List of Names Electors who Selected Donald Trump in 2016 as the President of the United States

Gab1930s
13 min readOct 26, 2020

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This list of names are public infomation and should’nt be taken out of the ream of polictics.

Electors: 9, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

Alabama

Perry O. Hooper Jr., Pike Road, At-Large[3]

Grady H. Thornton, Birmingham, At-Large

Frank Burt Jr., Bay Minette, CD1

Will B. Sellers, Montgomery, CD2

James Eldon Wilson, Montgomery, CD3

Tim Wadsworth, Arley, CD4

J. Elbert Peters, Huntsville, CD5

Mary Sue McClurkin, Indian Springs, CD6

Robert A. Cusanelli, Carrollton, CD7[4]

Alaska

Electors: 3, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President[5]

Sean Parnell, Palmer

Jacqueline Tupou, Juneau

Carolyn Leman, Anchorage[4]

Arizona

Electors: 11, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

J. Foster Morgan, Glendale[6][7] — The youngest elector, at 19.[8]

Walter Begay Jr., Kayenta

Bruce Ash, Tucson — National Committeeman

Sharon Giese, Mesa

James O’Connor, Scottsdale

Jerry Hayden, Scottsdale

Robert Graham, Phoenix — State Party Chairman

Edward Robson, Phoenix

Carole Joyce, Phoenix

Alberto Gutier, Phoenix

Jane Pierpoint Lynch, Phoenix[4]

Arkansas

Electors: 6, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

Jonathan Barnett[9]

Jonelle Fulmer

Keith Gibson

Tommy Land

John Nabholz

Sharon Wright[4]

California

Electors: 55, voted for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President[4][10]

Dustin R. Reed, Concord

Javier Gonzalez, San Jose

Shawn E. Terris, Ventura

John M. Ryan, San Rafael

Mark W. Headley, Berkeley

Gail R. Teton-Landis, Santa Barbara

Faith A. Garamendi, Davis

Ana A. Huerta, Bakersfield

Marie S. Torres, Hacienda Heights

Kathleen R. Scott, Lincoln

Donna M. Ireland, Pleasanton

Robert S. Torres, Pomona

Timothy J. Farley, Martinez

Christine T. Kehoe, San Diego

Dorothy N. Vann, Long Beach

Analea J. Patterson, Sacramento

Vinzenz J. Koller, Carmel — Had indicated that he was undecided, currently suing California over law forcing him to vote for Clinton.[11][12]

David S. Warmuth, Pasadena

Janine V. Bera, Elk Grove

Andrew R. Krakoff, Orinda

Karen D. Waters, Inglewood

Sandra M. Aduna, Laguna Woods

Katherine A. Lyon, Coronado

Shirley N. Weber, San Diego

Saundra G. Andrews, Oakland

John P. MacMurray, La Habra

Denise B. Wells, Victorville

Jane C. Block, Riverside

Sheldon Malchicoff, Westlake Village

Gregory H. Willenborg, Los Angeles

Edward Buck, West Hollywood

Nury Martinez, San Fernando

Laurence S. Zakson, Los Angeles

Francine P. Busby, Cardiff

Gwen Moore, Los Angeles

Laphonza R. Butler, Los Angeles

Cathy A. Morris, Rancho Cucamonga

Benjamin Cardenas, Montebello

Stephen J. Natoli, Visalia

Jacki M. Cisneros, Los Angeles

Mark A. Olbert, San Carlos

Raymond L. Cordova, Garden Grove

Christine Pelosi, San Francisco — Signed letter demanding an intelligence briefing on the alleged Russian hacking.[13]

Steven D. Diebert, Fresno

Carmen O. Perez, Long Beach

James A. Donahue, El Cerrito

Celine G. Purcell, Redwood City

Patrick F. Drinan, Escondido

Andres Ramos, Elk Grove

Susan Eggman, Stockton

Olivia A. Reyes-Becerra, Stanford

Eileen Feinstein Mariano, San Francisco

Priscilla G. Richardson, Cathedral City

Natalie P. Fortman, Valencia

Steve J. Spinner, Atherton

Colorado

Electors: 9, voted for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President[14]

