Demographics Florida has the most elderly voters in the nation with a heavy percentage of
Hispanic/
Latino voters. According to exit polls, 66 percent of voters in the Florida Democratic Primary were
white and they opted for Clinton 53-23-20 (Clinton-Obama-Edwards) along with the 12 percent of Hispanic/Latino voters who backed Clinton 59-30-8. This contrasts with the 19 percent of
African American voters who supported Obama 73-25-1. Clinton won all age groups and income groups in Florida, but split the vote with Obama among highly affluent voters making over $200,000. She also won all educational attainment groups from high school graduates to those with postgraduate studies. Self-identified Democrats, which composed 79 percent of the electorate, backed Clinton 52-35-11 along with
Independents who favored her 40-30-25; Edwards won self-identified Republicans 31-27-23 (Edwards-Obama-Clinton), which composed 4 percent of the electorate. Clinton won all ideological groups except voters who identified themselves as
conservative, as they opted for Obama. Regarding religion, Clinton won
Protestants 49-33-15,
Roman Catholics 63-22-14,
Jews 58-26-13, and
atheists/
agnostics 40-38-18; Obama won other Christians 43-39-16 and voters who affiliated with other religions 48-39-7.
Electoral geography Clinton's strongest performance was in the
Miami area where she won 56-32-8 and
South Florida where she won 53-29-14. She also won
Central Florida by a margin of 52-30-13 and the
Tampa Bay Area by a margin of 50-32-15. Obama did best in
North Florida, winning 41-37-20 (Obama-Clinton-Edwards). While Edwards won a number of
rural, predominantly white and conservative counties in the
Florida Panhandle, Obama took in more of the vote in
Pensacola and
Tallahassee which enabled him to win more in the congressional districts. He also won inner-city
Jacksonville and the areas outside
Orlando and
Tampa as well as
North Miami and
Fort Lauderdale. Clinton carried
Orlando,
Tampa,
Palm Beach,
Miami,
Hialeah and other large
urban areas in South Florida as well as the Florida Keys.
Endorsements Clinton received endorsements in Florida from
U.S. Senator Bill Nelson as well as
U.S. Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz of
Fort Lauderdale. ==See also==