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2016 United States presidential election in Texas

The 2016 United States presidential election in Texas took place on November 8, 2016, as part of the 2016 United States presidential election. Primary elections were held on March 1, 2016.


Results by county showing number of votes by size and candidates by color

Treemap of the popular vote by county

The 2016 United States presidential election in Texas took place on November 8, 2016, as part of the 2016 United States presidential election. Primary elections were held on March 1, 2016.

Texas was won by Republican Donald Trump and his running mate Mike Pence by an 8.99% margin over Democrats Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine. Texas 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.

When the Electoral College met on December 19, 2016, only 36 of the 38 electors voted for Trump for president. Two electors defected; one voted for Ohio Governor John Kasich, and the other voted for former Congressman Ron Paul, making the latter, at 81 and despite not running, the oldest person to ever receive an electoral vote. For vice president, 37 electors voted for Pence, while one voted for Carly Fiorina. This was the first time since 1976 where a Republican presidential candidate lost a pledged vote via a faithless elector; that year, Gerald Ford lost a Washington state electoral vote to fellow Republican Ronald Reagan. Additionally, this was the first time since 1972 that the winning presidential candidate lost an electoral vote, when Richard Nixon lost a Virginia electoral vote to Libertarian Party nominee John Hospers.

Texas was one of eleven states (and the District of Columbia) where Clinton improved on Barack Obama's performance in 2012. Clinton lost Texas by a smaller margin than any Democrat since 1996 (though her proportion of the vote was slightly smaller than that received by Barack Obama in 2008), which analysts attributed to Trump losing ground with college-educated white voters. Trump's 2016 performance in Texas was the weakest of any victorious Republican nominee since Richard Nixon in 1968 - the last Republican to win the presidency without carrying Texas. Trump in 2016 was the tenth consecutive Republican presidential nominee to win Texas, beginning with Reagan in 1980. Nevertheless, he became the first Republican to win the White House without carrying Bexar County since Richard Nixon in 1968, as well as the first to win without carrying Fort Bend County since Herbert Hoover in 1928, and the first to win without carrying Harris or Dallas County since Calvin Coolidge in 1924.

The Texas Democratic Party held their state's primary in concurrence with the other Super Tuesday contests on March 1. Eight candidates appeared on the ballot, Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders, dropped-out candidate Martin O'Malley and five minor candidates (Rocky De La Fuente, Willie Wilson, Star Locke, Keith Russell Judd and Calvis Hawes.) The Texas Democratic primary had 251 delegates to the Democratic National Convention: 222 pledged delegates and 29 super delegates. 145 delegates were allocated proportionally based on the results in the state's 31 senatorial districts. The other 77 pledged delegates were allocated proportionally based on the statewide popular vote.

CandidatePopular voteDelegates
Hillary Clinton936,00465.19%14721168
Bernie Sanders476,54733.19%75075
Rocky De Le Fuente8,4290.59%000
Martin O'Malley5,3640.37%000
Willie Wilson3,2540.23%000
Keith Russell Judd2,5690.18%000
Calvis L. Hawes2,0170.14%000
Star Locke1,7110.12%000
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Total:1,435,895100%22229251
Column 1Column 2
Key:Withdrew prior to contest
CandidatePopular voteDelegates
Ted Cruz1,241,11843.76%104
Donald Trump758,76226.75%48
Marco Rubio503,05517.74%3
John Kasich120,4734.25%0
Ben Carson117,9694.16%0
Jeb Bush35,4201.25%0
Uncommitted29,6091.04%0
Rand Paul8,0000.28%0
Mike Huckabee6,2260.22%0
Elizabeth Gray5,4490.19%0
Chris Christie3,4480.12%0
Carly Fiorina3,2470.11%0
Rick Santorum2,0060.07%0
Lindsey Graham1,7060.06%0
Total:2,836,488100%155
Column 1Column 2
Key:Withdrew prior to contest

The Texas Green Party held its party caucuses at conventions at the precinct level on March 8, the county level on March 12, and the district level on March 19, leading up to the state nominating convention in Grey Forest, Texas, on April 9 and 10.

On April 10 it was announced that Jill Stein had won the state convention.

CandidateVotesPercentageNational delegates
Jill Stein--15
Sedinam Moyowasifza-Curry--3
Darryl Cherney--2
Kent Mesplay--2
William Kreml--1
Total-100.00%23

The Green Party did host their National Convention in Houston from August 4–6 at the University of Houston making it the last physical convention for the Green Party to date for a presidential election as one was held virtually for the 2020 and 2024 elections.

Trump won every single pre-election poll with margins varying from 2 to 14 points. Trump won the last poll 49% to 35% and the average of the last three polls showed Trump leading 50% to 38%.

The following are final 2016 predictions from various organizations for Texas as of Election Day.

SourceRankingAs of
Los Angeles TimesLean RNovember 6, 2016
CNNSafe RNovember 8, 2016
Rothenberg Political ReportSafe RNovember 7, 2016
Sabato's Crystal BallSafe RNovember 7, 2016
NBCLean RNovember 8, 2016
Electoral-vote.comLean RNovember 8, 2016
RealClearPoliticsLikely RNovember 8, 2016
Fox NewsLean RNovember 7, 2016
ABCSafe RNovember 7, 2016

State Senate district results

State House district results

The voting age population was 19,307,355, of which 15,101,087 were registered to vote. Turnout was 8,969,226, which is 46.45% of the voting age population and 59.39% of registered voters. The early voting period lasted for two weeks ending November 4, with 43.5% of registered voters casting early or absentee ballots. Out of those who cast votes, 73% cast their ballots early or absentee and 26% voted on Election Day.