Celeste Landry, Boulder (replaced Micheal Baca, Denver, who[15] was removed as an elector after voting for John Kasich[16][17]

Terry Phillips, Louisville

Mary Beth Corsentino, Pueblo

Jerad Sutton, Greeley; had indicated he would not vote for Hillary Clinton.[18]

Robert Nemanich, Colorado Springs; had in early December not planned to vote for Hillary Clinton.[18]

Amy Drayer, Greenwood Village

Ann Knollman, Arvada

Sen. Rollie Heath, Boulder

Hon. Polly Baca, Denver; had indicated she would cast her vote for an alternative Republican candidate

Connecticut

Electors: 7, pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President

Barbara Gordon, West Hartford[20]

Ellen Nurse, Hartford

Edward Piazza, New Haven

Tyisha Walker, New Haven

Christopher Rosario, Bridgeport

Robert Godfrey, Danbury

Steven Jones, Tolland

Delaware

Electors: 3, pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President

Lynn Fuller

Lydia York

Linda Cavanaugh[4]

District of Columbia Edit

Electors: 3, pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President

Anita Bonds — Signed letter demanding an intelligence briefing on the alleged Russian hacking.[13]

Jack Evans

Franklin Garcia[4]

Florida

Electors: 29, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

Tony Ledbetter[21]

Pam Bondi[22]

Sharon Day

Adrien “Bo” Rivard[23]

Larry Ahern

Brian Ballard[24]

Kristy Banks

Michael Barnett

Lizbeth Benacquisto

Robin Bernstein

John Browning

Dena DeCamp

Nick DiCeglie

Jeremy Evans

John Falconetti

Peter Feaman

Kat Gates-Skipper

Joe Gruters

Debbie Hannifan

Blaise Ingoglia

Mike Moberley

Susan Moore

Joe Negron

Clint Pate

Ray Rodrigues

Carlos Trujillo

Robert Watkins

Susie Wiles

Christian Ziegler[4]

Georgia

Electors: 16, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

Bruce Allen Azevedo

Brian K Burdette

Lott Harris Dill

John David Elliott

James Randolph Evans

Bobbie D. Frantz

Linda D. Herren

Rachel Blackstone Little

Deborah M. McCord

Michael Neil McNeely

Mary L. Padgett

Neil L. Pruitt

Joshua Kirk Shook

Frank B. Strickland

John Padgett (replaced Baoky Nguyen Vu, who resigned)[25]

John B. White[4]

Hawaii

Electors: 4, pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President[26]

(Clinton received three votes and Bernie Sanders received one for President.)

(Kaine received three votes and Elizabeth Warren received one for Vice-President.)[27]

Electors Edit

John Bickel

Janice Bond

Marie (Dolly) Strazar

David Mulinix, voted for Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren[4]

First Alternates Edit

Kainoa Kaumeheiwa-Rego

Eileen McKee

Michael Golojuch Sr.

Yvonne Lau

Second Alternates Edit

Carolyn Golojuch

Julie Patten

Michele Golojuch

Leo Caries

Idaho

Electors: 4, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President[28] Two (Bangerter and Smyser) shall be replaced on Electoral College Monday, inasmuch as Federal employees cannot be electors.[29]

Layne Bangerter

Caleb Lakey

Jennifer Locke

Melinda Smyser[4]

Illinois

Electors: 20, pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President[30]

Toni Preckwinkle

Carrie Austin

Silvana Tabares

Jesus “Chuy” Garcia

Pam Cullerton

Nancy Shepherdson — Signed letter demanding an intelligence briefing on the alleged Russian hacking.[13]

Vera Davis

William Marovitz — Signed letter demanding an intelligence briefing on the alleged Russian hacking.[13]

Barbara Flynn Currie

John R. Daley

Michelle Mussman

Lauren Beth Gash, Highland Park

Kevin Duffy Blackburn, Joliet

Jerry Costello, Belleville

Carol Ammons, Urbana

Mark Guethle, North Aurora

Flint Taylor, McLeansboro

John Nelson, Rockford

Don Johnston, Rock Island.

