vlog

Skip to content
NOWCAST vlog News at 10pm Weeknights
Watch on Demand
Advertisement

Why does Iowa launch the presidential campaign?

Why does Iowa launch the presidential campaign?
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW BEFORE YOU SHOW UP. THE IOWA CAUCUS WILL TAKE PLACE ON MONDAY AT 7 P.M. AT INDIVIDUAL PRECINCT LOCATIONS IN ALL 99 COUNTIES OF IOWA. ANYONE WILL BE 18 BY ELECTION DAY. THAT’S NOVEMBER FIFTH. CAN CAUCUS. THE EVENTS ARE RUN BY THE STATE PARTY, SO REPUBLICANS AND DEMOCRATS HOLD SEPARATE CAUCUSES FOR THE REPUBLICAN CAUCUSES, IOWANS WILL BE CHOOSING WHICH CANDIDATE THEY WANT AS PRESIDENT AND REMEMBER, CAUCUS LOCATIONS ARE DIFFERENT THAN POLLING PLACES TO KNOW WHERE TO GO. YOU’LL FIRST NEED TO FIND YOUR PRECINCT. GO TO THE SECRETARY OF STATE’S WEBSITE AND TYPE IN YOUR ADDRESS TO FIND YOUR PRECINCT. NEXT, IF YOU’RE A REPUBLICAN, GO TO IOWA GOP. ORG IF YOU’RE A DEMOCRAT, GO TO IOWA DEMOCRATS. ORG SLASH CAUCUS. LOOK FOR YOUR COUNTY AND PRECINCT NAME TO FIND YOUR CAUCUS LOCATION. NOW, CAUCUSES START RIGHT AT 7 P.M., SO MAKE SURE TO ARRIVE EARLY IF YOU’RE A REPUBLICAN, REMEMBER TO BRING A VALID FORM OF ID WITH YOU. THEY CAN BE IN ANY OF THE FORMS LISTED ON YOUR SCREEN LIKE A DRIVER’S LICENSE OR MILITARY ID YOU’LL ALSO NEED TO BE A REGISTERED REPUBLICAN IN ORDER TO PARTICIPATE IN THE GOP CAUCUS. YOU CAN REGISTER ON CAUCUS NIGHT, BUT YOU’LL NEED TO BRING A VALID FORM OF ID AND A PROOF OF ADDRESS THAT COULD BE THINGS LIKE A UTILITY BILL, PAYCHECK, OR A PROPERTY TAX STATEMENT. NOW, ONCE THE REPUBLICAN CAUCUSES START, PEOPLE WILL GIVE SPEECHES ON BEHALF OF PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES AFTER. THAT, VOTING IS DONE BY SECRET BALLOT, AND THERE’S NO SET LIST OF CANDIDATES. TYPICALLY, VOTERS WRITE DOWN WHO THEY WANT FOR PRESIDENT ON A BLANK SLIP OF PAPER. AFTER CASTING YOUR VOTE FOR PRESIDENT, MEMBERS WILL BE ELECTED TO SERVE ON YOUR LOCAL COUNTY CENTRAL COMMITTEE. DELEGATES WILL BE SELECTED FOR YOUR COUNTY PARTY CONVENTION, AND THEN THEY’LL BE DISCUSSION ABOUT SHAPING PARTY PLATFORMS. SOME SMALLER CAUCUSES MIGHT TAKE ABOUT AN HOUR OR TWO, CAUCUSING AT LARGER LOCATIONS COULD TAKE LONGER. NOW, DEMOCRATS WILL ALSO HOLD IN-PERSON CAUCUSES. ALSO AT 7 P.M. ON MONDAY, BUT IT WILL ONLY BE TO TALK ABOUT TRADITIONAL PARTY BUSINESS. IOWA DEMOCRATS WILL CHOOSE WHO THEY WANT FOR PRESIDENT BY MAILING IN A PRESIDENTIAL PREFERENCE CARD. YOU CAN REQUEST A CARD ON THE IOWA DEMOCRATS WEBSITE IN STUDIO AMAN
Advertisement
Why does Iowa launch the presidential campaign?
Iowa assumed its position as the state that votes first for a presidential nominee more than 50 years ago. But its 1972 caucuses didn't feel very historic.Two folding tables at state Democratic Party headquarters were enough to accommodate all staff and media present. No TV cameras rolled. Results from around the state trickled in on two phone lines because the party didn't want to pay for a third. Just one person, a then-25-year-old anti-Vietnam War activist who helped engineer the Iowa caucuses, did the counting."I did borrow a memory calculator to speed up the process,” recalled Richard Bender, now 78, with a laugh. “That was state of the art."“We did not have any clue how big this was going to get," he said.BOOKMARK THIS LINK: 2024 Iowa Republican caucus results statewide, county by countySo big that the Iowa caucuses became an entrenched part of U.S. politics and launched some unexpected candidates toward the White House.In 1976, Iowa propelled former Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter, the little-known one-time peanut farmer.In 2008, the state gave Illinois Sen. Barack Obama his first win over Hillary Clinton, one of the most storied names in Democratic politics.Iowa caucus updates: What to know in final 24 hours before Monday's caucusesBut when Iowa's Republican caucuses start the 2024 election race on Jan. 15, the way voters begin choosing the two major parties’ nominees will look different.The order in which states vote has changed. So have some of the rules.It's a sign of our tumultuous politics, and also how the two front-runners — President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump — have moved party levers to give themselves an advantage, at times sowing chaos and confusion.IOWA CAUCUS PRIMER:What you need to know about 2024 caucuses2024 US presidential caucuses, primaries, explainedMaps: A look at Iowa caucus results from the past 20 yearsHow will the Iowa Republican caucuses work in 2024?How will the Iowa Democratic caucuses work in 2024?How did Iowa become the first to vote?The way that presidential nominees are selected has changed significantly over the years — and hasn't always involved the will of the voters.For decades during the 1900s the process was dominated by state and local party bosses, giving rise to the notion of the “smoke-filled room,” where top leaders were said to huddle secretly to determine their presidential candidate.That legend began with the Republican convention of 1920, when party leaders met secretly in a three-room suite at the still-operating Blackstone Hotel in Chicago and Warren G. Harding emerged as the party’s surprise presidential nominee.The party machine model continued until the bloody 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, when police clashed with street protesters including students opposing the Vietnam War. Democrats later said the chaotic scenes contributed to Republican Richard Nixon's subsequent victory. As a result, the party created a commission seeking to empower women, minority voters and young people in selecting their presidential nominee.The post-1968 Democratic reforms had a lasting effect on Iowa. New party rules required more time to pass between the state party's four tiers of conventions, which ranged from local to statewide. That forced Iowa's Democratic leaders to start the process earlier in the calendar.When it became clear Iowa’s caucuses could move ahead of New Hampshire — where the primary had kicked off presidential voting for decades — officials jumped at the chance.