Each precinct is colored to indicate which candidate received the most votes there. A more opaque (darker) version of the color is used when the candidate managed to win a majority of the votes in the precinct.
The map can be misleading in the same way typical U.S. presidential election maps are, since the area of a precinct is not proportional to the number of voters there. A candidate who wins in densely populated, high-turnout areas will often look worse on the map than a candidate who wins in less dense or low-turnout areas.
Click on a precinct to see the vote breakdown.
Each precinct is shaded to indicate the percentage of the vote that went for the candidate, with darker grays indicating higher percentages.
Click on a precinct to see the vote breakdown.
Each precinct is shaded to indicate the number of votes the candidate received there, with darker grays indicating higher numbers.
Click on a precinct to see the vote breakdown.
Each precinct is shaded to indicate the total number of votes cast there, with darker grays indicating higher numbers.
Click on a precinct to see the vote breakdown.
The 20 precincts that gave the candidate the most votes are colored.
Click on a precinct to see the vote breakdown.
This map is like the one of the precinct winners, except that precincts are colored to indicate the candidate who won second place in each. It's probably most interesting for the at-large race, which has two winners.
Click on a precinct to see the vote breakdown.
Each precinct is shaded to indicate what percentage of the registered voters voted, with darker grays indicating higher turnout.
Click on a precinct to see the vote breakdown.
Each precinct is shaded to indicate the average number of votes cast in this contest on each ballot, with darker grays indicating higher numbers. For the at-large council race a voter has two votes.
Click on a precinct to see the vote breakdown.
Page by Keith C. Ivey (source), Nov 2014. Send comments to keith at iveys dot org.