Shirley McCombs[4]

Indiana

Electors: 11, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President[31]

Stephanie Beckley, Jamestown

Daniel Bortner, Bedford

Laura Campbell, Carmel

Jeff Cardwell, Indianapolis

Donald L. Hayes, Jasper

Randall Kirkpatrick, Ligonier

Ethan E. Manning, Peru

Macy Kelly Mitchell, Indianapolis

Edwin J. Simcox, Fishers

Kevin Steen, Muncie

Chuck Williams, Valparaiso[4]

Iowa

Electors: 6, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

James Whitmer

Don Kass

Dylan Keller

Alan Braun

Kurt Brown

Polly Granzow

Danielle Massey[4]

Kansas

Electors: 6, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

Ashley J. McMillan, Concordia, party vice chair.[32]

Helen Van Etten, Topeka, national committeewoman.

Mark Kahrs, Wichita, national committeeman.

Ron Estes, Wichita, Kansas State Treasurer.

Clayton L. Barker, Leawood, party executive director.

Kelly Arnold, Wichita, party chairman.[4]

Kentucky

Electors: 8, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

Jim Skaggs

David Disponett

Robert Duncan

Michael Carter

Scott Lasley

Walter Reichert

Mary Singleton

Troy Sheldon[4]

Louisiana

Electors: 8, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

Chris Trahan, CD1[33]

Lloyd Harsch, CD2

Charles Buckels, CD3

Louis Avalone, CD4

Kay Katz, CD5

Lennie Rhys, CD6

Garret Monti, At Large

Scott Wilfong, At Large[4]

(1st-alternate) Candy Maness

(2nd-alternate) Jennifer Madsen

(3rd-alternate) Christian Gil

(4th-alternate) Constance Diane Long

(5th-alternate) Verne Breland

(6th-alternate) Glenda Pollard

(At Large-alternate) John Batt

(At Large-alternate) Raymond Griffin

Maine

Electors: 4[34]

Democratic Party Edit

3, pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President

(1st) Diane Denk of Kennebunk

(At Large) David Bright of Dixmont — voted for Bernie Sanders, then voted for Hillary Clinton in a second round of voting.[35]

(At Large) Sam Shapiro of Winslow[4]

Republican Party Edit

1, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

(2nd) Richard A. Bennett of Oxford[4]

Maryland

Electors: 10, pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President[36]

Lesley Israel

Robert Leonard

Lillian Holmes

Salome Peters

Hagner Mister

Claudia Martin

Courtney Watson — Signed letter demanding an intelligence briefing on the alleged Russian hacking.[13]

Karen Britto

Susan Ness

Wayne Rogers[4]

Massachusetts

Electors: 11, pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President

Nazda Alam

Mary Gail Cokkinias

Marie Turley

Dori Dean

Donna Smith

Cheryl Cumings

Marc Pacheco

Curtis Lemay

Jason Palitsch

Paul Yorkis

Parwez Wahid[4]

Michigan

Electors: 16, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

John Haggard

Jack Holmes

Kelly Mitchell

Judy Rapanos

Henry Hatter

Robert Weitt

Wyckham Seelig

Ross Ensign

Michael Banerian

Brian Fairbrother

Ken Crider

Mary Vaughn

Jim Rhoades — Motorcycle lobbyist.[37]

William Rauwerdink

Hank Fuhs

Joseph Guzman[4]

Minnesota

Electors: 10, voted for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President

Fred Knudson

Roger Gehrke

Marge Hoffa

Raymond Hess

Jill Garcia (replaced Muhammed Abdurrahman, faithless elector after he voted for Bernie Sanders and Tulsi Gabbard)[41]

Betsy O’Berry

Mike Wammer

Mary Murphy

Jules Goldstein

Sherrie Pugh[4]

Mississippi

Electors: 6, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

Ann Hebert

Joe F. Sanderson Jr.

Bradley R. White

J. Kelley Williams

William G. Yates Jr.

