ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-SIX YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM
Thursday, November 10, 2016
Ann Arbor, Michigan
“I grew up in a house of love . . . where it was more important to care about marginalized people than about your marginalized taxes.” -LSA senior Thomas Hislop, on growing up in a Republican household
“I feel like I have been very sad and despaired all day, and as a person of color, I feel very threatened and shaken to the core.” -SMTD freshman Nina Renella
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“I simply ask for you to not be comfortable as we have after violence and tragedy countless times before.” -University alum Harleen Kaur
“I don’t care what the election said today. I don’t care what it says in the next four years. I refuse to stop fighting.” -LSA senior Adedolapo Adeniji
“Remember this is not a new fight for my family, this is not a new fight for women, this is not a new fight for Latinos, this is not a new fight for the LGBT community.” -LSA senior Nicole Kahmis
SAM MOUSIGIAN/Daily
Hundreds of students protest Donald Trump’s victory at a vigil in the Diag Wednesday.
Hundreds gather to protest Trump Both expressions of fear and bids for unity prevalent among crowd on Diag NISA KHAN & CHETALI JAIN
Daily Staff Reporters
Both a vigil and anti-Trump rally were held Wednesday night in protest of President-elect Donald Trump’s unexpected win in the Diag, drawing a crowd of nearly 1,000 University of Michigan students, faculty and staff, as well as community members. The vigil featured both student speakers and University of Michigan President Mark Schlissel. Speakers called for perseverance during the next four years of Trump’s term, discussing both the fear felt by minority students on campus and the importance of action. LSA senior Nicole Khamis opened the vigil by recounting conversations with her parents, who are Palestinian refugees, the morning after Election Day. “We came here for a better life and last night, I woke up at 2:30 to the election results,” she said. “I thought it was a dream. And I called my parents, they could see that my eyes are red because I had been tearing up. … And (my mother) looked at me and said, ‘This is not the end.’ ” Throughout his campaign, Trump has criticized President Barack Obama and Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton’s policy of allowing more Syrian refugees to enter the country. Trump’s immigration plan details an end to letting a number of groups into the United States, and in February Trump claimed he would look at Syrian children and tell them they could not enter the country. “Are we going to stand up in the face of racism, in the face of sexism, in the face of xenophobia?” Khamis asked the cheering crowd. “My parents have escaped a war to have a better life for me and my two siblings. And we did not come to this country for this.” In his remarks, Schlissel congratulated University
students for waiting in lines and voting, stating that student voices were 90-10 in favor of a candidate other than Trump. Earlier today, he penned an email to students urging them to be inclusive and work toward intellectual honesty in their conversations. “Ninety percent of you rejected the kind of hate and the fractiousness and the longing for some kind of idealized version of a non-existent yesterday that was expressed during the campaign,” Schlissel said during the event. “So I urge you, continue your advocacy and your voices are already being heard. They are loud and clear — this is the way America changes. It’s the way it always changes. It’s the way it will change for the better.” According to USA Today exit polls, 56 percent of voters nationwide ages 18 to 24 voted for Clinton. There are no agebased exit polls specifically for Ann Arbor, but Michigan Daily surveys of students in the leadup to the election indicated a strong campus preference for Clinton at about 70 percent. At the rally, similar sentiments were expressed. Business junior Myles Hawkins said he felt shock after finding out the results of the election, and that he came to the rally to gain a sense of comfort about the situation. “(As an) African American, it’s hard to fathom Donald Trump being my president because he (has) no respect for my background, and it’s shocking to have gone from the first Black president, which was celebrated in my family … to a person who doesn’t seem to care about (them) or my culture,” he said. The rally emphasized solidarity and began with a chant: “The people united will never be divided,” that progressively grew into a unified roar. Speakers at both the vigil and the rally also emphasized the need to take action moving forward. In remarks at the vigil, CSG President David Schafer, an
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November 2016 Election
VOTER TURNOUT Washtenaw County
Ann Arbor > 70% to 100% > 65% to 70% > 60% to 65% > 55% to 60% > 50% to 55% > 45% to 50% > 40% to 45% AVA WEINER/Daily
Source: Washtenaw County Elections Division
Exit polls show sharp racial and generational divides among electorate
Low level of student voter turnout could have impacted Mich. outcome
Women and youth support Clinton, while white, older Americans vote Trump
Political experts say if more had come to the polls, state would be blue
CAITLIN REEDY Daily Staff Reporter
President-elect Donald Trump’s victory over Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton has baffled many Americans expecting a Clinton victory in light of earlier polling — but some experts say voter demographics could explain Trump’s upset win. Adding to the questions for some, it was confirmed Wednesday that despite losing the Electoral College and the presidency, Clinton won the popular vote by a small margin of about 0.2 percent. Michael Traugott, a research
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professor at the University of Michigan’s Center for Political Studies, said will be much explanation in the coming days as to why the polling data was so wrong in their predictions. “We know what the explanations are likely to be on why the polling was wrong … they didn’t estimate turnout too well,” Traugott said. “They might have had a problem in detecting support for Trump — some would call them shy Trump voters. This will require a very careful review of the polls, but clearly they misestimated.” The exit polls released thus far show a sharp divide in race,
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See POLLS, Page 3A
INDEX
LYDIA MURRAY Daily Staff Reporter
In an extremely close race nationwide, for a period of time Election Day all eyes were on Michigan, but the state ultimately wasn’t the one to hand President-elect Donald Trump his victory. However, many of the trends seen in the state around turnout and voter enthusiasm are similar to those in the other close states that did hand Trump his win. After the Associated Press called the race, declaring Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump the president-elect at 2:30 a.m.,
Vol. CXXVI, No. 26 ©2016 The Michigan Daily
Michigan was still counting votes from several counties. It continues to be in a deadlock, with Trump leading by just 11,837 votes, which would be a 0.3 percent margin of victory. If Trump wins the state, he will be the first Republican to do so since 1988. The race in Michigan became tighter in recent days as the candidates and their surrogates visited the state, but in the months leading up to the election Clinton maintained a lead over Trump in the state, and her campaign considered the state to be an almost guaranteed win. However, especially toward
NEWS......................... 2A OPINION.....................4A SPORTS..............5A
See VOTE, Page 3A
SUDOKU.....................2A CLASSIFIEDS............5A BSIDE.....................1B