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Sorry, all these figures indicate that she is clearing beating that 74 year old socialist:
Top 10 Popular votes in the history of primaries (includes primaries and ALL caucuses)
2008 Democratic primaries - Hillary Clinton 18.0 million votes
2008 Democratic primaries - Barack Obama 17.9 million votes
2016 Democratic primaries - Hillary Clinton 13.4 million votes
2000 Republican primaries - George W. Bush 12.0 million votes
2016 Republican primaries - Donald Trump 11.3 million votes
2000 Democratic primaries - Al Gore 10.9 million votes
2016 Democratic primaries - Bernie Sanders 10.5 million votes
1992 Democratic primaries - Bill Clinton 10.5 million votes
1980 Democratic primaries - Jimmy Carter 10.0 million votes
2012 Republican primaries - Mitt Romney 10.0 million votes
1988 Democratic primaries - Michael Dukakis 10.0 million votes
Top 20 states with victories by actual votes
01. Florida - Clinton +532k votes
02. Texas - Clinton +459k votes
03. Georgia - Clinton +329k votes
04. New York - Clinton +313k votes
05. Maryland - Clinton +251k votes
06. Alabama - Clinton +233k votes
07. Virginia - Clinton +228k votes
08. Pennsylvania - Clinton +200k votes
09. South Carolina - Clinton +175k votes
10. Ohio - Clinton +161k votes
11. North Carolina - Clinton +155k votes
12. Mississippi - Clinton +149k votes
13. Louisiana - Clinton +149k votes
14. Wisconsin - Sanders +137k votes
15. Tennessee - Clinton +125k votes
16. Washington - Sanders +111k votes (estimate)
17. Vermont - Sanders +98k votes
18. Oregon - Sanders +83k votes
19. Arkansas - Clinton +79k votes
20. Arizona - Clinton +69k votes
20 states with the most number of votes in the 2016 Democratic Primaries/Caucuses:
01. Illinois - 2.07 million votes (Clinton wins by 1.8%)
02. New York - 1.98 million votes (Clinton wins by 16%)
03. Florida - 1.71 million votes (Clinton wins by 31%)
04. Pennsylvania - 1.69 million votes (Clinton wins by 12%)
05. Texas - 1.44 million votes (Clinton wins by 32%)
06. Ohio - 1.25 million votes (Clinton wins by 13%)
07. Michigan - 1.21 million votes (Sanders wins by 1.5%)
08. Massachusetts - 1.21 million votes (Clinton wins by 1.4%)
09. North Carolina - 1.11 million votes (Clinton wins by 14%)
10. Wisconsin - 1.01 million votes (Sanders wins by 14%)
11. Maryland - 917k votes (Clinton wins by 29%)
12. Virginia - 786k votes (Clinton wins by 29%)
13. Georgia - 766k votes (Clinton wins by 43%)
14. Indiana - 639k votes (Sanders wins by 5.0%)
15. Missouri - 630k votes (Clinton wins by 0.3%)
16. Oregon - 620k votes (Sanders wins by 14%)
17. Arizona - 467k votes (Clinton wins by 15%)
18. Kentucky - 455k votes (Clinton wins by 0.4%)
19. Alabama - 399k votes (Clinton wins by 59%)
20. Tennessee - 373k votes (Clinton wins by 34%)
I hate to tell Republicans this - but millennials seem to be on board with more socialist-type ideas. I see the Democratic party starting to move in the direction of Universal Health care and some form of 'free college'.
That is one thing we've learned from the Sanders 'movement'.
She beat him on Super Tuesday. The only reason she hasn't kicked him to the curb is he helps keep her and her campaign staff's skills honed for the general.
This is what's euphemistically known as "whistling past the graveyard".
Sorry, all these figures indicate that she is clearing beating that 74 year old socialist:
Top 10 Popular votes in the history of primaries (includes primaries and ALL caucuses)
2008 Democratic primaries - Hillary Clinton 18.0 million votes
2008 Democratic primaries - Barack Obama 17.9 million votes
2016 Democratic primaries - Hillary Clinton 13.4 million votes
2000 Republican primaries - George W. Bush 12.0 million votes
2016 Republican primaries - Donald Trump 11.3 million votes
2000 Democratic primaries - Al Gore 10.9 million votes
2016 Democratic primaries - Bernie Sanders 10.5 million votes
1992 Democratic primaries - Bill Clinton 10.5 million votes
1980 Democratic primaries - Jimmy Carter 10.0 million votes
2012 Republican primaries - Mitt Romney 10.0 million votes
1988 Democratic primaries - Michael Dukakis 10.0 million votes
Top 20 states with victories by actual votes
01. Florida - Clinton +532k votes
02. Texas - Clinton +459k votes
03. Georgia - Clinton +329k votes
04. New York - Clinton +313k votes
05. Maryland - Clinton +251k votes
06. Alabama - Clinton +233k votes
07. Virginia - Clinton +228k votes
08. Pennsylvania - Clinton +200k votes
09. South Carolina - Clinton +175k votes
10. Ohio - Clinton +161k votes
11. North Carolina - Clinton +155k votes
12. Mississippi - Clinton +149k votes
13. Louisiana - Clinton +149k votes
14. Wisconsin - Sanders +137k votes
15. Tennessee - Clinton +125k votes
16. Washington - Sanders +111k votes (estimate)
17. Vermont - Sanders +98k votes
18. Oregon - Sanders +83k votes
19. Arkansas - Clinton +79k votes
20. Arizona - Clinton +69k votes
20 states with the most number of votes in the 2016 Democratic Primaries/Caucuses:
01. Illinois - 2.07 million votes (Clinton wins by 1.8%)
02. New York - 1.98 million votes (Clinton wins by 16%)
03. Florida - 1.71 million votes (Clinton wins by 31%)
04. Pennsylvania - 1.69 million votes (Clinton wins by 12%)
05. Texas - 1.44 million votes (Clinton wins by 32%)
06. Ohio - 1.25 million votes (Clinton wins by 13%)
07. Michigan - 1.21 million votes (Sanders wins by 1.5%)
08. Massachusetts - 1.21 million votes (Clinton wins by 1.4%)
09. North Carolina - 1.11 million votes (Clinton wins by 14%)
10. Wisconsin - 1.01 million votes (Sanders wins by 14%)
11. Maryland - 917k votes (Clinton wins by 29%)
12. Virginia - 786k votes (Clinton wins by 29%)
13. Georgia - 766k votes (Clinton wins by 43%)
14. Indiana - 639k votes (Sanders wins by 5.0%)
15. Missouri - 630k votes (Clinton wins by 0.3%)
16. Oregon - 620k votes (Sanders wins by 14%)
17. Arizona - 467k votes (Clinton wins by 15%)
18. Kentucky - 455k votes (Clinton wins by 0.4%)
19. Alabama - 399k votes (Clinton wins by 59%)
20. Tennessee - 373k votes (Clinton wins by 34%)
Except none of that matter, only delegates matter.
I hate to tell Republicans this - but millennials seem to be on board with more socialist-type ideas. I see the Democratic party starting to move in the direction of Universal Health care and some form of 'free college'.
That is one thing we've learned from the Sanders 'movement'.
I hate to tell Republicans this - but millennials seem to be on board with more socialist-type ideas. I see the Democratic party starting to move in the direction of Universal Health care and some form of 'free college'.
That is one thing we've learned from the Sanders 'movement'.
Hopefully (if it happens) in absence of a candidate that'll give free stuff they'll vote for a candidate that'll restore the economy (Trump) instead one that will "continue Obama's (and Bill's)" destruction of it.
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