Wirt Yerger[4]

Missouri

Electors: 10, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

Tim Dreste (1st)

Jan DeWeese (2nd)

Hector Maldonado (3rd) — Says he will vote for Trump stating: “I took an oath once to become a U.S. citizen,” he said, “and on Aug. 14, 1995, that was the first oath that I’ve taken to support the U.S. Constitution. A year later I took the oath again, to support the duties of being an officer in the U.S. Army. This was the third oath that I’ve taken to execute what I promised to do.”

Sherry Kuttenkuler (4th)

Casey Crawford (5th)

Tom Brown (6th)

Cherry Warren (7th)

Scott Clark (8th)

Al Rotskoff

Susie Johnson[4]

Montana

Electors: 3, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

Thelma Baker

Nancy Ballance

Dennis Scranton

Vondene Kopetski (alternate)

Becky Stockton (alternate)

Thomas Tuck (alternate)[4]

Nebraska

Electors: 5, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

Craig Safranek, Merna

Chuck Conrad, Hastings

John Dinkel, Norfolk

Phil Belin, Omaha

Paul Burger, Kearney

Nevada

Electors: 6, pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President

Dayananda Prabhu Rachakonda

Larry Jackson

Joetta Brown

Paul Catha II

Greg Gardella

Teresa Benitez-Thompson[44]

New Hampshire

Electors: 4, pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President

The only all-female slate of electors, all four of whom are the first Democratic women to hold their elected offices.

Terie Norelli- Signed letter demanding an intelligence briefing on the alleged Russian hacking.[13]

Bev Hollingworth- Signed letter demanding an intelligence briefing on the alleged Russian hacking.[13]

Dudley Dudley- Signed letter demanding an intelligence briefing on the alleged Russian hacking.[13]

Carol Shea-Porter — Signed letter demanding an intelligence briefing on the alleged Russian hacking.[13]

New Jersey

Electors: 14, pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President

Alaa R. Abdelaziz of Paterson[45]

Tahsina Ahmed of Haledon — The first Bangladeshi-American female to hold elected office in the nation[46][47]

Anthony Cureton of Englewood

Lizette Delgado-Polanco of Ewing

Edward Farmer of Piscataway

Christopher D. James of East Orange

Leroy J. Jones Jr. of East Orange

Retha R. Onitiri of Clarksburg

Marlene Prieto of Secaucus

Ronald G. Rios of Carteret

Hetty M. Rosenstein of South Orange

Kelly Steward Maer of Manasquan

Mary Ann Wardlow of Lawnside

Heriberta Loretta Winters of Williamstown[4]

New Mexico

Electors: 5, pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President[48]

Roxanne Allen, a Democratic ward chairwoman in Albuquerque.

Noyola Padilla Archibeque, chairwoman of the San Miguel Federation of Democratic Women in Las Vegas.

John Padilla, a Bernie Sanders delegate to this year’s Democratic National Convention and a ward chairman in Albuquerque.

Lorraine Spradling, a grassroots organizer in Los Lunas.

E. Paul Torres of Isleta Pueblo.

New York

Electors: 29, pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President[49]

William J. “Bill” Clinton

Andrew M. Cuomo

Kathy C. Hochul

Thomas P. DiNapoli

Eric T. Schneiderman

Carl E. Heastie

Andrea Stewart-Cousins

Bill de Blasio

Letitia A. James

Scott M. Stringer

Melissa Mark-Viverito

Byron W. Brown

Christine C. Quinn

Basil A. Smikle, Jr.

Melissa Sklarz

Mario F. Cilento

Rhonda Weingarten

George K. Gresham

Daniel F. Donohue

Stuart H. Appelbaum

Bob A New

Gary S. LaBarbera

Lovely A. Warren

Stephanie A. Miner

Katherine M. Sheehan

Anastasia M. Somoza

Sandra Ung

Ruben Diaz, Jr.

Hazel L. Ingram — The oldest elector, at 93.[8]

Rachel D. Gold[4]

North Carolina

Electors: 15, voted for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

Linda Harper

Charles Staley

Karen Kozel

Martha Jenkins

Celeste Stanley

Donald Webb

Robert Muller

Jennifer Dunbar

Andrea Arterburn

Glenn Pinckney Sr.

