2016 United States presidential election in Colorado explained

See main article: 2016 United States presidential election.

Election Name:2016 United States presidential election in Colorado
Country:Colorado
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2012 United States presidential election in Colorado
Previous Year:2012
Election Date:November 8, 2016
Next Election:2020 United States presidential election in Colorado
Next Year:2020
Turnout:74.39% 3.22 pp[1]
Image1:Hillary Clinton by Gage Skidmore 2.jpg
Nominee1:Hillary Clinton
Party1:Colorado Democratic Party
Home State1:New York
Running Mate1:Tim Kaine
Electoral Vote1:9
Popular Vote1:1,338,870
Percentage1:
Nominee2:Donald Trump
Party2:Colorado Republican Party
Home State2:New York
Running Mate2:Mike Pence
Electoral Vote2:0
Popular Vote2:1,202,484
Image3:Gary Johnson June 2016.jpg
Nominee3:Gary Johnson
Party3:Libertarian Party of Colorado
Home State3:New Mexico
Running Mate3:Bill Weld
Electoral Vote3:0
Popular Vote3:144,121
President
Before Election:Barack Obama
Before Party:Democratic Party (United States)
After Election:Donald Trump
After Party:Republican Party (United States)

The 2016 United States presidential election in Colorado 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. Colorado 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. Colorado has nine electoral votes in the Electoral College.[2]

Clinton received 48.2% of the vote, carrying the state's nine electoral votes. Trump received 43.3% of the vote, thus marking a Democratic margin of victory of 4.9%. This was the fourth time since Colorado had achieved statehood that the Republican nominee won the election without carrying Colorado, the first three having been in 1896, 1900, and 1908 (all when the Democratic nominee was William Jennings Bryan of neighboring Nebraska, a populist with unusual popularity in the traditionally Republican West); and the second time Colorado has voted Democratic in three consecutive presidential elections, the first having been the elections of 1908, 1912, and 1916. Trump became the first ever Republican to win the White House without carrying Alamosa or Broomfield Counties, as well as the first to do so without carrying Jefferson, Arapahoe, or Larimer Counties since William McKinley in 1900, and the first to do so without carrying Ouray County since William Howard Taft in 1908.

At the same time, Trump flipped five counties in the state: Conejos, Chaffee, Huerfano, Las Animas, and Pueblo. The last two had not supported a Republican presidential candidate since Richard Nixon's landslide in 1972. Despite Clinton's victory, this is the sole election since Colorado's Democratic winning streak from 2008 forward that the Democratic candidate's percentage in the state was held to only a plurality, while winning the state by a less than (albeit very narrowly in this case) 5% margin.[3]

Caucuses

Democratic caucuses

See main article: article and 2016 Colorado Democratic presidential caucuses.

Results

See also: Results of the 2016 Democratic Party presidential primaries. Caucus date: March 1, 2016

Detailed results for the Colorado Democratic caucuses, March 1, 2016[4]
DistrictTotal estimateBernie SandersHillary Clinton
VotesEstimated
delegates
VotesEstimated
delegates
VotesEstimated
delegates
1st district29,474816,232413,2424
2nd district30,624719,376411,2483
3rd district14,67168,95645,7152
4th district10,06056,11533,9452
5th district10,31556,33833,9772
6th district12,83666,67536,1613
7th district14,65569,15445,5014
At-large delegates122,6351472,846849,7896
Pledged PLEOs954
Total663828

Results of the county assembliesTimeframe for the county assemblies: March 2–26, 2016

|-! rowspan="2" | Candidate! colspan="2" | State + District delegates[5] ! colspan="3" | Estimated delegates|-! Count! Percentage! Pledged! Unpledged! Total|- | style="text-align:left;" | Bernie Sanders| 372 || 61.39%| || || |-| style="text-align:left;"| Hillary Clinton| 234 || 38.61%| || || |-| style="text-align:left;"| Uncommitted| || | || || |-! Total! 606 !! 100%! !! !! |}

Results of the congressional district conventions|-! rowspan=2 | District! rowspan=2 | Delegates
available! colspan=2 | Delegates won|-! Sanders! Clinton|-| style="text-align:left" | 1st district| 8| 5| 3|-| style="text-align:left" | 2nd district| 7| 4| 3|-| style="text-align:left" | 3rd district| 6| 4| 2|-| style="text-align:left" | 4th district| 5| 3| 2|-| style="text-align:left" | 5th district| 5| 3| 2|-| style="text-align:left" | 6th district| 6| 3| 3|-| style="text-align:left" | 7th district| 6| 4| 2|-! Total! style="text-align:right" | 43! style="text-align:right" | 26! style="text-align:right" | 17|}

