bsjkki Posted February 15, 2017 Share Posted February 15, 2017 This article article contains interesting statistics about the Mormon voter population by state. https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/clintons-ground-game-didnt-cost-her-the-election/ 1 Link to comment
Stargazer Posted February 15, 2017 Share Posted February 15, 2017 Well, I read the article, and I had a look at the Mormon population in each state (lds.org), but after referring to the Mormon population in each state the author failed to state why that was important. I get that the author somehow thought that the Mormon population in some swing states had some effect upon the election, but I've read the article a couple of times and I don't understand how he (she?) arrived at this conclusion. In fact, I found the article fairly obtuse. And the lds.org page is not "Mormon voter population by state". It just the number of Mormons in each state. 1 Link to comment
bsjkki Posted February 15, 2017 Author Share Posted February 15, 2017 40 minutes ago, Stargazer said: Well, I read the article, and I had a look at the Mormon population in each state (lds.org), but after referring to the Mormon population in each state the author failed to state why that was important. I get that the author somehow thought that the Mormon population in some swing states had some effect upon the election, but I've read the article a couple of times and I don't understand how he (she?) arrived at this conclusion. In fact, I found the article fairly obtuse. And the lds.org page is not "Mormon voter population by state". It just the number of Mormons in each state. So it is not the percentage of Mormon voters, it's the percentage of Mormons in each state. Thanks for clarifying. I am glad I was not the only one who struggled to figure out why the Mormon statistics were so important. I surmised that somehow as Mormons we messed up his numbers so we had to be included as a variable. I found his article poorly explained. I basically concluded that it wasn't other campaign issues for Clinton but demographic changes with non college educated white people that shifted the results of the election. I would love to see the actual percentage of Mormon voters by state. Link to comment
Calm Posted February 15, 2017 Share Posted February 15, 2017 (edited) I got the impression they included the Mormon stats n their analysis in order to remove the influence of that variable on Utah and other high LDS density states. I may be wrong as I didn't examine the stats themselves and skimmed the main article, but it referred to the problem of Utah and Idaho? as being outliers (due to being heavily invested in Romney as a candidate and possibly against Trump). Edited February 15, 2017 by Calm Link to comment
Nofear Posted February 21, 2017 Share Posted February 21, 2017 Footnote #5 Quote Mormon voters really did not like Trump after having a Mormon candidate in Romney on the ballot in 2012. Thus, Utah (68 percent Mormon) shifted more toward Democrats than any other state. Meanwhile, Clinton matched Obama’s performance in Idaho, which has a lot of white voters without college degrees but also a lot of Mormons. As much as I like the sentiment above, citing/linking buzzfeed as a source isn't confidence building. Ah well. 1 Link to comment
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