2020 Vermont Republican presidential primary

March 3, 2020

17 Republican National Convention delegates
 
Candidate Donald Trump Bill Weld
Home state Florida[1] Massachusetts
Delegate count 17 0
Popular vote 33,984 3,971
Percentage 86.49% 10.11%

County results
  Trump—90–95%
  Trump—85–90%
  Trump—80–85%

The 2020 Vermont Republican presidential primary took place on March 3, 2020, as one of 14 contests scheduled for Super Tuesday in the Republican Party primaries for the 2020 presidential election.

Results

Bill Weld's 10% share of the vote was his second best performance of any state, after Maryland.

2020 Vermont Republican primary[2]
Candidate Votes % Delegates[3]
Donald Trump 33,984 86.49 17
Bill Weld 3,971 10.11 0
Rocky De La Fuente 341 0.87 0
Write-ins 480 1.22 0
Overvotes 37 0.09 0
Blank votes 478 1.22 0
Total 39,291 100% 17

Results by county

2020 Vermont Republican presidential primary

(results per county)[4]

County Donald Trump Bill Weld Rocky De La Fuente Write-ins Overvotes Blank votes Total votes cast
Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes %
Addison 2,147 85.27 270 10.72 24 0.95 32 1.27 2 0.08 43 1.71 2,518
Bennington 1,996 87.24 217 9.48 18 0.79 20 0.87 1 0.04 36 1.57 2,288
Caledonia 1,821 87.30 181 8.68 18 0.86 27 1.29 7 0.34 32 1.53 2,086
Chittenden 6,660 84.98 881 11.24 73 0.93 111 1.42 9 0.11 103 1.31 7,837
Essex 681 92.65 24 3.27 3 0.41 13 1.77 0 0 14 1.90 735
Franklin 3,307 89.60 264 7.15 34 0.92 42 1.14 0 0 44 1.19 3,691
Grand Isle 633 90.95 43 6.18 4 0.57 6 0.86 0 0 10 1.44 696
Lamoille 1,036 84.36 150 12.21 10 0.81 23 1.87 2 0.16 7 0.57 1,228
Orange 1,391 83.59 215 12.92 15 0.90 19 1.14 2 0.12 22 1.32 1,664
Orleans 1,392 90.04 113 7.31 11 0.71 12 0.78 0 0 18 1.16 1,546
Rutland 5,303 90.63 399 6.82 43 0.73 70 1.20 3 0.05 33 0.56 5,851
Washington 2,875 82.31 486 13.91 46 1.32 30 0.86 6 0.17 50 1.43 3,493
Windham 1,581 82.22 275 14.30 15 0.78 27 1.40 3 0.16 22 1.14 1,923
Windsor 3,161 84.63 453 12.13 27 0.72 48 1.29 2 0.05 44 1.18 3,735
Total 33,984 86.49 3,971 10.11 341 0.87 480 1.22 37 0.09 478 1.22 39,291

See also

References

  1. Matthew Choi (October 31, 2019). "Trump, a symbol of New York, is officially a Floridian now". Politico. Retrieved February 3, 2020.
  2. ":: Vermont Election Night Results ::". vtelectionresults.sec.state.vt.us. Archived from the original on August 11, 2017. Retrieved March 4, 2020.
  3. "Vermont Election Results 2020". PBS NewsHour. Retrieved March 26, 2020.
  4. "Official Report of the Canvassing Committee" (PDF). Vermont Official State Website. United States and Vermont Statewide Offices. March 3, 2020. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 27, 2020. Retrieved March 26, 2020.
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