Clinton lost the Electoral College by a collective 80,000-ish votes across three swing states: Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania. (It was 80,000, not 107,000. The overall amount of turnout wasn’t bad (for example, in Michigan, it went from 63% 2012 to 61% 2016 and shot up to 71% in 2020 to get Trump the fuck out of office). However, Trump’s turnout was considerably better. Per the NYT:
If the turnout had been as good for Mrs. Clinton as it was for Mr. Trump, she would have won by our analysis. But even then, she would have only scratched by.
And the thing is, there should have been even stronger turnout by the Democrats to keep this insane threat out of office. This man was a raving lunatic, and every Democrat saw him as one. But there wasn’t. All the polls showed Hillary winning, and so I imagine plenty of people just assumed it to not be their job. As shown above, for instance, people turned out in droves in Michigan in 2020 to boot Trump out (Trump lost by about 150,000 votes there). So my main contention is that turnout was depressed compared to what it should’ve been with what an obviously insane threat this man was to our country but simply wasn’t because the other candidate was whatever and was basically sure to win anyway.
Registered voters who didn’t vote on Election Day in November were more Democratic-leaning than the registered voters who turned out, according to a post-election poll from SurveyMonkey, shared with FiveThirtyEight. In fact, Donald Trump probably would have lost to Hillary Clinton had Republican- and Democratic-leaning registered voters cast ballots at equal rates.
The biggest reason given by non-voters for staying home was that they didn’t like the candidates.
Clinton, apparently, couldn’t get those who disliked both candidates — and who may have been more favorably disposed to her candidacy — to turn out and vote.
So I can’t substantiate through hard numbers the idea that people didn’t turn out because they assumed she was winning, but we were both there. Polls ranged anywhere from a 3/10 chance to a 1/100 chance for Trump. The talk among Democrats was that we had a female president like it had already happened. If you talked to your friends about it, the consensus was that Trump was an unviable clown and that we were in for four boring-ass years of the status quo. If you ran in progressive circles, the idea was that since the Democrat was a shoe-in anyway, it should’ve been Bernie, because even his more radical ideas couldn’t lose against a trainwreck like Trump. Literally everyone was shocked when the election was called for Trump. I can substantiate through a reliable source that those who liked neither candidate but would have likely preferred Hillary stayed home and were a large factor in her not winning by such thin margins. But I have to ask you to take my hand and believe that a decent portion of those apathetic dislike-both voters who would’ve preferred Hillary didn’t go vote because of the sort of premature consensus around Hillary’s victory.
Clinton lost the Electoral College by a collective 80,000-ish votes across three swing states: Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania. (It was 80,000, not 107,000. The overall amount of turnout wasn’t bad (for example, in Michigan, it went from 63% 2012 to 61% 2016 and shot up to 71% in 2020 to get Trump the fuck out of office). However, Trump’s turnout was considerably better. Per the NYT:
And the thing is, there should have been even stronger turnout by the Democrats to keep this insane threat out of office. This man was a raving lunatic, and every Democrat saw him as one. But there wasn’t. All the polls showed Hillary winning, and so I imagine plenty of people just assumed it to not be their job. As shown above, for instance, people turned out in droves in Michigan in 2020 to boot Trump out (Trump lost by about 150,000 votes there). So my main contention is that turnout was depressed compared to what it should’ve been with what an obviously insane threat this man was to our country but simply wasn’t because the other candidate was whatever and was basically sure to win anyway.
“so I imagine”
https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/registered-voters-who-stayed-home-probably-cost-clinton-the-election/
So I can’t substantiate through hard numbers the idea that people didn’t turn out because they assumed she was winning, but we were both there. Polls ranged anywhere from a 3/10 chance to a 1/100 chance for Trump. The talk among Democrats was that we had a female president like it had already happened. If you talked to your friends about it, the consensus was that Trump was an unviable clown and that we were in for four boring-ass years of the status quo. If you ran in progressive circles, the idea was that since the Democrat was a shoe-in anyway, it should’ve been Bernie, because even his more radical ideas couldn’t lose against a trainwreck like Trump. Literally everyone was shocked when the election was called for Trump. I can substantiate through a reliable source that those who liked neither candidate but would have likely preferred Hillary stayed home and were a large factor in her not winning by such thin margins. But I have to ask you to take my hand and believe that a decent portion of those apathetic dislike-both voters who would’ve preferred Hillary didn’t go vote because of the sort of premature consensus around Hillary’s victory.