Results of the state conventionState convention date: April 16, 2016

Colorado Democratic State Convention, April 16, 2016
CandidateState convention delegatesNational delegates won
CountPercentageAt-largePLEOTotal
Bernie Sanders1,90062.3%9615
Hillary Clinton1,15037.7%538
Total3,050100.0%14923

Republican conventions

See main article: 2016 Colorado Republican presidential caucuses. From April 2–8, 2016, conventions were held in each of Colorado's seven congressional districts. Cruz swept all seven, winning 21 delegates total.[6] [7] [8] [9] On April 9, 2016, the state convention was held to elect the 13 statewide delegates and the 3 RNC delegates.[10] Again, Cruz won all 13 statewide at-large delegates.[11] Cruz was also the only candidate to address the state convention.

A proposal to forbid Colorado Republican delegates from voting for Donald Trump was written in March 2016 by Robert Zubrin. The group "Colorado Republicans for Liberty" handed out fliers of Zubrin's resolution at the state's convention. Irregularities on the ballot were discovered at the state's convention. Delegate #379 (Jerome Parks, a Trump delegate) was replaced on the ballot with a duplicate of delegate #378 (a Ted Cruz delegate).[12] The Colorado Republican Party's Twitter account posted the message "We did it #NeverTrump" after Cruz received all the bound delegates at the April convention. The party claims somebody hacked its Twitter account, and the party claims to be investigating how the message was posted.[13] [14] In May 2015, the Colorado Senate defeated a bill to hold a 2016 presidential primary. State senators Kevin Grantham, Kent Lambert, Laura J. Woods, and Jerry Sonnenberg voted to stop the bill.[15] Sonnenberg, Woods, Grantham, and Lambert are members of the Ted Cruz "Colorado Leadership Team" for Ted Cruz.[16] Congressman Ken Buck and Colorado Secretary of State Wayne Williams are also members of the Ted Cruz "Colorado Leadership Team".[16]

The conventions were selected through statewide caucuses, which were conducted at the precinct level on March 1. No voter preference poll was held due to a decision in August by the state party to cancel it.[17]

Three candidates contested the Republican presidential conventions:

Marco Rubio and Ben Carson had dropped out of the race by the time the conventions were held, though they were still running during the March 1 caucuses.

Green Party convention

On April 3, the Green Party of Colorado held a presidential nominating convention in Centennial, Colorado, for registered Green voters.[18]

On April 4, the Green Party of Colorado announced that Jill Stein had won the convention and received all 5 delegates.[19]

Colorado Green Party Convention, April 3, 2016.
CandidateVotesPercentageNational delegates
Jill Stein--5
William Kreml---
Kent Mesplay---
Sedinam Moyowasifza-Curry---
Darryl Cherney---
Uncommitted ---
Total--5

General election

Polling

Throughout the race, Clinton lead in almost every poll in margins varying between 1 and 11 points, with a few polls showing a tie or a Trump lead. One of the last polls showed a tie between Clinton and Trump, but the last poll showed Clinton leading Trump 50% to 45%, which was very accurate compared to the results.[20] The average of the last three polls showed Clinton leading Trump 44% to 41%.[20]

Predictions

SourceRankingAs of
ABC News[21] November 8, 2016
CNN[22] November 4, 2016
Cook Political Report[23] November 7, 2016
Electoral-vote.com[24] November 8, 2016
align=left Rothenberg Political Report[25] November 7, 2016
Sabato's Crystal Ball[26] November 7, 2016
RealClearPolitics[27] November 8, 2016

Statewide results

Voter turnout for the 2016 United States presidential election in Colorado was 72.4%.[28] [29]