Mark Delk

David Speight

Ann Sullivan

Lee Green

David Smuski[4]

North Dakota

Electors: 3, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President[50]

John Olson

Duane Mutch

Bev Clayburgh

Ohio

Electors: 18, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

Marilyn Ashcraft[51]

Curt Braden[51]

Rob Scott (Replaced Christina Hagan,[51] who resigned position, possibly ineligible, being in the State Legislature)

Lee-Ann Johnson[52]

Ralph King[53]

Alex Triantafilou[53]

Mary Anne Christie

Corey Schottenstein

Jim Dicke II

Cheryl Blakely

Richard Jones

Tom Coyne

Judy Westbrock

Leonard Hubert

Tracey Winbush

James Wert

Brian Schottenstein

Ed Crawford[4]

Oklahoma

Electors: 7, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President[54]

David Oldham

Teresa Lyn Turner

Mark Thomas

Bobby Cleveland

Lauree Elizabeth Marshall

Charles W. Potts

George W. Wiland, Jr.[4]

Oregon

Electors: 7, pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President

Frank James Dixon, Portland[55]

Karen A. Packer, Newberg

Austin Folnagy, Klamath Falls

Leon H. Coleman, Aloha

Harry W. “Sam” Sappington III, Albany

Timothy Norman Powers Rowan, Portland

Laura Gillpatrick, Eugene[4]

Pennsylvania

Electors: 20, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

Bob Asher

Mary Barket

Robert Bozzuto

Theodore (Ted) Christian

Michael Downing

Margaret Ferraro

Robert Gleason

Christopher Gleason

Joyce Haas

Ash Khare

James McErlane

Elstina Pickett

Patricia Poprik

Andrew Reilly

Carol Sides

Glora “Lee” Snover

Richard Stewart

Lawrence Tabas

Christine Toretti

Carolyn Bunny Welsh[4]

Rhode Island

Electors: 4, pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President

Clay Pell — Signed letter demanding an intelligence briefing on the alleged Russian hacking.[13]

Grace Diaz

L. Susan Weiner

Frank J. Montanaro[4]

South Carolina

Electors: 9, voted for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

Glenn McCall

Matt Moore

Terry Hardesty

Jim Ulmer

Brenda Bedenbaugh

Bill Conley

Shery Smith

Moye Graham

Jerry Rovner[4][56]

South Dakota

Electors: 3, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

Marty Jackley[57]

Dennis Daugaard

Matt Michels[4]

Tennessee

Electors: 11, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

Beth Scott Clayton Amos, a State Executive Committee member for the Republican party, member of the Board of the Estate Planning Council of Middle TN, At Large

Joey Jacobs of Brentwood as a statewide delegate (Pres & CEO of Acadia Healthcare), At Large

Jason Mumpower (Bristol), CD1

Susan Mills (Maryville), CD2

Liz Holiway (Harriman), CD3

Lynne Davis (Lascassas), CD4

Tom Lawless (Nashville), CD5 — Says he will vote for Trump stating: “Hell will freeze and we will be skating on the lava before I change,” he said. “He won the state and I’ve pledged and gave my word that that’s what I would do. And I won’t break it.”[42]

Mike Callahan (Monterey), CD6

Pat Allen (Clarksville), CD7

Shannon Haynes (Alamo), CD8

Drew Daniel (Memphis), CD9[4]

Texas

Electors: 38, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President. (One, Christopher Suprun, has pledged not to vote for Donald Trump.)[58]

(Ron Paul received one vote and John Kasich received one vote for president. Carly Fiorina received one vote for vice president)

Marty Rhymes[59]

Thomas Moon

Carol Sewell

Christopher Suprun — Voted for John Kasich and Carly Fiorina. Pledged to not vote for Trump in New York Times Op-Ed along with claims of being a 9/11 Responder, a claim that has been challenged by multiple news sources including the Dallas Morning News.[60][61][62]

John E. Harper

Sherrill Lenz

Nicholas Ciggelakis

Will Hickman

Landon Estay

Rex Lamb

Rosemary Edwards

Matt Stringer

Deborah Coffey (replaced Shellie Surles, ruled ineligible)

