2016 Electoral College

Comparison of Best Polled Candidate Combinations in New Hampshire [4 EV]

Most Recent Poll (middate): 2016-11-05 00:00 UTC

Last Poll Update: 2016-11-08 10:34 UTC

Post Mortem Analysis here

State: History Shown in Graph: 

Switch to National Summary

 

Clinton Trump
46.4% 39.6%
 
Clinton up by 6.8%
(Strong Clinton)

The average currently includes 5 polls spanning the last 6.5 days.

Clinton vs Trump New Hampshire Details

Clinton Bush
43.6% 41.4%
 
Clinton up by 2.2%
(Weak Clinton)

The average currently includes 5 polls spanning the last 1.1 years.

Clinton vs Bush New Hampshire Details

Clinton Cruz
43.2% 36.1%
 
Clinton up by 7.1%
(Strong Clinton)

The average currently includes 5 polls spanning the last 9.1 months.

Clinton vs Cruz New Hampshire Details

Clinton Rubio
41.6% 43.8%
 
Rubio up by 2.2%
(Weak Rubio)

The average currently includes 5 polls spanning the last 9.2 months.

Clinton vs Rubio New Hampshire Details

Clinton Huckabee
45.5% 35.3%
 
Clinton up by 10.2%
(Solid Clinton)

The average currently includes 5 polls spanning the last 2.5 years.

Clinton vs Huckabee New Hampshire Details

 

Election Graphs tracks state by state poll averages to estimate Electoral College results, and tracks estimates of the primary delegate races.

 

Like Election Graphs on Facebook, follow @ElectionGraphs on Twitter, or read the Election 2016 blog posts for commentary and analysis when there are significant changes to this data.

For a feed of all poll updates follow @ElecCollPolls on Twitter. For more discussion of Election 2016 and other topics, listen to the Curmudgeon's Corner podcast.

If you have information on inaccuracies or omissions, please email abulsme@abulsme.com

 

2016 Electoral College: Intro | Tour | FAQ

 

If you find this site interesting or useful, please consider visiting the Tip Jar.

 

The poll average generally uses the last 5 polls (by middate).

If there is tie for the middate of the oldest poll to be included, all polls with that middate are included.

If the result is exactly on the border between categories (0%, 5% or 10% margin) older polls are pulled in one by one until the result is clearly within a category.

When there are not enough actual polls for the poll average, results from prior presidential elections are used to fill in the average.

If a pollster releases multiple results based on the same sample they are weighted so collectively they count as "1 poll".

On state detail pages this is noted by an [N], shading in the listing, and a different color data point in the graph.

 

Full listing of polls used on this site: HTML or pipe delimited text

 

Analysis for the 2008 and 2012 election cycles can be found here.

 

Page cached at 2019-02-28 11:57:50 UTC

Original calculation time was 214.344 seconds

 

Page displayed at 2024-11-21 17:12:09 UTC

Page generated in 0.038 seconds