2016 Illinois Democratic presidential primary
2016 Illinois Democratic presidential primary
Results by countyClinton: 40-50% 50-60% 60-70%Sanders: 40-50% 50-60% 60-70%
The 2016 Illinois Democratic presidential primary took place on March 15 in the U.S. state of Illinois as one of the 2016 Democratic Party presidential primaries ahead of the 2016 presidential election .
On the same day, the Democratic Party held primaries in Florida , Missouri , North Carolina and Ohio , while the Republican Party held primaries in the same five states, including their own Illinois primary , plus the Northern Mariana Islands.
Clinton's win came thanks to African American neighborhoods of Chicago .[ 1] Precinct-level results showed a close race with Latino voters : with Sanders performing in Mexican American neighborhoods and Clinton in Puerto Rican neighborhoods.[ 1]
Sanders dominated the suburban [ 1] and rural vote.
Opinion polling
Poll source
Date
1st
2nd
Other
Primary results[ 2]
March 15, 2016
Hillary Clinton 50.6%
Bernie Sanders 48.6%
Others 0.8%
McKeon & Associates[ 3]
Margin of error: ± 4.1%
Sample size: 428
March 12, 2016
Hillary Clinton 31%
Bernie Sanders 30%
Others / Undecided 39%
Public Policy Polling[ 4]
Margin of error: ± 3.9%
Sample size: 627
March 11–12, 2016
Hillary Clinton 48%
Bernie Sanders 45%
Others / Undecided 7%
CBS News/YouGov[ 5]
Margin of error: ± 5.5%
Sample size: 756
March 9–11, 2016
Bernie Sanders 48%
Hillary Clinton 46%
Others / Undecided 6%
NBC News/Wall Street Journal/Marist[ 6]
Margin of error: ± 4.3%
Sample size: 529
March 4–10, 2016
Hillary Clinton 51%
Bernie Sanders 45%
Others / Undecided 4%
We Ask America[ 7]
Margin of error: ± 3.11%
Sample size: 994
March 7–8, 2016
Hillary Clinton 62%
Bernie Sanders 25%
Others / Undecided 13%
Chicago Tribune[ 8]
Margin of error: ±4.1%
Sample size: 600
March 2–6, 2016
Hillary Clinton 67%
Bernie Sanders 25%
Others / Undecided 8%
We Ask America[ 9]
Margin of error: ± 3.0
Sample size: 1,116
February 24, 2016
Hillary Clinton 57%
Bernie Sanders 28%
Others / Undecided 15%
The Simon Poll/SIU[ 10]
Margin of error: ± 5.6
Sample size: 306
February 15–20, 2016
Hillary Clinton 51%
Bernie Sanders 32%
Others / Undecided 17%
The Illinois Observer[ 11]
Margin of error: ± 4.23
Sample size: 560
February 11, 2016
Hillary Clinton 58%
Bernie Sanders 25%
Others / Undecided 18%
Public Policy Polling[ 12]
Margin of error: ± 4.9%
Sample size: 409
July 20–21, 2015
Hillary Clinton 60%
Bernie Sanders 23%
Others / Undecided 17%
Results
Results by county
County
Clinton
Votes
Sanders
Votes
Adams
50.78%
1,784
47.08%
1,654
Alexander
59.97%
770
33.80%
434
Bond
44.94%
719
53.44%
855
Boone
41.11%
1,958
58.30%
2,777
Brown
49.23%
160
48.00%
156
Bureau
44.44%
1,523
54.27%
1,860
Calhoun
44.92%
447
50.65%
504
Carroll
48.75%
625
50.08%
642
Cass
46.93%
504
50.19%
539
Champaign
33.24%
10,721
66.48%
21,440
Christian
46.86%
1,401
51.14%
1,529
Clark
44.75%
562
52.87
664
Clay
44.89%
378
52.14%
439
Clinton
41.14%
908
57.54%
1,270
Coles
39.96%
1,714
58.92%
2,527
Cook
53.66%
633,300
45.49%
536,805
Crawford
49.96%
609
47.99%
585
Cumberland
39.57%
364
56.30%
518
Dekalb
33.10%
4,146
66.50%
8,330
De Witt
45.32%
561
53.31%
660
Douglas
42.27%
484
56.16%
643
DuPage
47.32%
59,798
52.35%
66,163
Edgar
47.40%
446
49.73%
468
Edwards
48.15%
143
49.83%
148
Effingham
40.35%
868
58.02%
1,248
Fayette
47.90%
616
50.00%
643
Ford
39.08%
288
59.43%
438
Franklin
42.13%
2,179
53.79%
2,782
Fulton