Thirteen candidates received write-in votes, of which the large majority (42,366) went to Evan McMullin.

PartyCandidateRunning mateVotesPercentageElectoral votes
RepublicanDonald TrumpMike Pence4,685,04752.23%36
DemocraticHillary ClintonTim Kaine3,877,86843.24%0
LibertarianGary JohnsonWilliam Weld283,4923.16%0
GreenJill SteinAjamu Baraka71,5580.80%0
Write-inVarious candidatesVarious candidates51,2610.57%0
RepublicanJohn KasichCarly Fiorina00.00%1
LibertarianRon PaulMike Pence00.00%1
Totals8,969,226100.00%38
Turnout (VAP)46.45%

2012-2016 Swing by Precinct   Trump   >50%  40-50%  30-40%  20-30%  15-20%  10-15%  5-10%  1-5%   Clinton   1-5%  5-10%  10-15%  15-20%  20-30%  30-40%  40-50%  >50%

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

  • Jefferson (largest city: Beaumont)

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

  • Fort Bend (largest city: Sugar Land)
  • Kenedy (largest community: Sarita)

Trump won 22 of 36 congressional districts, while Clinton won 14, including three held by Republicans.

DistrictTrumpClintonRepresentative
72%25%Louie Gohmert
52%43%Ted Poe
54%40%Sam Johnson
75%22%John Ratcliffe
63%34%Jeb Hensarling
54%42%Joe Barton
47%48%John Culberson
72%24%Kevin Brady
18%79%Al Green
52%43%Michael McCaul
78%19%Mike Conaway
62%32%Kay Granger
80%17%Mac Thornberry
58%38%Randy Weber
40%56%Rubén Hinojosa
Vicente Gonzalez
27%67%Beto O'Rourke
56%38%Bill Flores
20%76%Sheila Jackson Lee
72%23%Randy Neugebauer
Jodey Arrington
34%60%Joaquín Castro
52%42%Lamar Smith
52%44%Pete Olson
46%49%Will Hurd
51%44%Kenny Marchant
55%40%Roger Williams
60%34%Michael Burgess
60%36%Blake Farenthold
38%58%Henry Cuellar
25%71%Gene Green
18%79%Eddie Bernice Johnson
53%40%John Carter
47%48%Pete Sessions
24%73%Marc Veasey
37%59%Filemon Vela Jr.
30%64%Lloyd Doggett
72%25%Brian Babin

A map of the most college-educated counties in the United States

While he continued the Republican 10-cycle winning streak in Texas, Trump's winning margin was down from Mitt Romney's 15.79% in 2012 to 8.99%, a 6.80% drop, making 2016 the closest Democrats had come to winning Texas since 1996 (though the Democrats also received a smaller percentage of the vote in Texas in this election than in the 2008 presidential election). The surge in Democratic votes can partly be attributed to a growing population of Hispanics/Latinos, Trump's relatively weak performance with college-educated white voters, and the growth of cities and their respective suburbs in the Texas Triangle region, which are heavily populated with both college-educated voters and minorities and thus swung more Democratic compared to 2012. These were Clinton's main sources of votes. She swept the Rio Grande region counties, such as El Paso, Webb, Hidalgo and Cameron as they have sizable Hispanic populations.

Due to Trump's underperformance with college-educated white voters, Clinton made major gains in the Texas Triangle. Clinton scored a 38-point sweep in Travis County, home to the state capital of Austin and the University of Texas at Austin, the best Democratic performance in the county since 1964. She became the first Democrat to break 60% of the vote in Dallas County since 1944. Furthermore, she outperformed Obama in the minority-heavy counties of Bexar (San Antonio) and Harris County (Houston), shifting his slim victories into double-digit leads. In fact, the Presidential vote in Texas' 7th Congressional District, which includes Houston's inner-west suburbs, had the biggest change in margin towards Clinton compared to Obama's 2012 performance outside of Utah, shifting 23 points left. Clinton also won suburban Fort Bend County for the first time since Texas native Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964, which was attributed to the county's large immigrant population and negative perception of Trump by female Republican voters. While Clinton didn't win heavily college-educated suburban counties such as Denton County, Williamson County, Collin County, or Hays County, her margin of defeat was much narrower than other Democratic presidential nominees. Places that had large numbers of young voters in the state were a stronghold for Clinton as well. Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick suggested that Trump's relatively small margin of victory could have been largely due to many moderate Republican voters who had supported Romney in 2012 staying home. In an interview conducted the morning after the election, Patrick said in reference to these voters, "Had they turned out, he would've been in the low teens".

In total, Clinton beat Trump in 27 counties by a total of 883,819 votes, and had the best percentage performance of any other Democrat running statewide. Conversely, Trump, who won 227 of the state's 254 counties, got the smallest percentage of the vote of all Republicans running in the state.

As of the 2024 election, this is the most recent election where Frio, Jim Wells, Kenedy, Kleberg, La Salle, Reeves, Val Verde, and Zapata counties have voted Democratic, as rural Hispanic-majority South Texas has trended heavily Republican in the two elections since, and the most recent election where Hays County has voted Republican.

  • United States presidential elections in Texas

  • First presidency of Donald Trump

  • 2016 Democratic Party presidential debates

  • 2016 Democratic Party presidential primaries

  • 2016 Republican Party presidential debates

  • 2016 Republican Party presidential primaries

  • David Weigel; Lauren Tierney (October 4, 2020), "The seven political states of Texas", Washingtonpost.com, archived from the original on October 5, 2020.

  • RNC 2016 Republican Nominating Process Archived November 8, 2016, at the Wayback Machine

  • Green papers for 2016 primaries, caucuses, and conventions

  • Decision Desk Headquarter Results for Texas

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