“We finagled a little bit,” Bender recalled.In January of that year, the corn-producing state tucked within America’s heartland hosted the Democratic Party’s opening presidential contest for the first time. Republicans followed four years later.How are the nominees chosen now? Voters today weigh in on who should be the major parties' general election candidates through a series of contests held over the first half of the year.Candidates accumulate delegates — those people who will formally select the nominee at the parties' national conventions this summer — based off state-level performance, using complex rules that vary by party and place. Officially, neither party will have a nominee until a candidate wins the number of delegates needed at the convention to clinch the nomination.Besides the delegate race, how a candidate performs early on is critical to gaining campaign momentum and media attention. That's why the order in which states vote matters so greatly.It's also why candidates for years have spent so much time in Iowa, from stopping at the state fair to chat up voters while working the storied pork chop grill to talking policy at swanky GOP dinners or tiny town halls deep in corn country.“Primary voters in later states pay attention to what happened in early states and they react to what they learn,” said David Redlawsk, a University of Delaware professor and co-author of a book about the Iowa caucuses.What's different for 2024?This year, Iowa will again hold the first Republican contest. But Biden last year directed the Democratic National Committee to shake up the party's primary calendar to start in South Carolina, which used to follow Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada.South Carolina, where the population is 26% Black, has a primary electorate that's much more representative of the Democratic Party's diverse coalition than Iowa and New Hampshire, two of the whitest states in the nation. The state also is safer political terrain for Biden, who struggled badly in Iowa and New Hampshire in 2020 before a victory in South Carolina resurrected his campaign.The DNC also voted to put Nevada on the same day as New Hampshire, followed by Georgia and Michigan — other more diverse states — next after South Carolina, which votes Feb 3. But Georgia Republicans refused to move their state's primary date and New Hampshire opted to push ahead with its primary on Jan. 23 anyway. Biden won't be on the ballot, but could still win as a write-in candidate.Iowa Democrats also are going ahead with voting on the same day as Republicans, though they'll do so by mail and say results won’t be publicly announced until March, so they comply with party rules letting the other states go earlier.Biden, 81, is expected to win the Democratic nomination. The president faces token opposition from Minnesota Democratic Rep. Dean Phillips and progressive author Marianne Williamson.Meanwhile, Republicans have continued to open with Iowa.Trump, 77, is Republicans' overwhelming favorite, though he faces several significant GOP challengers, including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, 45, and former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley, 51. He also has been indicted multiple times, and a trial for one criminal case could begin in the middle of the primary campaign.While their campaign strategies have varied, the GOP candidates know one of the keys to winning over Iowa voters is spending time in person courting them and embracing some of the state's political traditions.Ron DeSantis completed an Iowa campaign milestone by visiting all of its 99 counties.Nikki Haley greeted voters at the Iowa State Fair.Donald Trump tossed autographed footballs into the crowd at a fraternity house ahead of a college football game.What's happening next? But winning — or losing — in Iowa isn’t everything. In the earliest contests, candidates are really playing an expectations game.BOOKMARK THIS LINK: 2024 Iowa Republican caucus results statewide, county by countyIn the 1976 caucuses, Carter finished second to those who chose not to commit to any candidate — but it was far better than expected and served to lift his campaign. In 1992, Bill Clinton finished fourth in Iowa but notched a stronger-than-expected second-place New Hampshire finish, declaring himself the “Comeback Kid.”Trump lost Iowa in 2016 to Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, but then dominated in New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada.This year, GOP voters will gather in local schools or other community sites for hours to be part of caucuses, which are party-run events conducted by local officials and volunteers.Voting is open only to registered Republicans. Those who show up — typically a fraction of the state's eligible voters — hear from representatives of the campaigns before making their selections.Trump is hoping for a commanding win so he looks unstoppable going forward. If he's successful, Iowa can claim to once again hold a central role in U.S. politics, and in how the nation chooses a president.