45.15%
2,153
53.26%
2,540
Gallatin
40.35%
531
50.38%
663
Greene
46.90%
507
49.49%
535
Grundy
39.44%
2,053
59.67%
3,106
Hamilton
42.83%
418
49.69%
485
Hancock
56.39%
631
41.82%
468
Hardin
40.40%
162
55.36%
222
Henderson
52.07%
339
45.47%
296
Henry
50.65%
2,159
48.44%
2,065
Iroquois
37.47%
544
60.67%
881
Jackson
37.40%
2,842
62.03%
4,713
Jasper
40.54%
328
53.65%
434
Jefferson
47.15%
1,678
49.93%
1,777
Jersey
43.59%
857
54.48%
1,071
Jo Daviess
51.44%
1,320
47.78%
1,226
Johnson
45.13%
361
52.50%
420
Kane
43.41%
23,505
56.21%
30,234
Kankakee
45.67%
4,902
53.67%
5,761
Kendall
41.54%
5,611
58.04%
7,841
Knox
47.27%
2,957
51.50%
3,222
Lake
52.68%
50,271
46.97%
44,823
LaSalle
43.47%
5,279
55.55%
6,746
Lawrence
46.85%
417
48.43%
431
Lee
39.46%
1,295
59.75%
1,961
Livingston
43.47%
832
55.07%
1,054
Logan
42.79%
739
56.40%
974
McDonough
41.43%
1,054
57.82%
1,471
McHenry
38.82%
13,221
60.78%
20,702
McLean
37.11%
7,726
62.48%
13,008
Macon
53.86%
5,958
45.15%
4,995
Macoupin
43.10%
2,783
54.78%
3,537
Madison
44.04%
15,572
55.04%
19,463
Marion
47.65%
1,630
49.93%
1,708
Marshall
49.01%
569
50.47%
586
Mason
49.10%
680
48.88%
677
Massac
51.38%
549
46.81%
492
Menard
44.37%
398
54.74%
491
Mercer
51.27%
496
46.61%
860
Monroe
44.21%
1,438
54.66%
1,778
Montgomery
48.28%
1,250
49.32%
1,277
Morgan
41.54%
936
57.17%
1,288
Moultrie
44.27%
467
53.65%
566
Ogle
40.17%
2,642
59.20%
2,642
Peoria
52.14%
11,473
47.31%
10,409
Perry
46.82%
855
50.99%
931
Piatt
43.01%
788
55.51%
1,017
Pike
50.92%
497
46.21%
451
Pope
37.20%
109
60.07%
176
Pulaski
61.70%
385
34.78%
217
Putnam
46.71%
455
51.75%
504
Randolph
44.59%
1,314
52.77%
1,555
Richland
43.75%
448
53.81%
551
Rock Island
51.62%
10,240
47.11%
9,345
St. Clair
59.95%
24,218
39.21%
15,838
Saline
45.95%
1,054
50.48%
1,158
Sangamon
46.91%
9,295
52.57%
10,416
Schuyler
54.36%
368
43.43%
294
Scott
46.58%
150
50.00%
161
Shelby
44.09%
783
52.98%
941
Stark
47.13%
197
51.44%
215
Stephenson
49.00%
1,989
49.99%
2,029
Tazewell
44.71%
5,905
54.46%
7,192
Union
43.23%
921
54.23%
1,153
Vermilion
51.23%
3,048
47.13%
2,803
Wabash
49.72%
356
48.18%
345
Warren
49.02%
726
50.03%
741
Washington
39.67%
409
57.71%
595
Wayne
41.27%
319
54.20%
419
White
48.96%
565
46.01%
531
Whiteside
47.95%
2,900
51.41%
3,109
Will
47.06%
42,799
52.42%
47,674
Williamson
42.23%
2,985
55.30%
3,909
Winnebago
47.11%
15,097
52.37%
16,784
Woodford
43.80%
1,279
55.48%
1,620
Total
50.56%
1,039,555
48.61%
999,494
Source:[ 13]
Analysis
Hillary Clinton won her birth state of Illinois by a 2-point margin, by winning with African American voters (70-30), women (55-45), and older voters (63-36), especially senior citizens (70-29). This margin was narrower than might have been expected, with Bernie Sanders winning with voters under the age of 45 (70%-30%) who made up 39% of the electorate and white voters (57-42) who made up 58% of the electorate. He also won men, 53–45. According to exit polls, the Hispanic/Latino vote was split, with Sanders narrowly winning 50–49.
As became a trend in the Democratic primary race, Hillary Clinton won Democrats (57-42), but Sanders won self-identified Independents (69-30).
Clinton performed well in Chicago where the electorate is more diverse (she won 54–46) and in the Cook Suburbs (she won 53–46). Sanders performed well in the Collar Counties (he won 52–47) in the north (he won 53–46) and in the central/south part of the state which is whiter and more rural (he won 54–45).[ 14]
See also
References