[{"@context":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"BlogPosting","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki43\/2020-united-states-presidential-election-in-new-york\/#BlogPosting","mainEntityOfPage":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki43\/2020-united-states-presidential-election-in-new-york\/","headline":"2020 United States presidential election in New York","name":"2020 United States presidential election in New York","description":"before-content-x4 2020 United States presidential election in New York Turnout 69.7% 2.4% County results Municipality results Biden after-content-x4 \u00a0\u00a040\u201350% \u00a0\u00a050\u201360%","datePublished":"2021-05-20","dateModified":"2021-05-20","author":{"@type":"Person","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki43\/author\/lordneo\/#Person","name":"lordneo","url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki43\/author\/lordneo\/","image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/c9645c498c9701c88b89b8537773dd7c?s=96&d=mm&r=g","url":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/c9645c498c9701c88b89b8537773dd7c?s=96&d=mm&r=g","height":96,"width":96}},"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Enzyklop\u00e4die","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","width":600,"height":60}},"image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/b\/b0\/Increase2.svg\/11px-Increase2.svg.png","url":"https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/b\/b0\/Increase2.svg\/11px-Increase2.svg.png","height":"11","width":"11"},"url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki43\/2020-united-states-presidential-election-in-new-york\/","wordCount":25346,"articleBody":" (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});before-content-x42020 United States presidential election in New YorkTurnout69.7% 2.4% County results Municipality resultsBiden (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4\u00a0\u00a040\u201350%\u00a0\u00a050\u201360%\u00a0\u00a060\u201370% (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4\u00a0\u00a070\u201380%\u00a0\u00a080\u201390%\u00a0\u00a090\u2013100%Trump (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});after-content-x4\u00a0\u00a040\u201350%\u00a0\u00a050\u201360%\u00a0\u00a060\u201370%\u00a0\u00a070\u201380%\u00a0\u00a080\u201390%\u00a0\u00a090\u2013100%Tie\u00a0\u00a0The 2020 United States presidential election in New York was held on Tuesday, November 3, 2020, as part of the 2020 United States presidential election in which all 50 states plus the District of Columbia participated.[1]New York voters chose electors to represent them in the Electoral College via a popular vote, pitting the Republican Party’s nominee, incumbent President Donald Trump, and running mate Vice President Mike Pence against Democratic Party nominee, former Vice President Joe Biden, and his running mate California Senator Kamala Harris.[2] New York had 29 electoral votes in the Electoral College.[3] Trump announced that Florida would be his home state for this election, rather than New York as it had been previously.[4] This was the first presidential election in New York to allow no-excuse absentee voting.[5]New York continued its streak as a solidly blue state. Biden’s victory came from overwhelming strength with Black and Hispanic voters, especially those from New York City,[6] as well as strong support throughout the state, particularly in suburban areas such as Westchester and Nassau counties, from college-educated, suburban, Hispanic, Asian, Multiracial, and other cosmopolitan voters.New York weighed in for this election as 19% more Democratic than the national average. This was the first time since 1992 that Orange, Oswego, Washington, Madison, and Warren counties voted for the losing presidential candidate, as well as the first since 1992 that a Democrat won without carrying Suffolk County,the first since 1976 that a Democrat won without Cayuga, Cortland, Otsego, Seneca, Franklin, Niagara, and St. Lawrence counties, and the first since 1960 that a Democrat won without Sullivan County.Table of ContentsPrimary