,882
Decatur2,29661.49%1,20132.16%2376.35% 1,095 29.33%3,734
Delaware5,69461.62%2,95732.00%5906.38% 2,737 29.62%9,241
Des Moines9,52949.88%8,21242.99%1,3627.13% 1,317 6.89%19,103
Dickinson6,75365.22%3,05629.52%5455.26% 3,697 35.70%10,354
Dubuque23,46047.18%22,85045.96%3,4116.86% 610 1.22%49,721
Emmet3,12465.73%1,35728.55%2725.72% 1,767 37.18%4,753
Fayette5,62056.34%3,68936.98%6666.68% 1,931 19.36%9,975
Floyd4,37554.28%3,17939.44%5066.28% 1,196 14.84%8,060
Franklin3,16363.67%1,49330.05%3126.28% 1,670 33.62%4,968
Fremont2,40766.95%96326.79%2256.26% 1,444 40.16%3,595
Greene2,82058.49%1,69135.08%3106.43% 1,129 23.41%4,821
Grundy4,52765.88%1,85627.01%4897.12% 2,671 38.87%6,872
Guthrie3,62863.10%1,73230.12%3906.78% 1,896 32.98%5,750
Hamilton4,46358.01%2,72635.43%5056.56% 1,737 22.58%7,694
Hancock3,97767.74%1,58727.03%3075.23% 2,390 40.71%5,871
Hardin5,25461.57%2,78732.66%4925.77% 2,467 28.91%8,533
Harrison4,90265.67%2,13128.55%4325.79% 2,771 37.12%7,465
Henry5,77961.45%2,90430.88%7217.67% 2,875 30.57%9,404
Howard2,61157.27%1,67736.78%2715.94% 934 20.49%4,559
Humboldt3,56870.14%1,25224.61%2675.25% 2,316 45.53%5,087
Ida2,65573.50%79221.93%1654.57% 1,863 51.57%3,612
Iowa5,20558.46%3,08434.64%6156.91% 2,121 23.82%8,904
Jackson5,82456.49%3,83737.22%6496.29% 1,987 19.27%10,310
Jasper10,56055.48%7,10937.35%1,3657.17% 3,451 18.13%19,034
Jefferson3,74845.95%3,71045.49%6988.56% 38 0.46%8,156
Johnson21,04427.35%50,20065.25%5,6967.40% -29,156 -37.90%76,940
Jones5,72056.45%3,78737.37%6266.18% 1,933 19.08%10,133
Keokuk3,39068.00%1,34226.92%2535.08% 2,048 41.08%4,985
Kossuth5,65365.68%2,54329.55%4114.78% 3,110 36.13%8,607
Lee8,80354.50%6,21538.48%1,1337.02% 2,588 16.02%16,151
Linn48,39041.32%58,93550.33%9,7738.35% -10,545 -9.01%117,098
Louisa3,06961.28%1,64832.91%2915.81% 1,421 28.37%5,008
Lucas2,87766.08%1,23928.46%2385.47% 1,638 37.62%4,354
Lyon5,19281.42%92014.43%2654.16% 4,272 66.99%6,377
Madison5,36062.07%2,67831.01%5986.92% 2,682 31.06%8,636
Mahaska7,43269.90%2,61924.63%5815.46% 4,813 45.27%10,632
Marion10,96261.53%5,48230.77%1,3727.70% 5,480 30.76%17,816
Marshall9,14650.87%7,65242.56%1,1826.57% 1,494 8.31%17,980
Mills5,06765.82%2,09027.15%5417.03% 2,977 38.67%7,698
Mitchell3,19058.89%1,88834.85%3396.26% 1,302 24.04%5,417
Monona3,12068.24%1,24727.27%2054.48% 1,873 40.97%4,572
Monroe2,63868.25%1,05627.32%1714.42% 1,582 40.93%3,865
Montgomery3,43668.12%1,31426.05%2945.83% 2,122 42.07%5,044
Muscatine9,58449.32%8,36843.06%1,4827.63% 1,216 6.26%19,434
O'Brien5,75277.67%1,31517.76%3394.58% 4,437 59.91%7,406
Osceola2,53178.77%55217.18%1304.05% 1,979 61.59%3,213
Page4,89369.46%1,80725.65%3444.88% 3,086 43.81%7,044
Palo Alto3,08165.51%1,39829.73%2244.76% 1,683 35.78%4,703
Plymouth9,68073.39%2,88521.87%6254.74% 6,795 51.52%13,190
Pocahontas2,70269.91%96324.92%2005.17% 1,739 44.99%3,865
Polk93,49240.38%119,80451.74%18,2597.89% -26,312 -11.36%231,555
Pottawattamie24,44757.28%15,35535.98%2,8786.74% 9,092 21.30%42,680
Poweshiek4,94650.30%4,30443.77%5835.93% 642 6.53%9,833
Ringgold1,82467.38%75327.82%1304.80% 1,071 39.56%2,707
Sac3,70371.05%1,27024.37%2394.59% 2,433 46.68%5,212
Scott39,14945.41%40,44046.90%6,6317.69% -1,291 -1.49%86,220
Shelby4,36268.48%1,66226.09%3465.43% 2,700 42.39%6,370
Sioux14,78581.26%2,30012.64%1,1096.10% 12,485 68.62%18,194
Story19,45838.40%25,70950.74%5,50010.86% -6,251 -12.34%50,667
Tama4,97156.80%3,19636.52%5856.68% 1,775 20.28%8,752
Taylor2,11169.69%75825.02%1605.28% 1,353 44.67%3,029
Union3,52560.44%1,92232.96%3856.60% 1,603 27.48%5,832
Van Buren2,52770.96%84523.73%1895.31% 1,682 47.23%3,561
Wapello8,71557.53%5,59436.93%8405.54% 3,121 20.60%15,149
Warren14,81454.26%10,41138.14%2,0757.60% 4,403 16.12%27,300
Washington6,17356.48%3,94336.08%8137.44% 2,230 20.40%10,929
Wayne2,06970.37%71924.46%1525.17% 1,350 45.91%2,940
Webster10,05657.69%6,30536.17%1,0696.13% 3,751 21.52%17,430
Winnebago3,44759.56%1,93133.37%4097.07% 1,516 26.19%5,787
Winneshiek5,34447.03%5,25446.24%7646.72% 90 0.79%11,362
Woodbury24,72756.56%16,21037.08%2,7816.36% 8,517 19.48%43,718
Worth2,45357.62%1,53035.94%2746.44% 923 21.68%4,257
Wright3,80063.06%1,89631.46%3305.48% 1,904 31.60%6,026
Iowa Total800,98351.15%653,66941.74%111,3797.11% 147,314 9.41%1,566,031

