Men, across the board, all population  groups, overperformed  for Trump.
This includes black men even if the  majority (80%) voted for Hillary,
down from 93% in 2012.
 
Among Independent men of all races  (predominantly white) the
tally was Trump 51% vs Hillary 37%. 
 
Biggest surprise: The only group of women  that Hillary won was the college
educated in aggregate, which is to say  that female college grads
gave Hillary the nod, 51-45    -while she was being swamped among
non-college women by  2:1.
 
My question is: How would the election  look demographically
if you subtracted California? Viz, if  there was a separate breakout
of data for California?
 
BR
 
--------------------------
 
November 9, 2016
 
 
 
CBS News  Exit Polls: How Donald Trump won the U.S. presidency
 


 
 
by Stanley  Feldman and Melissa Herrmann 
Many observers thought _this presidential election_ 
(http://www.cbsnews.com/election-2016)  would be decided by Donald Trump’s  
polarizing rhetoric, 
his history of behavior toward women and his questionable  qualifications for 
the office. 
Instead,  CBS News exit polls suggest Trump’s win was in large part a 
repudiation of  Hillary Clinton by a substantial number of white voters. While 
Clinton did win  big majorities of minority voters, she did not get the level 
of support from  those groups that she needed to overcome her deficit among 
white  voters. 
There  are also indications that Clinton’s gender was a factor in the 
outcome. The  gender gap was substantial. Trump beat Clinton by 53 percent to 
41 
percent among  men while Clinton won among women by 54 percent to 42 
percent. Four years ago,  President Obama won 45 percent of men’s votes and 
Mitt 
Romney won 44 percent of  women’s votes. 
More  telling is the gender breakdown among white voters: Trump beat 
Clinton among  white women 53 percent to 43 percent. This was close to Romney’s 
margin in 2012.  While Mr. Obama won 35 percent of white, male voters in 2012, 
Clinton lost to  Trump among this group by 63 percent to 31 percent.   
As  expected, Trump did best among white voters without a college degree, 
beating  Clinton by the enormous margin of 72 percent to 23 percent. Trump 
also won among  white, non-college women 62 to 34 percent and white 
college-educated men, 54 to  39 percent. Among white voters, Clinton only won 
among 
women with a college  degree by a 51 to 45 percent margin. Interestingly, 
among white voters, there is  no evidence in the exit poll that income affected 
the likelihood that they  supported Trump. 
Clinton  needed extremely strong support from African-American voters to 
try to offset  Trump’s margin among whites. She did win 88 percent of the 
black vote to just 8  percent for Trump. However, this was significantly lower 
than the 93 percent of  black voters Mr. Obama won four years ago. The 
falloff in her share of the black  vote was entirely due to black men. Clinton 
won 
among black women by a 93  percent to 4 percent margin. Among black men she 
won by 80 percent to 13  percent. 
Many  political observers thought a significant number of Republicans would 
either  vote for Clinton, one of the third party candidates, or stay home 
rather than  casting their votes for Trump. According to the exit polls, 
Republicans stayed  loyal to their presidential candidate. Some 89 percent of 
self-described  Republicans voted for Trump; 91 percent of white Republicans 
did. In contrast,  only 84 percent of white Democrats voted for Clinton. She 
did win 86 percent of  white Democratic women, but only 81 percent of white, 
Democratic men voted for  her. 
Surprisingly, given all of the attention to Trump’s  attitudes and behavior 
toward women, he did virtually as well among white,  Republican women (91 
percent support) as he did among white, Republican men (92  percent). Clinton 
was more competitive among white independent women than men,  losing to 
Trump by a 49 to 41 percent margin among independent women and by 57  to 31 
percent among independent men. 
The  Candidates’ Personal Characteristics
These  were not likable candidates who instilled a great deal of confidence 
in their  supporters. Many voters supported one of these candidates despite 
significant  misgivings. 
The  majority of voters had unfavorable impressions of both. Twelve percent 
of  Clinton voters and 20 percent of Trump voters had an unfavorable 
opinion of the  candidate for whom they opted. So despite their misgivings 
about 
the candidates,  something still compelled them to support one of them. 
Both  candidates were seen as not being honest or trustworthy by more than 
6 out of 10  voters. However, among white voters, 57 percent said Trump was 
not honest and  trustworthy while fully 70 percent said the same of Clinton. 