elections[edit]Canceled Republican primary[edit]Democratic primary[edit]Conservative[edit]Working Families[edit]Green[edit]Libertarian primary[edit]Independence[edit]General election[edit]Predictions[edit]Polling[edit]Graphical summary[edit]Electoral slates[edit]Results[edit]By county[edit]Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic[edit]By congressional district[edit]Analysis[edit]See also[edit]References[edit]Further reading[edit]External links[edit]Primary elections[edit]The primary elections were originally scheduled for April 28, 2020. On March 28, New York State elections officials moved the primary date to June 23 due to concerns over the COVID-19 pandemic.[7]Canceled Republican primary[edit]On March 3, 2020, the New York Republican Party became one of several state GOP parties to officially cancel their respective primaries and caucuses. Donald Trump was the only Republican candidate to submit the required number of names of his 162 total delegates, both the 94 primary ones and the alternates. Among Trump’s major challengers, Bill Weld only submitted about half of his required delegates, and neither Rocky De La Fuente nor Joe Walsh sent in any names at all. With the cancellation, Trump was automatically able to send his 94 New York pledged delegates to the national convention.[8][9]Democratic primary[edit]On April 27, 2020, New York State elections officials had decided to cancel the state’s Democratic primary altogether, citing the fact that former Vice President Joe Biden was the only major candidate left in the race after all the others had suspended their campaigns, and canceling it would save the state millions of dollars from printing the extra sheet on the ballot.[10] However, on May 5, a federal judge ruled that the Democratic primary must proceed on June 23 after a suit made by former presidential primary candidate Andrew Yang.[11]Among the other major candidates were entrepreneur Andrew Yang, Kirsten Gillibrand, one of New York’s two current senators, and Bill de Blasio, the mayor of New York City. However, on August 29, 2019, Gillibrand dropped out of the race. Bill de Blasio as well dropped out on September 20, 2019, after failing to qualify for the 4th Democratic debate.Results2020 New York Democratic presidential primary[12]CandidateVotes%Delegates[13]Joe Biden1,136,67964.62231Bernie Sanders (withdrawn)285,90816.2543Elizabeth Warren (withdrawn)82,9174.71Michael Bloomberg (withdrawn)39,4332.24Pete Buttigieg (withdrawn)22,9271.30Andrew Yang (withdrawn)22,6861.29Amy Klobuchar (withdrawn)11,0280.63Tulsi Gabbard (withdrawn)9,0830.52Deval Patrick (withdrawn)3,0400.17Michael Bennet (withdrawn)2,9320.17Tom Steyer (withdrawn)2,2990.13Blank ballots135,4867.70Void ballots4,6210.26Total1,759,039100%274Conservative[edit]The Conservative Party of New York State cross-endorsed the Republican ticket, nominating Donald Trump for president and Mike Pence for vice president.[14]Working Families[edit]The Working Families Party cross-endorsed the Democratic ticket, nominating Joe Biden for president and Kamala Harris for vice president.[15] Several prominent Democrats, including Senators Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren and Kirsten Gillibrand, U.S. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer encouraged voting for Biden and Harris on the WFP line, in order for the party to keep ballot access.[16]Green[edit]The Green Party of New York nominated the national Green Party ticket; Howie Hawkins for president and Angela Nicole Walker for vice president.Libertarian primary[edit]2020 New York Libertarian presidential primaryFuture of Freedom Foundation Founder Jacob Hornberger was the sole candidate to qualify for the New York primary ballot. Therefore, in accordance with state law, he was declared the winner of the primary by default. As the winner of the primary, Libertarian Party of New York rules permitted Hornberger to choose 27 of the state’s 48 unbound delegates to the 2020 Libertarian National Convention. The Libertarian Party of New York was the only Libertarian state affiliate to choose any of its delegates on the basis of its presidential primary or caucus.