Oklahoma Democratic primary, 2016

Oklahoma Democratic primary, 2016
Oklahoma
March 1, 2016 (2016-03-01)

 
Candidate Bernie Sanders Hillary Clinton
Home state Vermont New York
Delegate count 22 18
Popular vote 174,228 139,443
Percentage 51.88% 41.52%

Oklahoma results by county
  Bernie Sanders
  Hillary Clinton

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

Poll source Date 1st 2nd 3rd Other
Official Primary results March 1, 2016 Bernie Sanders
51.9%
Hillary Clinton
41.5%
Others
6.6%
Monmouth[1]

Margin of error: ± 5.7%
Sample size: 300

February 25–28, 2016 Bernie Sanders
48%
Hillary Clinton
43%
Others / Undecided
9%
Sooner Poll/News 9/News on 6[2]

Margin of error: ± 4.3%
Sample size: 510

February 23–25, 2016 Hillary Clinton
40%
Bernie Sanders
31%
Others / Undecided
29%
Public Policy Polling[3]

Margin of error: ± 4.2%
Sample size: 542

February 14–16,
2016
Hillary Clinton
46%
Bernie Sanders
44%
Undecided 9%
Sooner Poll[4]

Margin of error: ± 5.0%
Sample size: 360

February 6–9, 2016 Hillary Clinton
43.9%
Bernie Sanders
28%
Undecided 28.1%
Sooner Poll[5]

Margin of error: ± 5.1%
Sample size: 369

November 12–15, 2015 Hillary Clinton
46.6%
Bernie Sanders
12.2%
Martin O'Malley
2.2%
Undecided 39.1%
The Oklahoman/Cole Hargrave Snodgrass & Associates[6]

Margin of error: ± 4.3%
Sample size: 550

October 19–22, 2015 Hillary Clinton
30%
Bernie Sanders
21%
Martin O'Malley
1%
Undecided 46%

Results

Primary date: March 1, 2016
National delegates: 91

Oklahoma Democratic primary, March 1, 2016
Candidate Popular vote Estimated delegates
Count Percentage Pledged Unpledged Total
Bernie Sanders 174,228 51.88% 21 1 22
Hillary Clinton 139,443 41.52% 17 1 18
Martin O'Malley (withdrawn) 7,672 2.28%
Keith Russell Judd 4,386 1.31%
Michael Alan Steinberg 4,171 1.24%
Star Locke (withdrawn) 3,458 1.03%
Rocky De La Fuente 2,485 0.74%
Uncommitted N/A 0 2 2
Total 335,843 100% 38 4 42
Source: The Green Papers, Oklahoma State Election Board

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.[7]

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

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