Benona Love (replaced Melissa Kalka, ruled ineligible)

Sandra Cararas

David Thackston

Robert Bruce

Margie Forster

Scott Mann

Marian K. Stanko

Tina Gibson

Ken Muenzter

Alexander Kim

Virginia Abel

Curtis Nelson

Sherry Clark (replaced Kenneth Clark, ruled ineligible)

Candace Noble

Fred Farias

John Dillard

Tom Knight

Marian Knowlton

Rex Teter

Jon Jewett

Susan Fischer

Lauren Byers

William Greene — Voted for Ron Paul and Mike Pence

Mary Lou Erben

Janis Holt (replaced Arthur Sisneros, who resigned from Texas Electoral College rather than vote for Trump.)[61][63]

Utah

Electors: 6, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President[64]

Cherilyn Eagar

Kris Kimball

Jeremy Jenkins

Peter Greathouse

Chia-Chi Teng

Richard Snelgrove[4]

Vermont

Electors: 3, pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President

Peter Shumlin

Martha Allen

Tim Jerman[4]

Virginia

Electors: 13, pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President[65]

Bethany J. Rowland, Chesapeake[66]

Debra Stevens Fitzgearld, Harrisonburg

James Harold Allen Boyd, Culpeper

Jasper L. Hendricks, III, Pamplin

Jeanette C. Sarver, Dublin

K. James O’Connor, Jr., Manassas

Kathy Stewart Shupe, Sterling

Keith A. Scarborough, Woodbridge

Lashrecse D. Aird, Petersburg

Susan Johnson Rowland, Chesapeake

Terry C. Frye, Bristol

Virginia L. Peters, Alexandria

Vivian J. Paige, Norfolk[4]

Washington

Electors: 12, pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton for President and Tim Kaine for Vice President[67]

(Clinton received eight votes, Colin Powell received three, and Faith Spotted Eagle received one.)

(Kaine received eight votes and Elizabeth Warren, Susan Collins, Maria Cantwell, and Winona LaDuke each received one for Vice-President.)[68]

Elizabeth Caldwell — Voted for Clinton and Kaine

Dan Carpita — Voted for Clinton and Kaine

Peter Bret Chiafalo — Voted for Colin Powell[69][70] and Elizabeth Warren[71]

Levi Guerra — Voted for Colin Powell and Maria Cantwell. Had stated she planned to vote for a Republican “consensus candidate.”[71][72][73]

Eric Herde — Voted for Clinton and Kaine

Joshua Ivey — Voted for Clinton and Kaine

Esther John — Voted for Colin Powell for President and Susan Collins for Vice President.[71]

Julie Johnson — Voted for Clinton and Kaine

Varisha Khan — Voted for Clinton and Kaine

Chris Porter — Voted for Clinton and Kaine

Robert Satiacum, Jr. — A member of the Puyallup Tribe. Refused to vote for Clinton and Kaine, and voted for Faith Spotted Eagle[74][75] and Winona LaDuke[71] instead.

Phillip Tyler — Voted for Clinton and Kaine[4][76]

West Virginia

Electors: 5, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President

Ron Foster

Patrick Morrisey

Ann Urling

Mac Warner

Bill Cole[4]

Wisconsin

Electors: 10, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President[77]

Kim Travis, Williams Bay, CD1

Kim Babler, Madison, CD2

Brian Westrate, Fall Creek, CD3 — Tweeted that he will vote for Donald Trump[78]

Brad Courtney, Whitefish Bay, CD4

Kathy Kiernan, Richfield, CD5

Dan Feyen, Fond du Lac, CD6

Kevin Hermening, Wausau, CD7 (replacing Jim Miller, Hayward[79])

Bill Berglund, Sturgeon Bay, CD8

Steve King, Janesville, At Large

Mary Buestrin, River Hills, At Large[4]

Wyoming

Electors: 3, pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President[80]

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Gab1930s
Gab1930s

Written by Gab1930s

Ibrahim A. Arrahim has studied and observed men’s fashion since he was 12 years old. He says, “It’s my life’s passion to be very involved in this tradition a

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