2/24/16, "Nevada Caucus Results," NY Times chart
"Latino voters made up 8 percent of the Republican caucuses (up from just 5 percent
four years ago); Trump carried those voters by a 17-point margin over
Rubio....In Nevada a smaller number of voters described themselves as
born-again Christians (39 percent), but Trump again won those voters,
this time with a 15-point margin over Cruz."...
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2/24/16, "Donald Trump Takes The Jackpot In Nevada Caucuses," npr.org, Jessica Taylor
"Donald Trump has won the Nevada Republican caucuses, giving the
billionaire his third victory in two weeks and a huge surge of momentum
heading into Super Tuesday.
Florida Sen. Marco Rubio held a
narrow but decisive lead for second place over Texas Sen. Ted Cruz. With
all caucus votes in, Rubio had 23.9 percent to Cruz's 21.4 percent,
according to the Associated Press.
But it was Trump who towered
above his two top rivals, nearly doubling the support of his nearest
competitor with 45.9 percent of the vote.
"If you listen to the
pundits we weren't expected to win too much, and now we're winning,
winning, winning the country," Trump declared shortly after returns came
in. "And soon the country is going to start winning, winning, winning."
The
real estate mogul, whose name adorns a glistening hotel along the Las
Vegas Strip, was the heavy favorite heading into the Silver State vote.
His win follows triumphs in New Hampshire and South Carolina. No
candidate who has won both those states has not gone on to be the GOP
nominee.
At stake in Nevada were 30 delegates, which will be
awarded both proportionally based on the at-large statewide vote and by
who wins the state's four congressional districts.
On Tuesday night Trump already had his eye on the calendar ahead,
boasting as he declared victory that he was creeping up in the polls in
Texas, which votes in next week's Super Tuesday contest — a
not-so-subtle dig at Cruz. And with his eye on Rubio and Ohio Gov. John
Kasich, Trump also noted he's on top of polls in Florida and Ohio, which
hold their primaries on March 15.
It's becoming increasingly difficult for any candidate to consolidate the type of support they need to topple Trump. Entrance polls
showed a breadth of support for the former reality-TV star from across
the board, and he was once again the main beneficiary of a frustrated
electorate which is hungry for an outsider candidate. Fifty-eight
percent of Nevada caucus-goers said they were angry with the federal
government, much higher than in Iowa (42 percent), South Carolina (40
percent) or New Hampshire (39 percent.)
Sixty-one percent said
they wanted someone in the White House from outside the political
establishment, while just 33 percent backed someone with government
experience. In the three previous states, voters were more evenly split.
Cruz
seemed to raise his campaign's expectations as he took the stage in Las
Vegas. Repeating again that he was the only candidate so far to best
Trump — in Iowa — Cruz declared that Super Tuesday, now less than one
week away, "Will be the most important night of this campaign."
But
while the Texas senator sees more fertile ground ahead, Cruz has lately
failed to win several voting blocs crucial to his campaign.
Trump
captured evangelical voters over Cruz in South Carolina this past
Saturday. In Nevada a smaller number of voters described themselves as
born-again Christians (39 percent), but Trump again won those voters,
this time with a 15-point margin over Cruz.
Trump carried
voters across the GOP's ideological spectrum, winning self-described
"very conservative" voters by four points over Cruz, "somewhat
conservative" voters by 23 points over Rubio and "moderate" voters by 26
points.
Trump has taken heat for controversial comments he's
made about immigrants and Muslims, but was still victorious in the first
primary or caucus state with a more diverse electorate. Latino voters
made up 8 percent of the Republican caucuses (up from just 5 percent
four years ago); Trump carried those voters by a 17-point margin over
Rubio.
As has been the case in other contests, Trump did
particularly well with older less-educated voters. Among voters 65 and
over, who made up a third of Nevada Republican caucus goers, Trump more
than doubled Rubio's support, winning 51 percent to 25 percent.
The
biggest gap was between voters whose education did not go beyond high
school — Trump won those voters by a 37-point margin over Cruz.
"I love the poorly-educated," Trump declared in his victory speech."
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Comment: The media is obsessed with the "poorly educated" angle, the above article electing to mention it 3 times. Why? Are the votes inferior? In any case, Trump has connected with working class people for many years:
Aug. 1988, "Donald Trump Interview 1988 Republican convention," from New Orleans, Aug. 15-18, 1988, You Tube
In 1988 when asked if he's a Rockefeller or Bush Republican, Trump replies, "No...the people that I do best with are the people who drive the taxis:"
At 1:05: Larry King asks Trump what kind of Republican he is, is he a Rockefeller Republican, is he a Bush Republican?:
At 1:12: Trump: "No,
I'm...the people that I'm really, the people that I do best with are
the people who drive the taxis. You know, wealthy people don't like me,
because I'm competing against them all the time...and I like to win."
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