Results by county

CountyHillary Clinton
Democratic
Donald Trump
Republican
Various candidates
Other parties
MarginTotal votes cast
%%%%
Adams96,55849.86%80,08241.35%17,0378.79%16,4768.51%193,677
Alamosa3,18945.96%3,04643.90%70410.14%1432.06%6,939
Arapahoe159,88552.76%117,05338.63%26,1108.61%42,83214.13%303,048
Archuleta2,50034.06%4,26458.10%5757.84%-1,764-24.04%7,339
Baca28313.14%1,75381.42%1175.44%-1,470-68.28%2,153
Bent59030.62%1,18861.65%1497.73%-598-31.03%1,927
Boulder132,33470.34%41,39622.00%14,4157.66%90,93848.34%188,145
Broomfield19,73152.35%14,36738.12%3,5929.53%5,36414.23%37,690
Chaffee4,88843.45%5,39147.92%9718.63%-503-4.47%11,250
Cheyenne13211.98%92583.94%454.08%-793-71.96%1,102
Clear Creek2,72946.52%2,57543.90%5629.58%1542.62%5,866
Conejos1,77144.03%1,91447.59%3378.38%-143-3.56%4,022
Costilla1,12560.88%58831.82%1357.30%53729.06%1,848
Crowley33922.20%1,07970.66%1097.14%-740-48.46%1,527
Custer79725.99%2,06167.22%2086.79%-1,264-41.23%3,066
Delta4,08724.34%11,65569.42%1,0486.24%-7,568-45.08%16,790
Denver244,55173.69%62,69018.89%24,6117.42%181,86154.80%331,852
Dolores24219.28%94475.22%695.50%-702-55.94%1,255
Douglas68,65736.62%102,57354.71%16,2708.67%-33,916-18.09%187,500
Eagle14,09955.90%8,99035.64%2,1348.46%5,10920.26%25,223
El Paso108,01033.86%179,22856.19%31,7309.95%-71,218-22.33%318,968
Elbert3,13419.61%11,70573.25%1,1417.14%-8,571-53.64%15,980
Fremont5,29724.11%15,12268.82%1,5547.07%-9,825-44.71%21,973
Garfield11,27142.58%13,13249.61%2,0677.81%-1,861-7.03%26,470
Gilpin1,63445.69%1,56643.79%37610.52%681.90%3,576
Grand3,35839.10%4,49452.33%7368.57%-1,136-13.23%8,588
Gunnison5,12854.48%3,28934.94%99510.58%1,83919.54%9,412
Hinsdale19733.45%33957.56%538.99%-142-24.11%589
Huerfano1,63343.17%1,88349.78%2677.05%-250-6.61%3,783
Jackson17119.86%62973.05%617.09%-458-53.19%861
Jefferson160,77648.89%138,17742.01%29,9309.10%22,5996.88%328,883
Kiowa9110.64%72885.15%364.21%-637-74.51%855
Kit Carson53614.48%2,96780.15%1995.37%-2,431-65.67%3,702
La Plata15,52549.84%12,58740.41%3,0389.75%2,9389.43%31,150
Lake1,61650.52%1,27039.70%3139.78%34610.82%3,199
Larimer93,11347.51%83,43042.57%19,4389.92%9,6834.94%195,981
Las Animas2,65039.01%3,71054.62%4336.37%-1,060-15.61%6,793
Lincoln40916.79%1,89277.67%1355.54%-1,483-60.88%2,436
Logan1,85119.04%7,28274.90%5896.06%-5,431-55.86%9,722
Mesa21,72927.98%49,77964.10%6,1467.92%-28,050-36.12%77,654
Mineral23736.35%34452.76%7110.89%-107-16.41%652
Moffat87413.39%5,30581.30%3465.31%-4,431-67.91%6,525
Montezuma3,97330.90%7,85361.07%1,0328.03%-3,880-30.17%12,858
Montrose5,46625.80%14,38267.88%1,3386.32%-8,916-42.08%21,186
Morgan3,15126.35%8,14568.10%6645.55%-4,994-41.75%11,960
Otero2,94334.82%4,92858.31%5816.87%-1,985-23.49%8,452
Ouray1,69751.27%1,35140.82%2627.91%34610.45%3,310
Park3,42132.84%6,13558.89%8618.27%-2,714-26.05%10,417
Phillips43618.70%1,79176.80%1054.50%-1,355-58.10%2,332
Pitkin7,33369.69%2,55024.23%6406.08%4,78345.46%10,523
Prowers1,18623.64%3,53170.39%2995.97%-2,345-46.75%5,016
Pueblo35,87545.62%36,26546.11%6,5068.27%-390-0.49%78,646
Rio Blanco43612.64%2,79180.90%2236.46%-2,355-68.26%3,450
Rio Grande2,00136.16%3,08555.75%4488.09%-1,084-19.59%5,534
Routt7,60054.34%5,23037.39%1,1568.27%2,37016.95%13,986
Saguache1,41749.98%1,14740.46%2719.56%2709.52%2,835
San Juan26552.37%21542.49%265.14%509.88%506
San Miguel2,97568.72%1,03323.86%3217.42%1,94244.86%4,329
Sedgwick26719.57%1,01574.41%826.02%-748-54.84%1,364
Summit9,55759.09%5,10031.53%1,5179.38%4,45727.56%16,174
Teller3,60324.94%9,74567.47%1,0967.59%-6,142-42.53%14,444
Washington29610.83%2,29984.12%1385.05%-2,003-73.29%2,733
Weld46,51934.35%76,65156.60%12,2609.05%-30,132-22.25%135,430
Yuma72615.15%3,85080.36%2154.49%-3,124-65.21%4,791
Total 1,338,87048.16%1,202,48443.25%238,8938.59%136,3864.91%2,780,247

