Massachusetts, with its 91 Democratic delegates at stake, is the home state of candidate Elizabeth Warren — and the site of a tight race between Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton in 2016. The handful of contenders on the ballot in the Republican primary are likely no match for President Donald Trump.
Presidential primary results
Democrats / 91 Delegates
100% in
Projected winner
The following is a summary of Massachusetts's Democratic Primary. Massachusetts has 91 delegates and 114 available delegates including supers.
Dem
Democrat
Joe BidenWinner
33.5%
473,861
+ 49 Delegates
Dem
Democrat
Bernie SandersWinner
26.7%
376,990
+ 30 Delegates
Dem
Democrat
Elizabeth WarrenWinner
21.5%
303,864
+ 12 Delegates
Dem
Democrat
Michael BloombergWinner
11.8%
166,200
Dem
Democrat
Pete ButtigiegWinner
2.7%
38,400
Dem
Democrat
Amy KlobucharWinner
1.2%
17,297
Dem
Democrat
Tulsi GabbardWinner
0.7%
10,548
Dem
Democrat
Deval PatrickWinner
0.5%
6,923
Dem
Democrat
Tom SteyerWinner
0.5%
6,762
Dem
Democrat
No PreferenceWinner
0.4%
5,345
Dem
Democrat
Andrew YangWinner
0.2%
2,708
Dem
Democrat
Write-insWinner
0.1%
1,941
Dem
Democrat
Michael BennetWinner
0.1%
1,257
Dem
Democrat
John DelaneyWinner
0%
675
Dem
Democrat
Marianne WilliamsonWinner
0%
617
Dem
Democrat
Cory BookerWinner
0%
426
Dem
Democrat
Julian CastroWinner
0%
305
March 3, 2020
Hover over the map for details
Republicans / 41 Delegates
100% in
The following is a summary of Massachusetts's Republican Primary. Massachusetts has 41 delegates and 41 available delegates including supers. The race has not been called as of yet.
Rep
Republican
Donald TrumpWinner
incumbent
87%
239,115
+ 41 Delegates
Rep
Republican
William WeldWinner
9.3%
25,425
Rep
Republican
No PreferenceWinner
1.6%
4,385
Rep
Republican
Joe WalshWinner
1.1%
3,008
Rep
Republican
Write-insWinner
0.8%
2,152
Rep
Republican
Rocky De La FuenteWinner
0.2%
675
March 3, 2020
Hover over the map for details
Presidential exit polls
Exit polls are surveys of voters conducted as they leave (or exit) their polling place on Election Day. The survey asks who voters decided to vote for and includes questions to help explain voter attitudes and demographics.
Polls close at -11:00 P.M. ET, March 4. Come back for results.
Democrats
Updated on March 3 2020, 10:14PM ET
Biden
Bloomberg
Buttigieg
Gabbard
Klobuchar
Sanders
Steyer
Warren
No Preference
Gender
Male (44%)
34%10%4%4%1%1%1%1%31%1%1%17%
Female (56%)
34%11%1%1%1%1%1%1%26%24%2%2%
Race
White (80%)
36%11%1%1%1%1%1%1%28%21%
Black (7%)
36%16%1%1%3%3%29%14%1%1%
Hispanic/Latino (9%)
21%7%12%1%1%2%2%34%2%2%17%3%3%
Asian (3%)
Not enough data
Other (2%)
Not enough data
Race
White (80%)
36%11%1%1%1%1%1%1%28%21%
Non-White (20%)
27%10%5%5%1%1%3%3%30%1%1%18%4%4%
Age
18-29 (16%)
21%3%3%3%3%1%1%51%21%
30-44 (21%)
22%5%5%3%3%1%1%1%1%39%1%1%27%2%2%
45-64 (36%)
38%15%2%2%1%1%1%1%21%19%1%1%
65 or over (26%)
47%15%2%2%1%1%1%1%16%17%1%1%
Age
18-24 (11%)
17%4%4%4%4%54%21%
25-29 (6%)
28%3%3%45%22%1%1%
30-39 (15%)
18%4%4%4%4%1%1%43%1%1%27%2%2%
40-49 (15%)
32%9%2%2%1%1%31%1%1%23%
50-64 (28%)
40%17%2%2%1%1%1%1%18%19%1%1%
65 or over (26%)
47%15%2%2%1%1%1%1%16%17%1%1%
Age
18-44 (38%)
21%4%4%3%3%1%1%1%1%44%1%1%24%1%1%
45+ (62%)
42%15%2%2%1%1%1%1%19%18%1%1%
Which best describes your education? You have:
Never attended college (15%)
44%6%1%1%31%1%1%16%1%1%
Attended college but received no degree (19%)
33%9%1%1%38%1%1%15%1%1%
Associate's degree (AA or AS) (12%)
35%12%5%5%1%1%2%2%29%13%4%4%
Bachelor's degree (BA or BS) (25%)
27%13%5%5%2%2%1%1%31%21%
An advanced degree after a bachelor's degree (such as JD, MA, MBA, MD, PhD) (28%)
34%13%2%2%1%1%1%1%17%31%
What was the last grade of school you completed?
