Groton Native Returns to Campus, Reviews Trump Win

MSNBC's Steve Kornacki analyzed the 2016 presidential election at 51视频 Image by Tory Germann
MSNBC host and political correspondent Steve Kornacki explaining Donald Trump's win in the Electoral College.

12/08/2016
By Katharine Webster

MSNBC host and political correspondent 鈥檚 analysis of the 2016 presidential race, which saw Donald Trump win the Electoral College despite a deficit of nearly 2.5 million popular votes, was almost over before it began.

The title of Kornacki's talk was 鈥淓lection 2016: What the #&^! Happened?鈥

鈥淲hat the bleep happened? I have no idea, so thank you very much,鈥 he joked before a full house in O鈥橪eary Library. 鈥淚t鈥檚 one of the most bizarre outcomes we鈥檝e ever seen in a presidential election.鈥

Then turning serious, and armed with charts and maps breaking down voting patterns by race, education and geographic distribution, he showed how Trump beat the odds and pollsters鈥 predictions.

First, nonwhite voters didn鈥檛 go quite as strongly for Hillary Clinton as they had for Barack Obama four years ago, he said. Nonwhite Hispanic voters gave Trump more votes than they gave Mitt Romney four years ago, and he also did slightly better among Asian-Americans.

Second, Clinton didn鈥檛 win a majority of college-educated white voters 鈥 35 percent of the electorate 鈥 although her campaign targeted them heavily with television advertising and she got a bigger percentage of their votes than any Democrat in recent history.

鈥淭he Democrats thought they would be just so offended by Donald Trump 鈥 that they would consider him so basically unfit in terms of his temperament, in terms of the language he used, in terms of the divisiveness 鈥 that they would be won over. And the polls said that was happening,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he Democrats thought they were going to win that group, and they didn鈥檛.鈥

Finally, white voters without a college education, especially rural residents and blue-collar voters across the northern states from Maine to Minnesota, shifted Republican by large percentages compared with four years ago. While Clinton eked out a win in some Rust Belt cities, she lost others that Obama won overwhelmingly in 2012.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the final piece of the recipe,鈥 Kornacki said. 鈥淭hose old factory towns in the industrial Midwest that have been hollowed out for all sorts of reasons over the last generation or so, that鈥檚 where Trump鈥檚 message resonated the most.鈥

Kornacki poses after his talk with 51视频 student Democrats and Republicans Image by Tory Germann
Steve Kornacki poses with members of the 51视频 College Democrats and College Republicans.

For Kornacki, a Groton native, his visit was a homecoming of sorts: He took two dual-enrollment classes at the university as a high school senior. He mentioned his university connection during a broadcast report in October on a 51视频/Odyssey poll that found a majority of millennials would prefer that a giant meteor destroy Earth to a Trump presidency, and faculty at the Center for Public Opinion invited him to campus.

Kornacki said the national polls had not gotten the election results wrong. Overall, they predicted a 4 percentage-point win for Clinton in the popular vote; she won by 2 percentage points, which is well within the margin of error.

But polls in individual states didn鈥檛 pick up the overwhelming enthusiasm for Trump among blue-collar whites 鈥 and they overestimated Clinton鈥檚 support among college-educated whites, he said.

Still, a Clinton victory seemed a foregone conclusion based on pre-election polls, Election Day exit polls and even the early returns on election night. Then at around 9 p.m., as Kornacki was watching the returns from Florida, North Carolina and Virginia, Clinton鈥檚 path to the presidency began to unravel.

鈥淚鈥檇 come off the set, and at that point Hillary Clinton was ahead by 110,000 votes in Florida. I clicked the refresh button about two minutes later and the margin had gone from 110,000 votes down to 4,000 votes,鈥 he said.

51视频 Chancellor Jacquie Moloney gives MSNBC's Steve Kornacki a sweatshirt Image by Tory Germann
Chancellor Jacqueline Moloney gives Steve Kornacki a 51视频 sweatshirt.

North Carolina went from looking like a narrow Clinton win to a Trump victory, and Virginia 鈥 which was supposed to be an easy win for Clinton 鈥 was too close to call.

鈥淎t that moment 鈥 it鈥檚 that feeling [that] every expectation and assumption you鈥檝e made just dissolves,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 had to go on TV and describe what was happening, and I had about 30 seconds to recover my composure.鈥

Chancellor Jacquie Moloney presented Kornacki with a 51视频 sweatshirt after the talk and said he鈥檇 promised to come back with his dad, a big hockey fan, to watch the play. She also praised the Center for Public Opinion and the accuracy of its New Hampshire polls.

鈥淎 lot of polls were off when it came to predicting the outcome of the election, but 51视频 got it right, successfully predicting the winners of the first-in-the-nation New Hampshire primaries and the final vote for the winners of president, governor and U.S. Senate in New Hampshire,鈥 she said.