ANDOVER, Kan. – Students at Andover High School want a President Donald Trump.

Trump won in a landslide in the school’s recent mock election – 51 percent to Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton’s 31.6 percent – in the latest school election to favor the Republican candidate.

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“Out of the two, I’ll probably vote for Trump,” senior Trevor Bateman told KWCH. “Trump has done a lot of awful things, but everything Clinton has done, I feel, outweighs what Trump has done.

“Benghazi, the emails, the Clinton Foundation.”

“They both have a lot going against them,” senior Whitney Pepper agreed. “I was really hesitant voting for Trump because of the way he talks about women. I’m not a fan of that at all.”

Andover social studies teacher James Harris explained that the mock election is designed to give students who can’t legally vote a way to express their opinion and engage in the presidential election, though the 2016 contest seems to be a choice between “the lesser of two evils.”

“Voting is one of the ways, as Americans, we can express our opinions, and the students have a lot of opinions to express, unfortunately most of them aren’t 18 so it can’t be at the official ballot box,” he said.

“The class discussion very much mirror what’s going on in society in the sense that no one is very enthusiastic. It really does seem to be in a way, the lesser of two evils.”

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Many students across the country seem to be coming to the same conclusion, and siding with Trump.

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In Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, election director Marisa Crispell set up three county voting machines to teach Dallas Middle School students about the voting process. The school’s sixth- through eighth-grade students then cast ballots from their presidential pick.

“Every three students are equal to one electoral vote,” eighth-grade history teacher Harry Haas told the Times-Leader. “There is a total of 241 electoral votes in the school.”

The results: Trump took 183 electoral votes and 456 popular votes, while Clinton collected 56 electoral votes and 243 popular votes, Haas said.

It was a similar outcome at Northeastern High School in Fountain City, Indiana, where ninth through 12th grade students favored Trump by 65 percent to Clinton’s 17.69 percent. Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson was a close third with 15.77 percent, the Pal-Item reports.

“I have held these student mock elections during five presidential elections and this is, by far, the largest participation percentage we have ever had,” social studies teacher Mike Roeder told the news site. “They usually parallel the adult vote fairly closely.”

Trump won with nearly the same percentage at Mountain Home High School in Baxter County, Arkansas. There, Trump won with 64 percent of the votes, compared to Clinton’s 12.6 percent. Johnson beat out Clinton at the school by about 6 percent of the vote for second place, The Baxter Bulletin reports.

Other mock elections were closer, but still went to Trump.

In a statewide mock election for high schoolers in Minnesota, Trump won with nearly 35 percent ov the vote over Clinton’s 33 percent, according to the Morrison County Record.