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

[21]

By congressional district

Trump won all 4 of the congressional districts, including one held by a Democrat.[22]

District Trump Clinton Representative
1st 48% 45% Rod Blum
2nd 49% 44% Dave Loebsack
3rd 48% 45% David Young
4th 60% 33% Steve King

Analysis

The difference of 9.4% points was the largest winning margin for Trump in a state that had voted for Barack Obama in 2012. This was also the first time since 1976 that Iowa voted to the right of Texas, which Trump won in this election by 8.99 points. Trump carried 93 out of 99 counties, the most for a Republican presidential nominee in the state since 1980, and he flipped 32 counties won by Obama in 2012, the most out of any state. [21] This was the first time since 1988 in which Iowa did not go for the winner of the popular vote. It was also the first time since 2004 (and only the second since 1984) that Iowa would vote for a Republican candidate. This is also the first election since 1980 in which a non-incumbent Republican won the state.

Trump was the first Republican presidential candidate to win Buchanan, Chickasaw, Clarke, Clayton, Clinton, Floyd, Howard, Jackson, Jones, Mitchell, Muscatine, and Tama counties since Ronald Reagan in 1984; Des Moines and Wapello counties since Richard Nixon in 1972; Boone, Cerro Gordo, Lee, Webster, and Worth counties since Reagan in 1980; and Dubuque County since Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1956.

See also

References

  1. "Distribution of Electoral Votes". National Archives and Records Administration. September 19, 2019. Retrieved November 25, 2020.
  2. "Iowa Election Results 2016 – The New York Times". Retrieved November 10, 2016.
  3. "Donald Trump wins Iowa on a wave of popular discontent". Des Moines Register. Retrieved January 16, 2017.
  4. Bash, Dana; Crutchfield, Abigail (November 2, 2016). "Can Trump turn Iowa red?". CNN. Retrieved January 16, 2017.
  5. "United States House of Representatives floor summary for Jan 8, 2009". Clerk.house.gov. Archived from the original on April 2, 2012. Retrieved January 30, 2009.
  6. "Federal elections 2008" (PDF). Federal Election Commission. Retrieved May 11, 2015.
  7. "President Map". The New York Times. November 29, 2012. Retrieved May 11, 2015.
  8. "Election Other – President Obama Job Approval". RealClearPolitics. Retrieved December 24, 2015.
  9. Byrnes, Jesse (June 15, 2016). "Poll: Obama approval rating highest since 2012". The Hill. Retrieved June 19, 2016.
  10. Cohn, Nate (January 19, 2015). "What a Rise in Obama's Approval Rating Means for 2016". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved June 19, 2016.
  11. "Joe Biden Decides Not to Enter Presidential Race". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved October 21, 2015.
  12. "RealClearPolitics - Election 2016 - Iowa: Trump vs. Clinton".
  13. "RealClearPolitics - Election 2016 - Iowa: Trump vs. Clinton".
  14. Chalian, David (November 4, 2016). "Road to 270: CNN's new election map". CNN. Retrieved February 10, 2019.
  15. "2016 Electoral Scorecard". The Cook Political Report. November 7, 2016. Retrieved February 10, 2019.
  16. "2016 Predicted Electoral Map". Electoral-vote.com. Retrieved February 10, 2019.
  17. Todd, Chuck (November 7, 2016). "NBC's final battleground map shows a lead for Clinton". NBC News. Retrieved February 10, 2019.
  18. "2016 Election Maps - Battle for White House". RealClearPolitics. Retrieved February 10, 2019.
  19. "Presidential Ratings". The Rothenberg Political Report. Retrieved August 16, 2021.
  20. Sabato, Larry (November 7, 2016). "The Crystal Ball's 2016 Electoral College ratings". University of Virginia Center for Politics. Retrieved February 10, 2019.
  21. Bentley, Chris (October 22, 2019). "Dozens Of Iowa Counties Flipped Red For Trump in 2016. Will They Stand By Him In 2020?". WBUR. Archived from the original on October 22, 2019. Retrieved September 1, 2020.
  22. "Presidential Results by Congressional District, 2000-2008 – Swing State Project".
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