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

[30]

By congressional district

Clinton won 4 of 7 congressional districts including one held by a Republican representative.[31]

DistrictTrumpClintonRepresentative
23%69%Diana DeGette
35%56%Jared Polis
52%40%Scott Tipton
57%34%Ken Buck
57%33%Doug Lamborn
41%50%Mike Coffman
40%52%Ed Perlmutter

Analysis

Historically, Colorado has been, following the Bryan-Wilson period, one of the most Republican states in the nation. From 1920 through 2004, Colorado voted Democratic only five times—in Franklin Roosevelt's two landslide wins in 1932 and 1936; for Harry Truman in 1948; in Lyndon Johnson's landslide win in 1964; and for Bill Clinton in 1992, with Ross Perot running substantially ahead of his national showing in the state. (With the shrinkage of the Perot vote in 1996, Colorado, along with Montana, another Western state where Perot had performed exceptionally well, reverted to Dole.) Before 2016, no Republican had won without Colorado since 1908.

However, increasing urbanization in the Front Range Urban Corridor, along with the growth of minority populations (especially Hispanics) have chipped away from Republican dominance in the state: while President George W. Bush won the state in the 2004 election, it was one of the few states where Republican performance fell (with Bush's margin being nearly halved with respect to 2000), presaging Barack Obama's two Colorado wins in 2008 and 2012. Trump did improve upon previous Republican candidates in Southern Colorado, carrying three of the area's counties (Conejos County, Las Animas County and Huerfano County), a feat not accomplished by any Republican since George H. W. Bush in his decisive 1988 victory. He also carried Pueblo County by a 0.49% margin, becoming the first Republican to carry it since 1972.[32] Southern Colorado, a blue-collar, working-class, industrial area, had once been the state's Democratic stronghold, but Democratic dominance of the region is starting to fade. Trump also did well in the traditionally Republican Western Slope, where counties such as Mesa County (home to Grand Junction) went for Trump by a 2–1 margin and the Eastern Plains, where Republicans often carried counties by 80% or more.

However, as is with the case with Nevada and other states in the American Southwest that have been experiencing increasing urbanization and a rapidly growing Hispanic population, Clinton won by running up the margins in the rapidly growing metro areas of the state, in this case principally Denver and its suburbs, as well as Boulder and Fort Collins. Hillary Clinton exceeded Obama's performance in the City and County of Denver and Boulder County. While these had long been the Democrats' main base in Colorado, Republicans had typically managed at least a quarter of the vote in the former and at least 30% in the latter when Colorado was a Republican state. In contrast, Trump managed only 18.9% and 22.0% in the two jurisdictions, respectively. Hillary Clinton did not improve on Obama's performance in Larimer County (home of Fort Collins), but she did win the county, which had voted Republican in every election from 1920 through 2004 save 1936, 1964, and 1992, and Trump posted the worst showing for a Republican in the county since 1992. Also, while rural western Colorado leans Republican, it is not nearly as strongly conservative as other rural areas, as much of the economy on the I-70 corridor is based on tourism and outdoors recreation and has a liberal environmentalist bent: rural counties with heavily tourist based economies such as Gunnison, Eagle, Routt, Pitkin and La Plata are not only some of the most Democratic rural areas in America, but often vote nearly as Democratic as large urban counties.

Similarly, even though Hillary Clinton did not improve on Obama's showing in the suburban Denver-area counties of Arapahoe and Jefferson, she nevertheless carried both, both of which had been Republican strongholds up through 2004. Trump posted some of the worst results Republicans have had in decades in this region. Trump only won 39% of the vote in Arapahoe County, which includes some of the largest Denver suburbs such as Aurora and Centennial; before Obama won this county in 2008, this county had not gone Democratic since 1964. Trump won only one county in the metro area (Douglas County—home to suburbs such as Parker, Highlands Ranch and Castle Rock), but with only 54% of the vote—one of the poorest performances in the area's most Republican county in decades. Only in Adams County, the one county in the area outside the city of Denver itself that had been a Democratic stronghold prior to 2008, did Trump manage to improve upon Romney, but even here he was barely above 40% of the vote.

Meanwhile, while Trump did win the one remaining large Republican stronghold in the state, El Paso County (home of Colorado Springs), he won with only 56% of the vote, performing worse in the county than McCain in 2008 or Dole in 1996. The confluence of Hillary Clinton's strength in Denver, Boulder, and the Denver suburbs, and Trump's weakness in El Paso County, ultimately handed the state to Clinton.