Almost 3 in 10  white voters said neither candidate was honest and 
trustworthy. Among this  group, Trump won 52 percent to Clinton’s 32 percent. 
13 
percent of these voters  supported one of the third party candidates. 
Voters  in the exit polls were asked if each of the candidates was 
qualified to serve as  president. Almost half thought Clinton was not qualified 
but 
only 5 percent of  her voters thought that. Even more voters, 6 out of 10, 
thought Trump was not  qualified to be president. Almost a quarter of Trump 
voters gave him their  support despite saying he was not qualified.  
Voters  were also asked whether each candidate has the temperament to serve 
effectively  as president. By a slim margin, 55 percent to 43 percent, 
voters said Clinton  did have the right temperament. Sixty-three percent said 
Trump did not have the  temperament to be president. Just over half of all 
white voters said both  candidates did not have the right temperament. While 
very few of Clinton’s  voters questioned her temperament, 1 in 4 Trump voters 
backed him while saying  he did not have the temperament to be president. 
Voters  were asked how they would feel if Clinton were elected president 
and 53 percent  said they would be concerned or scared. Similarly, if Trump 
were elected  president, 58 percent said they would be concerned or scared. 
Among Clinton  voters, 10 percent would be concerned or scared if Clinton were 
elected and 95  percent would be concerned scared about a Trump presidency. 
Interestingly, while  94 percent of Trump voters would be concerned or 
scared about Clinton being  elected, 17 percent said they would be concerned 
about a President  Trump. 
If many  people had serious doubts about both candidates, is there a way to 
determine how  they distinguished between Clinton and Trump? In the exit 
polls, voters were  asked whether they strongly favored their candidate, liked 
their candidate but  with reservations, or if they voted because they 
disliked the other candidate.  While 21 percent of Clinton voters said they 
disliked the other candidates, more  – 28 percent – of Trump voters reported 
that. There appears to have been more  people voting against Clinton than 
against Trump. 
A Verdict on  Major Policy Issues?           
Can we  say Trump did better than expected in the election because a 
majority of voters  supported his most powerfully articulated policy positions? 
Exit poll voters  were asked whether most illegal immigrants working in the 
U.S. should be offered  a chance to apply for legal status or deported to the 
country they came from.  Fully 7 of 10 voters said they should be allowed to 
apply for legal status.  Similarly, more people opposed building a wall 
along the U.S. border with Mexico  than supported it. And virtually as many 
voters (38 percent) said trade with  other countries creates more U.S. jobs as 
said it takes away jobs (42  percent). 
How did  Trump win when many of his core positions were so unpopular? Some 
people voted  for him regardless of that. Among those who favored giving 
illegal immigrants a  chance to apply for legal status, one in three voted for 
Trump. Thirty-five  percent of people who said international trade creates 
jobs voted for Trump. And  even 27 percent of white voters who said they want 
the next president to change  to more liberal policies voted for Trump. 
One  issue that may have motivated some white voters is the ongoing 
national debate  over the way police treat African-Americans. The exit poll 
asked 
voters whether  they think the country’s criminal justice system treats all 
people fairly or  treats blacks unfairly. Half of white voters said blacks 
are treated fairly  while 41 percent say they are treated unfairly. Among the 
first group, 8 in 10  voted for Trump. Sixty-five percent who said blacks 
are treated unfairly voted  for Clinton. 
Did Johnson  and Stein Affect the Outcome?
With so  many tightly contested races, the votes cast for candidates such 
as Gary Johnson  and Jill Stein may have impacted the overall results. The 
exit polling asked  voters they would have cast ballots for if there were only 
two candidates  (Clinton and Trump). A quarter of Johnson voters said 
Clinton, 15 percent said  Trump, and 55 percent said they would not have voted. 
Numbers were similar for  Stein voters, with about a quarter saying they 
would have chosen Clinton, 14  percent saying Trump, and 61 percent saying they 
would not have voted. It is  difficult to say with any certainty, but with 
razor thin margins in some states,  a small number of voters who might have 
supported Clinton could have altered  outcomes in some states.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to