[17]Independence[edit]The Independence Party of New York nominated independent candidates Brock Pierce for president and Karla Ballard for vice president.[18]General election[edit]Predictions[edit]SourceRankingAs ofThe Cook Political Report[19]Safe DNovember 3, 2020Inside Elections[20]Safe DNovember 3, 2020Sabato’s Crystal Ball[21]Safe DNovember 3, 2020Politico[22]Safe DNovember 3, 2020RCP[23]Safe DNovember 3, 2020Niskanen[24]Safe DNovember 3, 2020CNN[25]Safe DNovember 3, 2020The Economist[26]Safe DNovember 3, 2020CBS News[27]Likely DNovember 3, 2020270towin[28]Safe DNovember 3, 2020ABC News[29]Safe DNovember 3, 2020NPR[30]Likely DNovember 3, 2020NBC News[31]Safe DNovember 3, 2020538[32]Safe DNovember 3, 2020Polling[edit]Graphical summary[edit]Aggregate pollsPollsPoll sourceDate(s)administeredSamplesize[b]Marginof errorDonaldTrumpRepublicanJoeBidenDemocraticJoJorgensenLibertarianHowieHawkinsGreenOtherUndecidedSurveyMonkey\/AxiosOct 20 \u2013 Nov 2, 20206,548 (LV)\u00b1\u00a02%35%[c]63%\u2013\u2013\u2013\u2013Research Co.Oct 31 \u2013 Nov 1, 2020450 (LV)\u00b1 4.6%34%64%––2%[d]4%SurveyMonkey\/AxiosOct 1\u201328, 202010,220 (LV)\u201334%63%––\u2013\u2013SwayableOct 23\u201326, 2020495 (LV)\u00b1 5.8%33%65%1%1%\u2013\u2013SurveyMonkey\/AxiosSep 1\u201330, 202010,007 (LV)\u201334%64%––\u20132%Siena CollegeSep 27\u201329, 2020504 (LV)\u00b1\u00a04.4%29%61%0%1%2%[e]7%SurveyMonkey\/AxiosAug 1\u201331, 20209,969 (LV)\u201334%64%––\u20132%Public Policy PollingAug 20\u201322, 20201,029 (V)\u00b1\u00a03.1%32%63%––\u20135%SurveyMonkey\/AxiosJul 1\u201331, 202010,280 (LV)\u201334%63%––\u20132%SurveyMonkey\/AxiosJun 8\u201330, 20204,555 (LV)\u201333%65%––\u20132%Siena CollegeJun 23\u201325, 2020806 (RV)\u00b1\u00a03.9%32%57%––\u201310%Siena CollegeMay 17\u201321, 2020767 (RV)\u00b1\u00a03.7%32%57%––\u201311%Quinnipiac UniversityApr 30 \u2013 May 4, 2020915 (RV)\u00b1\u00a03.2%32%55%––5%[f]8%Siena CollegeApr 19\u201323, 2020803 (RV)\u00b1\u00a03.7%29%65%––\u20136%Siena CollegeMar 22\u201326, 2020566 (RV)\u00b1\u00a04.5%33%58%––\u201310%Siena CollegeFeb 16\u201320, 2020658 (RV)\u00b1\u00a04.5%36%55%––\u20135%Former candidateswith Donald Trump and Michael BloombergPoll sourceDate(s)administeredSamplesize[b]Marginof errorDonaldTrump (R)MichaelBloomberg (D)OtherUndecidedSiena CollegeFeb 16\u201320, 2020658 (RV)\u00b1\u00a04.5%33%58%\u20139%with Donald Trump and Pete ButtigiegPoll sourceDate(s)administeredSamplesize[b]Marginof errorDonaldTrump (R)PeteButtigieg (D)OtherUndecidedSiena CollegeFeb 16\u201320, 2020658 (RV)\u00b1\u00a04.5%37%56%\u20137%with Donald Trump and Bill de BlasioPoll sourceDate(s)administeredSamplesize[b]Marginof errorDonaldTrump (R)Billde Blasio (D)OtherUndecidedSiena CollegeJun 2\u20136, 2019812 (RV)\u00b1\u00a04.1%36%48%13%3%with Donald Trump and Kirsten GillibrandPoll sourceDate(s)administeredSamplesize[b]Marginof errorDonaldTrump (R)KirstenGillibrand (D)OtherUndecidedSiena CollegeJun 2\u20136, 2019812 (RV)\u00b1\u00a04.1%34%58%5%3%with Donald Trump and Amy KlobucharPoll sourceDate(s)administeredSamplesize[b]Marginof errorDonaldTrump (R)AmyKlobuchar (D)OtherUndecidedSiena CollegeFeb 16\u201320, 2020658 (RV)\u00b1\u00a04.5%37%53%\u201310%with Donald Trump and Bernie SandersPoll sourceDate(s)administeredSamplesize[b]Marginof errorDonaldTrump (R)BernieSanders (D)OtherUndecidedSiena CollegeFeb 16\u201320, 2020658 (RV)\u00b1\u00a04.5%38%56%\u20137%with Donald Trump and Elizabeth WarrenPoll sourceDate(s)administeredSamplesize[b]Marginof errorDonaldTrump (R)ElizabethWarren (D)OtherUndecidedSiena CollegeFeb 16\u201320, 2020658 (RV)\u00b1\u00a04.5%39%53%\u20138%Electoral slates[edit]These electors were nominated by each party in order to vote in the Electoral College should their candidate win the state:[33]Joe Biden andKamala HarrisDemocratic PartyWorking Families PartyDonald Trump andMike PenceRepublican PartyConservative PartyJo Jorgensen andSpike CohenLibertarian PartyHowie Hawkins andAngela WalkerGreen PartyBrock Pierce andKarla BallardIndependence PartyJune O’NeillXiao WangKatherine M. SheehanThomas J. GarryLovely WarrenGary S. LaBarberaStuart H. ApplebaumMary SullivanGeorge K. GreshamRandi WeingartenMario F. CilentoAlphonso DavidHazel Nell DukesChristine QuinnByron BrownCorey JohnsonScott StringerAndrea Stewart-CousinsCarl HeastieJay JacobsLetitia JamesThomas DiNapoliKathy HochulAndrew CuomoHillary ClintonBill ClintonRub\u00e9n D\u00edaz Jr.Judith HunterAnastasia SomozaBrendan LantryJesus GarciaSusan McNeilJoseph CairoWilliam NapierKarl SimmethChristine BenedictJoann AriolaCarl ZeilmanJennifer Saul RichCharlie JoyceAdrian AndersonRob OrttWill BarclayJohn BurnettChloe SunElie HirschfeldYechezkel MoskowitzShaun Marie LevineChristopher KendallFrancis Vella-MarroneAndrea CatsimatidisJohn GereauRodney StrangeTodd RouseTrisha TurnerRobert KeisNick LangworthyTom DadeyDaniel P. DonnellyDuane J. WhitmerRobert M. ArrigoMark N. AxinnErin M. BeckerRachel E. BeckerRichard BellKari R. BittnerMark S. BraimanJay A. CarrTucker C. CoburnAnthony D’OrazioKevin A. WilsonMilva E. DordalPietro S. GeraciPaul M. GrindleMark E. GlogowskiShawn HannonAndrew M. KolsteePeyton D. KunselmanBrandon G. LyonLeonard E. MorlockLora L. NewellGary PopkinThomas D. QuiterIlya SchwartzburgPaul C. SechristLarry SharpeWilliam C. AndersonStephen BloomPeter A. LaveniaCassandra J. LemsPaul W. GilmanDarin RobbinsBarbara A. KidneyJoseph R. NahamMichael E. O’NeilEric M. JonesCarol S. PrzybylakTatianna M. MoragneJames R. Brown IIIJames McCabeCandace CarponterMichael D. EmperorJennifer R. WhiteAllan D. HunterMary B. HouseSerena L. SealsDavid Sutliff-AtiasCraig A. SeemanDaneilla LieblingAdrienne R. Craig-WilliamsChristopher J. ArcherClaudia FlanaganGil OblerDebra A. RosarioGloria MatteraDavid L. GiannascoliKenneth BayneScott R. MajorRobert G. PilnickBarbara PilnickGary P. NewmanArthur AbbateJoseph W. FullerMaryann H. MajorAndrew J. BogardtAnna C. BogardtRobert J. BogardtTrisha L. SterlingThomas HatfieldThomas A. ConnollyAtef S. ZeinaLee KolesnikoffJoseph L. BaruthPaul E. CaputoEdward G. MillerThomas S. ConnollyDennis R. ZackMichael AmoRichard S. BellandoMaryellen BellandoWilliam BogardtTeresa BogardtFrank M. MacKayKristin A. MacKayCarolyn P. MajorResults[edit]By county[edit]County[35]Joe BidenDonald TrumpJo JorgensenLibertarianHowie HawkinsGreenBrock PierceIndependenceWrite\u2013insVarious partiesMarginTotal votesDemocraticWorking FamiliesTotalRepublicanConservativeTotal#%#%#%#%#%#%#%#%#%#%#%Albany91,26059.42%8,2145.35%99,47464.77%46,06629.99%5,0153.27%51,08133.26%1,5230.99%7790.51%5950.39%1340.09%48,39331.51%153,586Allegany5,75427.78%2941.42%6,04829.19%13,12363.35%1,0124.89%14,13568.23%3381.63%880.42%920.44%150.07%\u20138,087\u201339.04%20,716Bronx337,78979.31%17,5854.13%355,37483.44%62,17814.60%5,5621.31%67,74015.91%7750.18%1,4200.33%4060.10%1680.04%287,63467.53%425,883Broome43,96647.38%3,0363.27%47,00250.66%40,75343.92%3,0383.27%43,79147.20%1,1031.18%4320.46%3710.39%760.08%3,2113.46%92,775Cattaraugus11,31032.54%5691.64%11,87934.17%20,29158.37%1,8645.36%22,15563.74%4501.29%1130.33%1540.44%90.03%\u201310,276\u201329.57%34,760Cayuga15,61242.47%7472.03%16,35944.50%17,68848.12%1,9445.28%19,63253.41%4011.09%1850.50%1630.44%140.03%\u20133,273\u20138.90%36,754Chautauqua21,93437.05%1,1541.94%23,08839.00%31,13552.59%3,7186.28%34,85358.87%7561.27%2030.34%2720.45%240.04%\u201311,765\u201319.87%59,196Chemung15,96940.52%6671.69%16,63642.21%20,37351.70%1,5493.93%21,92255.63%5601.42%1170.30%1620.41%130.03%\u20135,286\u201313.42%39,410Chenango7,91035.49%3901.75%8,30037.24%12,61656.61%8803.94%13,49660.56%3161.41%1070.48%800.35%70.03%\u20135,196\u201323.31%22,306Clinton17,31648.86%1,0482.96%18,36451.82%15,31343.21%1,2013.39%16,51446.60%2790.79%1210.34%1530.43%60.02%1,8505.22%35,437Columbia18,17951.18%2,2076.21%20,38657.39%13,06536.78%1,3993.94%14,46440.72%3571.01%1850.52%1150.32%150.04%5,92216.67%35,522Cortland9,79245.16%5782.66%10,37047.83%10,00146.13%7883.63%10,78949.76%2951.36%1130.52%960.44%160.07%\u2013419\u20131.93%21,679Delaware8,56737.29%5762.51%9,14339.80%12,65555.09%7323.19%13,38758.28%2681.17%810.35%790.34%130.06%\u20134,244\u201318.48%22,971Dutchess75,90750.35%5,5363.67%81,44354.03%59,95239.77%6,9204.59%66,87244.36%1,2470.83%5780.38%5130.34%920.06%14,5719.67%150,745Erie252,56953.35%14,7013.10%267,27056.45%172,35236.40%25,2005.32%197,55241.72%4,4400.93%1,9870.41%1,8950.40%2740.03%69,71814.72%473,418Essex9,33048.39%6203.21%9,95051.60%8,39943.56%5833.02%8,98246.58%1730.89%730.37%900.46%120.06%9685.02%19,280Franklin8,76745.50%4862.52%9,25348.02%9,09247.19%5762.99%9,66850.18%1730.90%770.40%930.48%40.02%\u2013415\u20132.16%19,268Fulton7,55131.84%3801.60%7,93133.44%14,14559.64%1,2335.20%15,37864.84%2481.05%730.31%870.37%10.00%\u20137,447\u201331.40%23,718Genesee9,10731.17%5181.77%9,62532.94%16,86857.73%2,0086.87%18,87664.61%4561.56%1090.37%1380.47%130.04%\u20139,251\u201331.67%29,217Greene9,36337.25%9833.91%10,34641.16%12,79450.90%1,4775.88%14,27156.77%3051.21%1210.48%910.36%30.01%\u20133,925\u201315.61%25,137Hamilton1,13132.69%471.36%1,17834.05%2,05659.42%1694.88%2,22564.31%411.18%70.20%80.23%10.03%\u20131,047\u201330.26%3,460Herkimer9,46432.27%4751.61%9,93933.89%17,57159.92%1,3004.43%18,87164.35%2981.01%980.33%1110.37%50.01%\u20138,932\u201330.46%29,322Jefferson16,67938.03%6281.43%17,30739.46%24,01954.77%1,6103.67%25,62958.44%5371.22%1860.42%1890.43%70.02%\u20138,322\u201318.98%43,855Kings (Brooklyn)608,79466.63%94,51610.34%703,31076.97%187,30720.50%15,4651.69%202,77221.78%2,5040.27%3,9780.44%6820.07%4440.05%500,53854.78%913,690Lewis3,67728.41%1461.12%3,82329.54%8,32964.37%5614.33%8,89068.70%1260.97%460.35%470.36%70.05%\u20135,067\u201339.16%12,939Livingston11,70437.27%7732.46%12,47739.73%16,19551.57%1,9876.33%18,18257.90%4601.46%1280.41%1400.45%140.04%\u20135,705\u201318.17%31,401Madison14,01841.18%7872.31%14,80543.49%16,81149.39%1,5984.69%18,40854.08%4741.39%1850.54%1530.44%90.02%\u20133,604\u201310.58%34,035Monroe213,60656.23%12,1403.20%225,74659.43%127,19133.48%18,4704.86%145,66138.35%4,8651.28%1,5290.40%1,7850.47%2780.07%80,08521.08%379,864Montgomery7,63636.13%3411.61%7,97737.74%11,57054.75%1,1755.56%12,74560.31%2421.15%870.41%790.37%40.02%\u20134,768\u201322.57%21,134Nassau380,90752.11%15,5972.13%396,50454.24%305,14441.74%21,5722.95%326,71644.70%3,5940.49%1,9240.26%1,9010.26%3440.05%69,7889.54%730,983New York (Manhattan)540,74877.78%62,2928.96%603,04086.74%79,03211.37%6,1530.88%85,18512.25%3,3290.48%2,6940.39%6560.09%3590.05%517,85574.49%695,263Niagara43,71741.99%2,3122.22%46,02944.21%49,28747.34%6,7816.51%56,06853.85%1,1331.09%3710.36%4790.46%430.04%\u201310,039\u20139.64%104,123Oneida39,65738.93%2,3162.27%41,97341.20%53,24552.27%4,6154.53%57,86056.80%1,1971.17%3960.38%4010.39%310.03%\u201315,887\u201315.59%101,858Onondaga132,72356.22%6,2682.65%138,99158.87%81,07334.34%10,6424.50%91,71538.85%2,5561.08%1,8200.77%8510.36%1350.05%47,27620.02%236,068Ontario27,38945.89%1,3602.27%28,74948.17%25,67743.02%3,1055.20%28,78248.23%9841.64%2750.46%3160.52%360.06%\u201333\u20130.05%59,142Orange80,76446.80%4,1912.42%84,95549.23%73,06742.34%12,0016.95%85,06849.30%1,3890.80%5270.30%5070.29%830.04%\u2013113\u20130.06%172,539Orleans5,32629.34%2611.44%5,58730.78%10,97260.44%1,1546.36%12,12666.80%3131.72%500.28%710.39%70.04%\u20136,539\u201336.02%18,154Oswego20,01736.73%1,1282.06%21,14538.80%29,32553.81%2,8175.16%32,14258.98%6981.28%2840.52%2070.37220.04%\u201310,997\u201320.18%54,498Otsego12,30743.94%6682.38%12,97546.32%13,44848.01%9343.33%14,38251.35%4091.46%1360.49%960.34%120.04%\u20131,407\u20135.03%28,010Putnam23,23542.25%1,7203.12%24,95545.38%26,46548.12%2,8185.12%29,28353.25%4110.74%1620.29%1550.28%250.04%\u20134,328\u20137.87%54,991Queens523,15266.37%45,8865.82%569,03872.19%197,59925.07%15,0661.91%212,66526.98%2,4830.31%2,9690.38%7050.09%4020.05%356,37345.21%788,262Rensselaer37,55847.37%3,4114.30%40,96951.67%32,14340.54%4,3575.50%36,50046.04%1,0161.28%3740.47%3860.49%410.05%4,4695.63%79,286Richmond (Staten Island)85,19739.39%5,8002.68%90,99742.07%114,60852.99%8,7124.03%123,32057.02%9090.42%6620.31%2650.12%1250.06%\u201332,323\u201314.95%216,278Rockland71,65647.65%4,1462.76%75,80250.41%64,51042.90%8,6765.77%73,18648.67%6500.43%3230.21%3340.22%740.05%2,6161.74%150,369St. Lawrence18,47741.24%8841.97%19,36143.22%22,63750.53%1,9714.40%24,60854.93%4370.98%2010.45%1720.38%210.05%\u20135,247\u201311.71%44,800Saratoga64,45448.59%4,0173.03%68,47151.62%55,38241.75%5,9234.46%61,30546.21%1,7371.31%5110.39%5800.44%510.04%7,1665.41%132,655Schenectady39,93053.34%2,5353.39%42,46556.72%26,73735.72%4,0045.35%30,74141.06%9231.23%3520.47%3450.46%360.05%11,72415.66%74,862Schoharie4,99831.86%3472.21%5,34534.08%9,02157.51%8825.62%9,90363.14%2821.80%750.48%770.49%30.02%\u20134,558\u201329.06%15,685Schuyler3,62237.19%2812.89%3,90340.07%5,19253.31%4294.40%5,62157.71%1301.33%510.52%330.34%20.02%\u20131,718\u201317.64%9,740Seneca6,54841.95%3662.34%6,91444.30%7,60248.71%7274.66%8,32953.36%1931.24%730.47%920.59%70.04%\u20131,415\u20139.06%15,608Steuben15,00932.50%7811.69%15,79034.19%27,38859.31%2,0864.52%29,47463.83%5701.23%1640.36%1670.36%140.03%\u201313,684\u201329.64%46,179Suffolk364,09147.17%16,9302.19%381,02149.37%345,75044.80%35,5034.60%381,25349.40%4,5930.59%2,1350.27%2,5390.32%2100.02%\u2013232\u20130.03%771,751Sullivan14,42441.63%1,0653.07%15,48944.71%16,99249.04%1,6734.83%18,66553.87%2470.71%1230.36%1120.32%110.03%\u20133,176\u20139.16%34,647Tioga9,13136.47%5032.01%9,63438.48%13,87055.40%9213.68%14,79159.08%4161.66%920.37%970.39%60.02%\u20135,157\u201320.60%25,036Tompkins28,97963.36%4,64010.15%33,61973.51%10,24022.39%8561.87%11,09624.26%4741.04%3650.80%1370.30%440.10%22,52349.25%45,735Ulster50,49751.83%7,4737.67%57,97059.51%33,89134.79%3,6993.80%37,59038.59%8790.90%6180.63%3440.35%190.02%20,38020.92%97,420Warren16,60645.94%1,0362.87%17,64248.80%16,27145.01%1,4283.95%17,69948.96%4241.17%2040.56%1620.45%180.05%\u201357\u20130.16%36,149Washington10,88238.72%6832.43%11,56541.16%14,54451.76%1,3974.97%15,94156.73%3401.21%1280.46%1190.42%80.03%\u20134,376\u201315.57%28,101Wayne16,60337.12%8531.91%17,45639.03%23,06551.57%3,1397.02%26,20458.59%6561.47%1840.41%2140.48%130.03%\u20138,748\u201319.56%44,727Westchester296,19364.06%16,2443.51%312,43767.57%133,41428.85%11,3162.44%144,73031.30%2,5690.55%1,2800.27%1,1450.24%2020.04%167,70736.27%462,363Wyoming4,80124.75%2721.40%5,07326.15%12,55264.70%1,3466.94%13,89871.64%2671.38%630.32%930.48%50.03%\u20138,825\u201345.49%19,399Yates4,01437.51%2051.92%4,21939.43%5,61152.43%5975.58%6,20858.01%1651.54%400.37%590.55%100.09%\u20131,989\u201318.58%10,701Total4,858,27356.38%386,6134.48%5,244,88660.86%2,955,66234.30%296,3353.43%3,251,99737.73%60,3830.70%32,8320.38%22,6560.26%4,1070.04%1,992,88923.13%8,616,861 County Flips: Democratic \u00a0\u00a0Hold\u00a0\u00a0Gain from Republican Republican \u00a0\u00a0HoldCounties that flipped from Republican to Democratic[edit]By congressional district[edit]Biden won 20 of 27 congressional districts, including one held by a Republican.[36]Analysis[edit] Waiting in line for early votingNew York continued its streak as a solidly blue state, with Biden winning 60.87% of the vote to Trump’s 37.74%, a Democratic victory margin of 23.13%. Due to a decrease in third-party voting, both candidates increased their party’s vote share from 2016, though Biden’s margin of victory was slightly wider than Hillary Clinton’s.New York’s inexperience processing a large number of mail ballots, having only legalized no-excuse absentee voting in 2019,[5][37] led to weekslong delays in counting them.[38] Over two million ballots and over 20% of the votes were cast by mail.[39] New York failed to meet its November 28 deadline to certify the election, with hundreds of thousands of votes still uncounted.[40] State Senator Michael Gianaris commented, “if we were a swing state in this presidential election, this would be a national scandal”.[38] New York’s voting tabulation was updated on March 15, 2021.The delay in the counting of mail-in ballots wrongly made it seem at first that Biden had underperformed Hillary Clinton in 2016, a phenomenon referred to as a “red mirage.”[41] However, when all the votes were counted, Biden outperformed Clinton’s margin over Trump by about 0.6 percentage points. This was due to a major improvement across Upstate New York and on Long Island. Meanwhile, four of New York City’s five boroughs shifted towards Trump (with the exception of Staten Island).Donald Trump is the first Republican to receive 3 million or more raw votes in New York since George H. W. Bush in 1988.Biden flipped 4 counties that Trump won in 2016: Broome, Essex, Rensselaer, and Saratoga counties.[42][43]Biden also came very close to flipping an additional six counties, as he lost Cortland County by 419 votes, Franklin County by 415 votes, Ontario County by 33 votes, Orange County by 113 votes, Suffolk County by 232 votes, and Warren County by just 57 votes.[44] Trump’s narrow victories in these counties meant that they were decided by a combined total of just 1,269 votes out of more than 1 million votes cast across all six counties.According to exit polls by CNN, Biden won 96% of Democrats, who were 41% of the electorate, 59% of Independents, who made up 32% of voters, and 21% of Republicans, who made up 27% of the vote.[45]Biden dominated core Democratic constituencies in New York City, winning 76% of the city’s vote.[46] Statewide, Biden won 94% of Black voters and 76% of Latino voters.[46] Biden won the upstate of New York (excluding New York City’s results), albeit by a much smaller 52.4% to 45.9% margin, or 2,923,127 votes to Trump’s 2,561,315. In urban Dominican neighborhoods, Trump reached a measly 15% of the vote to Biden’s 85%.[47] Biden also won by 18 points in the Hudson Valley and urban Upstate counties. Trump’s core support base came from rural Upstate counties. However, Trump made strong inroads with Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods of New York City[48][49] and in Hasidic Jewish communities in Rockland County.[50] The shift is attributed to Trump’s strong pro-Israel stance as president.[48] New York was one of five states in the nation in which Biden’s victory margin was larger than 1 million raw votes, the others being California, Maryland, Massachusetts and Illinois.See also[edit]^ Calculated by taking the difference of 100% and all other candidates combined.^ a b c d e f g h Key:A \u2013 all adultsRV \u2013 registered votersLV \u2013 likely votersV \u2013 unclear^ Overlapping sample with the previous SurveyMonkey\/Axios poll, but more information available regarding sample size^ “Someone else” with 2%^ Pierce (I) with 2%, “someone else” and would not vote with 0%^ “Someone else” with 3%; would not vote with 2%References[edit]^ Kelly, Ben (August 13, 2018). “US elections key dates: When are the 2018 midterms and the 2020 presidential campaign?”. The Independent. Archived from the original on August 2, 2018. Retrieved January 3, 2019.^ “New York Election Results”. New York Times. November 3, 2020. Retrieved November 10, 2020.^ “Distribution of Electoral Votes”. National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved January 3, 2019.^ Choi, Matthew (October 31, 2019). “Trump, a symbol of New York, is officially a Floridian now”. Politico. Retrieved November 18, 2020.^ a b Ferr\u00e9-Sadurn\u00ed, Luis (August 20, 2020). “New York Will Allow Voters to Cast Mail-In Ballots”. The New York Times. ISSN\u00a00362-4331. Retrieved November 29, 2020.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)^ “New York 2020 President exit polls”. www.cnn.com. Retrieved November 5, 2022.^ “New York presidential primary postponed amid record numbers of coronavirus cases”. ABC News. March 28, 2020.^ “New York might cancel Republican presidential primary”. Politico. February 28, 2020.^ “New York cancels Republican presidential primary”. Politico. March 3, 2020.^ “New York cancels Democratic presidential primary”. Politico. April 28, 2020.^ “Judge rules New York Democratic presidential primary will take place as planned”. CNN. May 6, 2020.^ “Certified Results from the June 23, 2020 Presidential Primary Election” (PDF). New York State Board of Elections. September 18, 2020. Retrieved September 20, 2020.^ “2020 Presidential Primaries, Caucuses, and Conventions: New York Democrat”. The Green Papers. Retrieved July 3, 2020.^ Reisman, Nick (August 31, 2020). “NY Conservative Party Backs Trump’s Re-Election”. NY1. Retrieved September 10, 2020.^ Nichols, John (August 14, 2020). “The Working Families Party Endorses Biden and Harris”. The Nation. Retrieved September 10, 2020.^ Slattery, Denis (October 26, 2020). “Working Families Party gets support from New Yorkers and U.S. Senators Schumer, Gillibrand”. New York Daily News. Retrieved October 29, 2020.^ Howman, David (April 1, 2020). “Did Jacob Hornberger Rig the New York Libertarian Primary?”. The Libertarian Republic. Retrieved April 18, 2021.^ Independence Party of New York (August 24, 2020). “The Independence Party of New York Endorses Brock Pierce for President of the United States”. PR Newswire. Retrieved September 10, 2020.^ “2020 POTUS Race ratings” (PDF). The Cook Political Report. Retrieved May 21, 2019.^ “POTUS Ratings | Inside Elections”. insideelections.com. Retrieved May 21, 2019.^ “Larry J. Sabato’s Crystal Ball\u00a0\u00bb 2020 President”. crystalball.centerforpolitics.org. Retrieved May 21, 2019.^ “2020 Election Forecast”. Politico. November 19, 2019.^ “Battle for White House”. RCP. April 19, 2019.^ 2020 Bitecofer Model Electoral College Predictions Archived April 23, 2020, at the Wayback Machine, Niskanen Center, March 24, 2020, retrieved: April 19, 2020.^ David Chalian; Terence Burlij (June 11, 2020). “Road to 270: CNN’s debut Electoral College map for 2020”. CNN. Retrieved June 16, 2020.^ “Forecasting the US elections”. The Economist. Retrieved July 7, 2020.^ “2020 Election Battleground Tracker”. CBS News. July 12, 2020. Retrieved July 13, 2020.^ “2020 Presidential Election Interactive Map”. 270 to Win.^ “ABC News Race Ratings”. CBS News. July 24, 2020. Retrieved July 24, 2020.^ Montanaro, Domenico (August 3, 2020). “2020 Electoral Map Ratings: Trump Slides, Biden Advantage Expands Over 270 Votes”. NPR.org. Retrieved August 3, 2020.^ “Biden dominates the electoral map, but here’s how the race could tighten”. NBC News. Retrieved August 6, 2020.^ “2020 Election Forecast”. FiveThirtyEight. August 12, 2020. Retrieved August 14, 2020.^ “AMENDED Certification for the November 3, 2020 General Election” (PDF). New York Board of Elections. Retrieved December 8, 2020.^ 2020 Election Results, New York State Board of Elections, December 3, 2020.^ “2020 Election Results”. New York State Board of Elections. Archived from the original on August 17, 2020. Retrieved March 21, 2021.^ “Introducing the 2021 Cook Political Report Partisan Voter Index”. The Cook Political Report. Retrieved March 19, 2021.^ “Governor Cuomo Signs Landmark Legislation Modernizing New York’s Voting Laws”. Albany: Governor Andrew M. Cuomo. January 24, 2019. Archived from the original on January 26, 2019. Retrieved November 29, 2020.^ a b Krieg, Gregory; Simko-Bednarski, Evan (November 18, 2020). “‘It’s embarrassing’: Why New York is still waiting for full election results”. CNN. Archived from the original on November 18, 2020. Retrieved March 22, 2021.^ “NY May Speed Up And Permanently Expand Vote-By-Mail, Reform Absentee Count Process”. NBC New York. November 25, 2020. Archived from the original on November 26, 2020. Retrieved November 29, 2020.^ Bergin, Brigid (November 28, 2020). “NYC Blows Past Deadline To Certify General Election Results As Lawmakers Push Reforms”. Gothamist. Archived from the original on November 28, 2020. Retrieved November 29, 2020.^ Kahn, Chris; Lange, Jason (November 3, 2020). “Explainer: Red mirage, blue mirage – Beware of early U.S. election wins”. Reuters. Retrieved December 30, 2020.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)^ “New York Election Results 2016”. The New York Times. August 1, 2017.^ “New York Election Results”. The New York Times. November 3, 2020.^ “Presidential Election Results: Biden Wins”. The New York Times. November 3, 2020.^ “New York 2020 President exit polls”. www.cnn.com.^ a b “New York 2020 President exit polls”. www.cnn.com. Retrieved August 8, 2021.^ Cai, Weiyi; Fessenden, Ford (December 21, 2020). “Immigrant Neighborhoods Shifted Red as the Country Chose Blue”. The New York Times. ISSN\u00a00362-4331. Retrieved November 5, 2022.^ a b Kolko, Jed; Monkovic, Toni (December 7, 2020). “The Places That Had the Biggest Swings Toward and Against Trump”. The New York Times. ISSN\u00a00362-4331. Retrieved August 8, 2021.^ J. Miles Coleman [@JMilesColeman] (December 2, 2020). “Biden carried Jerry Nadler’s NY-10 by 76%-23%, down a bit from Clinton’s 77%-19%. Brooklyn makes up about 1\/5 of the district, and it takes in many Orthodox Jewish precincts. 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