In Wisconsin, voters under the age of 0 supported Biden, compared to only 47% who voted for Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton in 2016. % Who voted for Clinton. They helped them to win in those states.
The former vice president also benefited white voters with college degrees in Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Arizona and Nevada, who gained a larger share of that group than Clinton did four years ago. He took a two-figure lead with the group in Arizona and Pennsylvania, although Clinton did not win in any of those states. CNN has not yet projected a winner in Nevada.
In Michigan, Biden also found support among independents and senior citizens, while in Wisconsin he gained more independent votes than Clinton four years ago. More Wisconsin and Michigan voters earned less than વર્ષે 50,000 a year compared to 2001.
National exit polls show that college-led voters are slightly less than half of the 2020 voters, up slightly from 2 out of 5 voters with a college degree in 2016. White voters made 2 out of 3 voters in 2020, which is slightly below 71% of 2016 voters. Like the 201st exit, according to these exit polls, women make up more than half of the electorate this year.
Latinoz is in favor of Trump
Trump won more Latino voters in some states than he did in 2016. The president occupied nearly half of the group in Florida, up from 35% in 2016. Biden received more than half of the state’s Latino votes, compared to 62%. Who backed Clinton four years ago.
Biden will also lose support among Latino voters in Georgia and Ohio, which Democrats had hoped to flip. The former vice president was up just 16 percent in Georgia and about 21 points in Ohio, compared to Clinton’s 40 percent margin and 41 points in Georgia and Ohio.
However, in Arizona’s preliminary results, Latino voters backed Biden by about 2 to 1, with Trump barely making a dent. Clinton also won the Latino vote by hand in 2016 there.
The economy is the main concern
Voters took the top spot in terms of economics, according to the results of a nationwide CNN exit poll.
About one-third of voters cited the economy as their most important issue, while about 1 in 5 and 1 in 6 cited racial inequality as the most important coronavirus epidemic for their vote. About 1 in 10 everyone cites health care policy and crime and safety as their main issues.
Among Biden supporters, more than a third said racial inequality was their most important issue, and beating everyone else.
Although more voters cited the economy as the most important issue in choosing a candidate than the coronavirus, a narrow majority say the country’s priority should now be the coronavirus on rebuilding the economy.
Trump supporters were more likely to call the economy their main issue, with only 3% of presidential supporters saying so, compared to only %% who cited the coronavirus. Among Biden’s supporters, 3 out of 10 said the coronavirus was their top concern, compared to 1 in 10 who cited the economy.
About 4 in 5 Biden supporters said a nation with a coronavirus should be a priority, while nearly three-quarters of Trump felt that rebuilding the economy was the most important.
Containing coronavirus
More than 9 out of 10 Biden voters say efforts to end the virus are going badly, while 1 in 10 Trump supporters felt that way.
With coronavirus cases and hospital admissions in many states, nearly two-thirds of voters said they see wearing a face mask as a public health responsibility rather than a personal choice. But this is also different, with more than 4 voters in Biden 5 saying it is a public health responsibility, but only half of Trump supporters respond that it is.
As of Wednesday afternoon, U.S. About 9.5 million cases of the virus have been reported in and more than 233,000 people have died, according to Johns Hopkins University data. Ten thousand more lives are forecast in the coming months.
Loyal to their candidates
Most supporters of Trump and Biden said they voted more in support of their candidate than their opponent, although Trump’s base was more loyal to him. In In, more than four people said they voted for the president, while two-thirds of Biden’s voters said the same.
High-quality voters were a strong leader in the search for a president. One-third said so, when only one-fourth of a person desires good justice and only one-fifth thinks a candidate who “cares about people like me” is most important to me. About one-fifth were in search of someone who could unite the country.
When it comes to issues, about three-quarters of voters said the candidate’s position on the issues is the most important, while less than a quarter is the name of the candidate’s personal qualities.
Two-thirds of voters said climate change was a serious problem.
Voters from almost some said Supreme Court appointments were an important factor for their vote – Trump named three judges in his first term, who moved the court to the right. And more than half of voters said the High Court should be kept the same as Obamacare. Judges will hear oral arguments on a case that seeks to overturn a landmark health reform law next week.
Half of the voters are confident that their vote count will be accurate
Voters found their voting experience to be an easy one, although there is a big difference between the proportion of white voters who said it was too easy (about three-quarters) and the proportion of black voters who experienced it that way. (About half). Nearly half said they were confident the vote in their states would be the same as it was four years ago.
With a wave of early and absentee voter recruitment this year, very few people made up their minds on the final days of the contest: only 5% said they made up their minds in the final week of the campaign, and more than 4 in 5 said they made up their minds before September. Is.
The survey indicated a high level of participation of new voters.
About 1 in 8 said the year 2020 is their first year, compared to the number of shares cast in 2008.
CNN Exit Polls is a combination of Election Day voters and telephone interviews to measure absentee by-mail and personal interviews to measure early voter opinions and was conducted by Edison Research on behalf of the National Election Pool. Day, on74 Election On Election Day, voters were personally interviewed on a random sample of 1 polling 115 polling stations across the country. The results also included 4,919 interviews with early and absent voters conducted by phone. The results of the full sample have an error margin of plus or minus 2 percentage points; It’s big for subgroups.
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