Any post that calls Trump's win a landslide cannot be taken seriously.
Trump won 30 states including 3 blue states he took away from Hillary, that's a landslide. Hillary was walking funny for weeks after that epic beating.
There is no landslide where the winner gets fewer votes than the loser.
It's nice to see however that you are admitting that Clinton and Obama, between them, won FOUR bigger landslides than Trump.
30 states and over 300 electoral votes, how many did Hillary win?


Beaten by Clinton twice and Obama twice but you're too much of a shit dick to admit they were bigger landslides by your own measure...
...which is really really really funny and a perfect example of RWnuttery.
So you admit Trump wiped Hillary off the map, that's progress I guess. Funny how you had to deflect to Obama lol.
Mr. Trump won 30 states, gathering 306 of 538 electoral votes. There have been 45 presidential elections in which the winning candidate won a larger share of the electoral vote.
Percent of electoral vote won
1.George Washington (1789)
George Washington (1792)
3.Franklin D. Roosevelt (1936)
4.James Monroe (1820)
5.Ronald Reagan (1984)
6.Richard Nixon (1972)
7.Thomas Jefferson (1804)
8.Abraham Lincoln (1864)
9.Ronald Reagan (1980)
10.Lyndon B. Johnson (1964)
11.Franklin D. Roosevelt (1932)
12.Dwight Eisenhower (1956)
13.Franklin Pierce (1852)
14.Franklin D. Roosevelt (1940)
15.James Monroe (1816)
16.Herbert Hoover (1928)
17.Dwight Eisenhower (1952)
18.Woodrow Wilson (1912)
19.Franklin D. Roosevelt (1944)
20.Ulysses Grant (1872)
21.William H. Harrison (1840)
22.George Bush (1988)
23.Warren G. Harding (1920)
24.Andrew Jackson (1832)
25.Ulysses Grant (1868)
26.Calvin Coolidge (1924)
27.Theodore Roosevelt (1904)
28.Bill Clinton (1996)
29.James Madison (1808)
30.Bill Clinton (1992)
31.Andrew Jackson (1828)
32.Barack Obama (2008)
33.William Taft (1908)
34.William McKinley (1900)
35.Grover Cleveland (1892)
36.James K. Polk (1844)
37.Barack Obama (2012)
38.William McKinley (1896)
39.Abraham Lincoln (1860)
40.James Madison (1812)
41.James Buchanan (1856)
42.Benjamin Harrison (1888)
43.James Garfield (1880)
44.Martin Van Buren (1836)
45.Harry Truman (1948)
46.Donald J. Trump (2016)
47.John F. Kennedy (1960)
48.Zachary Taylor (1848)
49.Richard Nixon (1968)
50.Jimmy Carter (1976)
51.Grover Cleveland (1884)
52.George W. Bush (2004)
53.Thomas Jefferson (1800)
54.Woodrow Wilson (1916)
55.John Adams (1796)
56.George W. Bush (2000)
57.Rutherford B. Hayes (1876)
58.John Quincy Adams (1824)*
100%
100%
98.5%
98.3%
97.6%
96.7%
92.0%
91.0%
90.9%
90.3%
88.9%
86.1%
85.8%
84.6%
84.3%
83.6%
83.2%
81.9%
81.4%
81.3%
79.6%
79.2%
76.1%
76.0%
72.8%
71.9%
70.6%
70.4%
69.7%
68.8%
68.2%
67.8%
66.5%
65.3%
62.4%
61.8%
61.7%
60.6%
59.4%
59.0%
58.8%
58.1%
58.0%
57.8%
57.1%
56.9%
56.4%
56.2%
55.9%
55.2%
54.6%
53.2%
52.9%
52.2%
51.4%
50.4%
50.1%
32.2%
Mr. Trump trails in the
popular vote by over 2.5 million votes as states continue to report final results. His deficit gives him the third-worst vote margin among winning candidates since 1824.
Popular vote margin
1.Warren G. Harding (1920)
2.Calvin Coolidge (1924)
3.Franklin D. Roosevelt (1936)
4.Richard Nixon (1972)
5.Lyndon B. Johnson (1964)
6.Theodore Roosevelt (1904)
7.Ronald Reagan (1984)
8.Andrew Jackson (1832)
9.Franklin D. Roosevelt (1932)
10.Herbert Hoover (1928)
11.Dwight Eisenhower (1956)
12.Woodrow Wilson (1912)
13.Martin Van Buren (1836)
14.Andrew Jackson (1828)
15.James Buchanan (1856)
16.Ulysses Grant (1872)
17.Dwight Eisenhower (1952)
18.Abraham Lincoln (1860)
19.Abraham Lincoln (1864)
20.Franklin D. Roosevelt (1940)
21.Ronald Reagan (1980)
22.William Taft (1908)
23.Bill Clinton (1996)
24.George H.W. Bush (1988)
25.Franklin D. Roosevelt (1944)
26.Barack Obama (2008)
27.Franklin Pierce (1852)
28.William McKinley (1900)
29.William H. Harrison (1840)
30.Bill Clinton (1992)
31.Ulysses Grant (1868)
32.Zachary Taylor (1848)
33.Harry Truman (1948)
34.William McKinley (1896)
35.Barack Obama (2012)
36.Woodrow Wilson (1916)
37.Grover Cleveland (1892)
38.George W. Bush (2004)
39.Jimmy Carter (1976)
40.James K. Polk (1844)
41.Richard Nixon (1968)
42.Grover Cleveland (1884)
43.John F. Kennedy (1960)
44.James Garfield (1880)
45.George W. Bush (2000)
46.Benjamin Harrison (1888)
47.Donald J. Trump (2016)
48.Rutherford B. Hayes (1876)
49.John Quincy Adams (1824)*
+26.2%
+25.2%
+24.3%
+23.1%
+22.6%
+18.8%
+18.2%
+17.8%
+17.8%
+17.4%
+15.4%
+14.4%
+14.2%
+12.3%
+12.2%
+11.8%
+10.9%
+10.1%
+10.1%
+9.9%
+9.7%
+8.5%
+8.5%
+7.7%
+7.5%
+7.3%
+6.9%
+6.2%
+6.0%
+5.6%
+5.3%
+4.8%
+4.5%
+4.3%
+3.9%
+3.1%
+3.0%
+2.5%
+2.1%
+1.5%
+0.7%
+0.6%
+0.2%
+0.1%
-0.5%
-0.8%
-2.1%
-3.0%
-10.4%
Reflecting Mr. Trump’s loss in the popular vote, only 29 percent of Americans say that Mr. Trump has a mandate for the agenda he offered during his campaign, according to a
Washington Post-Schar School of Policy and Government poll.
* No candidate in the 1824 election won a majority of electoral votes. The House of Representatives voted for Adams under the provisions of the 12th Amendment.