College graduate (53%)
31%13%3%3%1%1%1%1%24%26%
No college degree (47%)
37%9%1%1%1%1%34%1%1%15%2%2%
Education by race
White college graduates (45%)
32%13%3%3%1%1%1%1%23%27%
White non-college graduates (35%)
42%9%34%14%
Non White college graduates (8%)
28%15%6%25%1%1%22%2%2%
Non White non-college graduates (12%)
25%7%5%5%2%2%5%5%33%1%1%16%6%
Education by white by sex
White women college graduates (25%)
31%12%1%1%2%2%20%33%
White women non-college graduates (19%)
44%11%31%15%1%1%
White men college graduates (20%)
33%13%6%2%2%1%1%27%20%
White men non-college graduates (15%)
39%8%38%1%1%14%
Non-whites (20%)
26%10%5%5%1%1%3%3%30%1%1%18%4%4%
No matter how you voted today, do you usually think of yourself as a:
Democrat (54%)
34%9%2%2%1%1%1%1%25%28%1%1%
Republican (4%)
Not enough data
Independent or something else (41%)
32%14%3%3%1%1%1%1%33%1%1%13%1%1%
On most political matters, do you consider yourself:
Very liberal (27%)
19%4%4%2%2%1%1%40%1%1%33%1%1%
Somewhat liberal (37%)
34%9%3%3%1%1%27%24%1%1%
Moderate (30%)
47%16%2%2%1%1%1%1%21%9%
Conservative (6%)
Not enough data
On most political matters, do you consider yourself:
Liberal (64%)
27%7%3%3%1%1%1%1%33%28%1%1%
Moderate (30%)
47%16%2%2%1%1%1%1%21%9%
Conservative (6%)
Not enough data
On most political matters, do you consider yourself:
Liberal (64%)
27%7%3%3%1%1%1%1%33%28%1%1%
Moderate or conservative (36%)
46%18%2%2%2%2%2%2%20%8%1%1%
Are you gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender?
Yes (13%)
17%7%8%40%1%1%28%
No (87%)
37%11%2%2%1%1%1%1%27%20%1%1%
Before today, had you ever voted in a Democratic presidential primary?
Yes (81%)
35%13%2%2%1%1%1%1%25%22%1%1%
No (17%)
29%4%4%3%3%1%1%2%2%42%1%1%16%2%2%
Which ONE of these four issues mattered most in deciding how you voted today?
Race relations (7%)
49%14%2%2%3%3%15%16%
Health care (38%)
37%11%3%3%1%1%1%1%28%18%2%2%
Climate change (27%)
34%12%2%2%2%2%27%1%1%22%
Income inequality (20%)
24%6%2%2%38%30%1%1%
Which ONE of these four candidate qualities mattered most in deciding how you voted today?
Cares about people like me (16%)
34%4%4%3%3%1%1%37%20%1%1%
Can bring needed change (36%)
21%9%2%2%1%1%1%1%39%27%1%1%
Can unite the country (35%)
55%13%1%1%1%1%1%1%14%1%1%12%1%1%
Is a fighter (10%)
7%21%7%2%2%2%2%25%33%2%2%
If you had to choose, would you rather see the Democratic Party nominate a candidate who:
Agrees with you on major issues (32%)
24%10%4%4%2%2%2%2%36%1%1%19%2%2%
Can beat Donald Trump (65%)
39%12%1%1%1%1%24%22%1%1%
How do you feel about replacing all private health insurance with a single government plan for everyone?
Support (50%)
23%6%1%1%1%1%1%1%41%27%
Oppose (45%)
46%18%4%4%1%1%1%1%13%14%2%2%
Do you think the next president should:
Return to Barack Obama's policies (42%)
54%10%1%1%1%1%1%1%15%18%1%1%
Change to more conservative policies (12%)
35%25%6%4%4%3%3%17%2%2%5%5%1%1%
Change to more liberal policies (39%)
14%6%1%1%47%30%1%1%
Which comes closest to your feelings about the Trump administration:
Enthusiastic (4%)
Not enough data
Satisfied, but not enthusiastic (5%)
Not enough data
Dissatisfied, but not angry (20%)
36%16%2%2%1%1%1%1%27%2%2%12%2%2%
Angry (69%)
35%10%1%1%30%25%
In the election for president this November, will you vote for the Democratic nominee regardless of who it is?
Yes (80%)
35%10%1%1%1%1%29%24%1%1%
No (16%)
32%18%7%5%5%2%2%22%1%1%8%3%3%
Regardless of how you voted, which ONE of these candidates would have the best chance to defeat Donald Trump in November?
Biden (42%)
69%5%5%1%1%1%1%9%14%1%1%
Bloomberg (12%)
12%69%1%1%8%9%
Buttigieg (2%)
Not enough data
Gabbard (1%)
Not enough data
Klobuchar (1%)
Not enough data
Sanders (26%)
3%3%1%1%2%2%1%1%79%13%
Steyer (1%)
Not enough data
Warren (10%)
3%3%11%86%
When did you finally decide for whom to vote in the presidential primary?