2016 South Dakota Democratic presidential primary explained

Election Name:2016 South Dakota Democratic presidential primary
Country:South Dakota
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2008 South Dakota Democratic presidential primary
Previous Year:2008
Next Election:2020 South Dakota Democratic presidential primary
Next Year:2020
Candidate1:Hillary Clinton
Color1:d4aa00
Home State1:New York
Popular Vote1:27,047[1]
Percentage1:51.03%
Delegate Count1:10
Candidate2:Bernie Sanders
Home State2:Vermont
Delegate Count2:10
Popular Vote2:25,959
Percentage2:48.97%
Map Size:280x320px
Color2:228B22

The 2016 South Dakota Democratic presidential primary was held on June 7 in the U.S. state of South Dakota as one of the Democratic Party's primaries ahead of the 2016 presidential election.

The Democratic Party's primaries in California, Montana, New Jersey and New Mexico were held the same day, as are Republican primaries in the same five states, including their own South Dakota primary. Additionally, the Democratic Party held North Dakota caucuses the same day.

Opinion polling

See also: Statewide opinion polling for the 2016 Democratic Party presidential primaries.

Results

See also: Results of the Democratic Party presidential primaries, 2016.

Results by county

CountyClintonVotesSandersVotes
53.19%15046.81%132
57.32%501 42.68%373
43.79%7456.21%95
Bon Homme53.32%22546.68%197
51.45%95548.55%901
54.61%1,36945.39%1,138
45.39%18254.61%219
60.77%11039.23%71
37.03%16762.97%284
43.48%2056.52%26
51.40%29348.60%277
56.57%11243.43%86
50.57%62349.43%609
56.21%82843.79%645
43.73%11556.27%148
47.02%24552.98%276
55.19%54244.81%440
62.82%34337.18%203
59.34%16240.66%111
34.61%18165.39%342
56.47%4843.53%37
52.31%17047.69%155
40.51%20759.49%304
52.44%8647.56%78
55.76%52844.24%419
52.19%17947.81%164
30.26%2369.74%53
59.15%18140.85%125
51.72%10548.28%98
53.89%9746.11%83
25.93%1474.07%40
51.92%52848.08%489
54.71%15145.29%125
60.61%4039.39%26
46.09%5953.91%69
59.63%9640.37%65
39.22%2060.78%31
55.07%20144.93%164
51.49%48448.51%456
42.83%70557.17%941
55.49%1,43644.51%1,152
50.00%11550.00%115
62.94%28737.06%169
61.85%21438.15%132
50.54%4749.46%46
43.27%53056.73%695
39.68%5060.32%76
56.48%10943.52%84
53.22%6,01846.78%5,290
55.86%26244.14%207
42.54%42557.46%574
45.85%3,38454.15%3,996
31.62%4368.38%93
52.21%5947.79%54
49.68%39250.32%397
59.46%6640.54%45
58.47%28341.53%201
48.22%9551.78%102
42.05%3757.95%51
43.78%40856.22%524
48.06%13651.94%147
56.59%23243.41%178
55.39%38044.61%306
51.05%12148.95%116
54.90%70645.10%580
41.07%9258.93%132
Total 51.03%27,04748.97% 25,959
Source:[2]

Analysis

South Dakota, a predominantly white and rural state in the Great Plains with a significant Native American population, was split near evenly between Clinton and Sanders in terms of geography and delegate count. Secretary Clinton carried the eastern portion of the state, with the exception of Roberts County in the northeast corner. She edged out Sanders in Minnehaha County, the most populated county and home to Sioux Falls. Lincoln County (Canton), Brown County (Aberdeen), Brookings County (Brookings), Codington County, (Watertown), Yankton County (Yankton, South Dakota), Davison County (Mitchell), and Hughes County (home to the state capital Pierre), all gave Clinton substantial margins that were enough for her to carry one of the most Republican states in the country.

Senator Bernie Sanders kept the race close by winning the western portion, which is far more rural than the eastern half and tends to vote more Republican in presidential elections. The most populated county in the region and second most populous in the state, Pennington County, home to Rapid City, gave Sanders an 8.3% margin over Clinton. Sanders also carried the counties of Oglala Lakota, Jackson, and Bennett, which are part of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. These counties are among the most poverty stricken in the United States (as Sanders tends to do well among voters with low incomes), with the census-designated place of Allen in Bennett County being considered the poorest municipality in the entire country. Sanders also carried several other Native American reservations including neighboring Rosebud Indian Reservation to the east, the Cheyenne River Indian Reservation to the north, and its neighbor Standing Rock Indian Reservation, part of which stretches into North Dakota.

Sanders had visited the Pine Ridge reservation in May, where he spoke to residents and was warmly welcomed by Native American tribal leaders, talking about the need to improve health care and education on reservations and maintain tribal sovereignty. Other issues brought up by Sanders including the Keystone Pipeline and fracking, which many Native Americans had expressed opposition towards. Another likely reason for the large amount of Native American support for Sanders was towards a controversial comment Secretary Clinton made in April after Donald Trump became the presumptive nominee where she stated, "I have a lot of experience dealing with men who sometimes get off the reservation in the way they behave and how they speak." The remarks were considered offensive by many people, and likely benefitted Sanders (though Clinton appeared to do well among Native Americans in New Mexico the same day).[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. https://sdsos.gov/elections-voting/assets/2016PrimaryElectionOfficialCanvas.pdf South Dakota Secretary of State - Official Primary Results
  2. Web site: Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections.
  3. Web site: Why Bernie Sanders Is Going All Out for Native Americans - ABC News. ABC News.