Map: 2016 Electoral Vote Distribution. 13. • Map: 2016 Presidential Popular Vote Differential. 14. • Map: 2016 Popular Vote: Trump.
A The University of Texas Electoral College Study is available at States individually determine how to award their EC votes in an election.
close of voter registration for the 2016 election more than 77.5 million Illinois
4 A map of CD-23 is provided in Appendix II. 6. Page 8. either safely Republican or safely Democrat. In the first election held
period or the loss of a federal filing election does not change the begin and end dates of an accounting period for franchise tax reporting purposes.
Arizona Texas
unprecederit£dJeycl_ofjictm state election infrastructure in the run-up to the 2016 U.S. elections^. Throughout 2016 and for several years before Russian
Jun 21 2017 Most important question: Do you have any evidence that the votes themselves were changed in any way in the 2016 Presidential election?
represents the political party that state votes for every presidential election. California votes Democratic and Texas and New York vote Republican.”.
Dec 19 2016 · FOR PRESIDENT: DONALD J TRUMP received 36 votes RON PAUL received 1 vote JOHN KASICH received 1 vote and no votes were cast for any other person for President ofthe United States FOR VICE-PRESEDENT: MIKE PENCE received 37 votes CARLY FIORINA received 1 vote and no votes were cast for any other person for Vice-President ofthe United States
The Lone Star State assigned its 38 Electoral College votes to the state's popular vote winner, but two faithless electors chose other candidates, making Texas the only state in 2016 to give Trump fewer than the assigned electoral votes. Even then, its 36 electoral votes were Trump's largest electoral prize in 2016.
Even then, its 36 electoral votes were Trump's largest electoral prize in 2016. When the Electoral College met on December 19, 2016, only 36 out of the 38 electors voted for Trump for president. Two electors defected; one voted for Ohio Governor John Kasich, and the other voted for Congressman Ron Paul.
Maine distributes its electoral votes proportionally by Congressional district, with two at-large electors representing the statewide winning presidential and vice presidential candidates and one elector each representing the winners from its two Congressional districts.