Clinton won a 16-point victory in her home state.
Exit polls showed that Sanders won
among voters age 18–29 in the Empire State, capturing 65% of this demographic, while Clinton won every other age group, performing better with
older groups (53% of voters ages 30–44, 63% of voters aged 45–54, and 73% of voters aged 65 and over). Clinton tied men with Sanders 50-50, but won a 63–37 landslide among women (both married and unmarried). The candidates split the
white vote 50–50, but Clinton won the
African American vote 75–25 and the
Hispanic/Latino vote 64–36. Clinton swept all income levels/socioeconomic statuses and educational attainment levels in her home state. In terms of political ideology, Clinton won 62–38 among
Democrats while Sanders won 72–28 among
Independents, who were 14% of the electorate. Clinton won both liberals and moderate/conservative voters. She won among
union households 58–42, and won both married and unmarried voters. In terms of religious affiliation, Clinton won
Protestants 65–35,
Catholics 62–38, and also won the
Jewish vote by a 2 to 1 margin after Sanders caused controversy by criticizing
Israel. Sanders won agnostic/
atheist voters 57–43. While Clinton won voters who said
Wall Street does more to help the economy, Sanders won among those who said it hurts the economy. Clinton performed very well on
Long Island and in the
five boroughs of New York City, particularly in
Manhattan,
Queens and
the Bronx; she also won handily in
Brooklyn and
Staten Island. Clinton ran up big margins in New York City neighborhoods like
Harlem, where the percentage of African American voters was highest. Sanders did better in rural, whiter
upstate New York counties, with Clinton winning
Buffalo,
Syracuse, and
Rochester while Sanders won in
Albany. Sanders also performed well in the
Hudson Valley, with a high concentration of liberals and college students. ==Aftermath==