What Went Down On Super Tuesday
Amelia pointed out that the Virginia exit polls show a wide gender gap. As more polls close, I am going to be watching for this in other states as well. The gender gap is the difference in support between men and women for a particular candidate. According to exit polls of the first four primary states, Sanders’s support from men is much higher than his support from women.
Sanders’s support is higher among men
Vote share by gender in entrance and exit polls from completed state primaries and caucuses
| Biden | Sanders | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| State | Male | Female | Diff. | Male | Female | Diff. |
| Iowa | 16% | 16% | 0 | 26% | 20% | +6 |
| New Hampshire | 8 | 8 | 0 | 31 | 23 | +8 |
| Nevada | 18 | 17 | +1 | 38 | 30 | +8 |
| South Carolina | 48 | 49 | -1 | 24 | 17 | +7 |
In states like Nevada, Sanders won among both men and women — but there was still an 8-point gap! We need more information on whether support from women lags because they lack men’s enthusiasm for Sanders or because they are just slightly more enthusiastic for another candidate. But so far in the race, it seems clear that the Sanders campaign is appealing more to men.
There have been some issues in North Carolina and some polls will stay open longer, but based on analysis of the exit poll, ABC News projects that Biden will win the North Carolina Democratic primary. This is in line with what we had projected in our final forecast — we gave Biden a 95 percent chance of winning the most votes there. As was the case in Virginia, Biden had a recent surge there after South Carolina.
We have our first official results of the night, which you can see in our nifty side bar over here 👉. With 2 percent of precincts reporting in Virginia, Biden is overperforming our model’s expectations, Sanders is right about where we expected him, and Warren is slightly below.
