Breaking: Hillary Clinton Apparent Winner of Kentucky Democratic Primary
Democratic Frontrunner Extends Lead
Hillary Clinton is the apparent winner of the Kentucky Democratic primary. Although there have been very few polls taken, the Democratic frontrunner was expected to win. One poll taken at the beginning of March showed Clinton with a five-point lead against Sanders, but some thought her coal comments might have handed the Vermont Senator the win.
BREAKING: Hillary Clinton is the apparent winner of the KY Dem primary. More: https://t.co/9ShsnW0qzv #Decision2016 pic.twitter.com/IFMdBzNvhy
— NBC News (@NBCNews) May 18, 2016
Clinton won Fayetteville County, which includes the University of Louisville. University towns are usually a Sanders’ stronghold. Kentucky is 88 percent white and only 8.2 percent Black, also usually a winning demographic ratio for Sanders.
Nate Silver’s FiveThirtyEight today put Hillary Clinton as the “slight favorite” to win, projecting “that Clinton will win the state by about 2 percentage points.” Kentucky is also a close primary, meaning only registered Democrats can vote in the Democratic primary.
Eastern Kentucky coal country could be a big problem for Clinton. On paper, could be worse than West Virginia pic.twitter.com/B9IOMLuh9m
— Nate Cohn (@Nate_Cohn) May 17, 2016
There are 55 delegates at stake in the Kentucky Democratic primary.Â
It’s been close all evening. At about 8:55 PM EDT:
126 votes: that’s what’s separating @BernieSanders and @HillaryClinton in the #KYprimary: https://t.co/Z4HKVDCGu7 pic.twitter.com/E2lj4d2hWq
— CBS News Politics (@CBSPolitics) May 18, 2016
At 9:15 PM EDT, with 99 percent of results reported, Clinton was winning by about 2500 votes. 23,521 people, or 5 percent, voted “undecided.”Â
UPDATE: 10:40 PM EDT –
Kentucky Secretary of State declares Clinton “unofficial winner.”
BREAKING: Top Kentucky official declares Clinton “unofficial winner” in primary https://t.co/nvxzG4pR72 pic.twitter.com/RNytibkr7w
— The Hill (@thehill) May 18, 2016
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This is a breaking news and developing story. Details may change. This story will be updated, and NCRM will likely publish follow-up stories on this news. Stay tuned and refresh for updates.
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Image by Gage Skidmore via Flickr and a CC license
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