In downballot races, Mike Coffman was ultimately able to hold on to his seat in a Clinton-carried district around Arapahoe County. Democrats made big gains in this area in the State House and Senate. However, Republicans were able to gain a seat in Adams County, ultimately holding on to the State Senate.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Election Results 2016 . sos.state.co.us. 14 July 2020.
  2. Web site: Distribution of Electoral Votes. National Archives and Records Administration. 19 September 2019. November 23, 2020.
  3. Web site: Colorado Presidential Election Voting History. 2021-09-10. 270toWin.com.
  4. Web site: Colorado Democratic Delegation 2016 . Thegreenpapers.com . 2016-11-13.
  5. Web site: CDP National Delegate Candidates.xlsx . Coloradodems.org . 2016-11-13 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160415143751/http://www.coloradodems.org/sites/coloradodems/files/National%20Delegate%20Candidates_1.pdf . 2016-04-15 . dead .
  6. Web site: Ted Cruz wins first 6 Colorado delegates, Donald Trump shut out. The Spot. May 12, 2016.
  7. Web site: Colorado Loss Reveals Chaotic, Overwhelmed Trump Campaign. Benjy Sarlin. NBC News. May 12, 2016.
  8. Web site: 2016 Presidential Caucuses & Conventions. thegreenpapers.com. May 12, 2016.
  9. News: Ted Cruz Wins Majority of Delegates in Colorado. April 9, 2016. The New York Times. May 12, 2016.
  10. Web site: Colorado Republican Delegation 2016. thegreenpapers.com. May 12, 2016.
  11. Web site: Ted Cruz dominates Colorado GOP convention winning all 34 delegates. John Frank . Joey Bunch. April 9, 2016. The Denver Post. May 12, 2016.
  12. Web site: Cruz Sweeps Colorado as Trump Campaign Issues Error-Filled Ballots. Benjy Sarlin. NBC News. May 12, 2016.
  13. Web site: Oscar Contreras . Colorado GOP hastily deletes 'Never Trump' tweet following sweeping Ted Cruz delegate victory - 7NEWS Denver . Thedenverchannel.com . 2016-04-10 . 2016-11-13.
  14. Web site: Colorado GOP deletes #nevertrump tweet, pledges investigation. POLITICO. May 12, 2016.
  15. Web site: Senate GOP kills party's own push for 2016 presidential primary. The Spot. May 12, 2016.
  16. Web site: Cruz for President Announces Colorado Leadership Team. Cruz for President. May 12, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160507125746/https://www.tedcruz.org/news/cruz-president-announces-colorado-leadership-team/. May 7, 2016. dead.
  17. Web site: Colorado Republicans cancel presidential vote at 2016 caucus. John Frank. August 25, 2015. The Denver Post. May 12, 2016.
  18. Web site: PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATION CONVENTION. 2015-12-14. Colorado Green Party. 2016-02-20.
  19. Web site: Green Party of Colorado. April 4, 2016.
  20. Web site: RealClearPolitics - Election 2016 - Colorado: Trump vs. Clinton.
  21. News: The Final 15: The Latest Polls in the Swing States That Will Decide the Election . November 8, 2016 . . March 3, 2019 . en.
  22. News: Chalian . David . David Chalian. Road to 270: CNN's new election map . March 3, 2019 . . November 4, 2016.
  23. Web site: 2016 Electoral Scorecard . November 7, 2016 . . en . March 3, 2019 . February 16, 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170216084540/https://cookpolitical.com/presidential/charts/scorecard . dead .
  24. Web site: 2016 Electoral Map Prediction . November 8, 2016 . . March 3, 2019.
  25. Web site: Presidential Ratings . The Rothenberg Political Report . August 16, 2021.
  26. Web site: 2016 President . Sabato . Larry J. . Larry Sabato . November 7, 2016 . . March 3, 2019.
  27. Web site: 2016 Election Maps - Battle for White House. RealClearPolitics. 2016-11-13.
  28. Web site: Colorado Election Results. Williams. Wayne W.. November 16, 2016. Colorado Secretary of State. November 16, 2016.
  29. Web site: 2016 Voter Registration Statistics. Griswold. JennaW.. October 31, 2020. Colorado Secretary of State. June 18, 2020.
  30. News: Bump. Philip. The counties that flipped parties to swing the 2016 election. en-US. The Washington Post. 2020-09-01. 0190-8286.
  31. Web site: Presidential Results by Congressional District, 2000-2008 – Swing State Project.
  32. Web site: Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections.