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*FACTS: VOTE TOTALS AND VOTER TURNOUT*



*Total number of votes cast: 126,709,939 million*



Clinton:  60,555,017  -- 47.79% of votes cast



Trump:  60,088,797  -- 47.42% of votes cast



Johnson:  4,131,788  -- 3.26% of votes cast



Stein:  1,236,811  -- 0.97% of votes cast



Others: 690,526 -- 0.54% of votes cast



Parsing it;



Nearly half of eligible voters (231,556,622 people eligible vote) did not
vote in the 2016 presidential election, according to data of early turnout
rates compiled by the United States Election Project
<http://www.electproject.org/2016g> and crunched by Josh Nelson
<https://twitter.com/SSS_joshnelson>. The full results may not be available
until two weeks.



The data found that of the U.S. population:



·                *45.35% (or 105 million eligible voters) didn't vote *

·                *26.15% of all eligible voters voted for Hillary Clinton *

·                *25.95% of all eligible voters voted for Donald Trump *



It wasn't the lowest turnout in history, however. About 49 percent of
eligible voters did not participate in the 1996 election, in which
Democratic candidate Bill Clinton beat Republican candidate Bob Dole.



For the *swing states*, tallied by Jason Andrews
<https://twitter.com/elgato7664/status/796406096751689729>:

·                36.5% didn't vote

·                29.9% voted for Clinton

·                30.9% voted for Trump

·                1.9% voted Johnson





Again, the abstention vote was the largest voting bloc: 105 million
eligible voters stayed home on Election Day. Trump was elected with 25.5%
of the eligible voters.



Not only did he not win the popular vote, he garnered the votes of just
one-fourth of the eligible voters.



* * * * * * * * * *





*Obama’s Vanished Coalition (by Jack Rasmus)*



Trump’s election can be traced to the shift in key groups of voters who had
supported Obama in 2008 and who gave Obama his ‘one more chance’ to do
something in 2012, and who were deeply disappointed when he failed to do so
since 2012.  At the forefront of these groups was the white non-college
educated working class, especially those concentrated in the great lakes
industrial states in that geographic ‘arc’ from Pennsylvania to Wisconsin.
This group not only turned from Democrats but turned to Trump—as they had
in 1980 as the so-called ‘Reagan Democrats’—in response to another economic
crisis of the 1970s during which they were also abandoned by the Democratic
Party. Clinton 2016 thus lost key swing states of Pennsylvania, Wisconsin,
Ohio, Iowa, and Michigan that helped put Obama ‘over the top’ a second time
in those states.



Another important voter group that delivered for Obama in 2012 and did not
for Clinton in 2016 in similar percentages were Latinos.  They voted by a
margin of 44% for Obama 2012, but only 36% for Clinton.  Apparently, Trump
insults of Latinos were less important than Obama deportation policies in
recent years.



Women voters were supposed to vote overwhelmingly for Clinton, but white
women aged 45 and over did not.  And 75 million ‘millennials, 34 and under,
were driven away by Clinton and the Democratic Party’s treatment of the
Sanders campaign during the primaries and by offering no solution to the
hopeless scenario of insecure, low pay service jobs in exchange for record
student debt.



In short, white non-college educated workers abandoned the Democrats, while
other groups simply ‘stayed home’ and did not vote in the numbers they
previously had in 2012.



One final statistic worth considering: Over 95 percent of jobs created
during the “recovery” have gone to college-educated workers, while those
with a high school diploma or less are being left behind. A report
published by Georgetown University reveals that those with at least some
college education have captured 11.5 million of the 11.6 million jobs
created during the recovery – again, mostly jobs without benefits, unions,
job security.



* * * * * * * * * *





*ELECTORAL COLLEGE VOTE*



Hillary Clinton won the popular vote. In any democracy respecting the
fundamental democratic principle of “one-person, one-vote, Clinton should
have been elected president. This was not to be.



For the second time in 16 years, a Democratic Party candidate won the
popular vote (in 2000 it was Al Gore) but lost the election.



While Trump lost the national popular vote by more than 400,000 votes
(absolute final tally is not yet in), he won the Electoral Collge by a wide
margin: 58%, or 308 delegates, for Trump vs. 42%, for 230 delegates, for
Clinton.



Why this disparity? Why this blatantly anti-democratic setup that denies
One Person, One Vote?



The Electoral College is an 18th Century holdover written into the
Constitution “to prevent mob rule” – which is the term that the “founding
fathers” used to justify the Electoral College. The college was written
into the Constitution of 1787.



The Electoral College provides a winner-takes-all formula for the selection
of delegates – meaning that all the delegates in the state go to the
candidate who wins a majority of the popular vote in that state. This
disenfranchises all voters who voted for the candidates who did not win. It
gives undue influence to smaller states, where voters in mainly rural areas
with more conservative voters have a proportionately higher ratio of
electoral college delegates. It also disenfranchises third parties, who
have little chance of winning a majority in the state but who might be able
to cast significant numbers of votes.



It is a system that is undemocratic through and through.



* * * * *



** A word about the abstentionists and others prevented from voting*



Most Democratic Party pollsters had projected a Hillary Clinton victory
based on a projected voter turnout of 136 million. Early polls had
suggested that this would be the expected turnout. But the total voter
turnout was far less than expected; 126 million votes cast -- or roughly 10
million votes short of most projections.



In 2008, the total number of votes cast was 131 million; in 2012 the total
number was 129 million. The number of registered voters in 2008 was almost
50 million votes lower; in 2012 it was roughly 27 million votes lower.



What accounts for the lower-than-expected voter turnout?



Some liberal newspapers and online blogs such as Politico, attribute this
to the voter anger at both the Republican and Democratic candidates.  Many
people just voted with their feet and stayed home. They also point out that
the Black vote was lower than expected because of the distrust in Hillary
Clinton but also because in some states, such as North Carolina, the
Republican officials imposed new restrictive voting laws targeting African
American voters specifically. These laws restricted access to early voting.



And let's not forget the "felony disenfranchisement" in countless states --
that is, the New Jim Crow laws that ban prisoners and ex-felons from
voting. The total is 3.9 million people who could otherwise vote. This is
13% of the adult Black male population.



Democratic Party lashes out at abstentionists and third party voters:



Colin Kaepernick, the quarterback of the San Francisco 49ers, gained great
notoriety when – to protest the continued police killings of Black youth –
he refused to stand during the pre-game rendition of the national anthem.
He took a knee instead.



Kaepernick’s protest went further. In an interview prior to the election,
he explained that he had no plans to vote. Speaking about the third debate
between Clinton and Trump, he stated:



“I watched a little bit of it. To me it was embarrassing to watch that
these two are our candidates. At this point, the election is a choice
between the lesser of two evils. But in the end it’s still evil.”



Kaepernick was raked over the coals by the sports media, the Democratic
Party, and the political establishment. They accused Kaepernick of
poisoning the minds of Black youth against the political system. The
Democrats also went out of their way to discourage people from voting for
third parties, arguing that a vote for a third party was a vote for Trump.



Now the refrain that was used to denounce Ralph Nader is being used to
denounce Jill Stein of the Green Party. She is accused of denying the vote
to Clinton in two swing states, which also happens not to be true. It’s
called blaming everyone but yourself.
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