Iowa assumed its position as the state that votes first for a presidential nominee more than 50 years ago. But its 1972 caucuses didn't feel very historic.

Two folding tables at state Democratic Party headquarters were enough to accommodate all staff and media present. No TV cameras rolled. Results from around the state trickled in on two phone lines because the party didn't want to pay for a third. Just one person, a then-25-year-old anti-Vietnam War activist who helped engineer the Iowa caucuses, did the counting.

Advertisement

"I did borrow a memory calculator to speed up the process,” recalled Richard Bender, now 78, with a laugh. “That was state of the art."

“We did not have any clue how big this was going to get," he said.

BOOKMARK THIS LINK: 2024 Iowa Republican caucus results statewide, county by county

So big that the Iowa caucuses became an entrenched part of U.S. politics and launched some unexpected candidates toward the White House.

In 1976, Iowa propelled former Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter, the little-known one-time peanut farmer.

FILE - Jimmy Carter, Democratic presidential candidate, left, speaks to a crowd of supporters on the Van Ryswyk farm in Des Moines, Iowa, Aug. 24, 1976. The once-every-four-years Iowa caucuses grew to be an entrenched part of U.S. politics, catapulting little-known one-time peanut farmer Carter&apos&#x3B;s bid for the White House. (AP Photo, File)
AP Photo, File
Jimmy Carter, Democratic presidential candidate, left, speaks to a crowd of supporters on the Van Ryswyk farm in Des Moines, Iowa, Aug. 24, 1976. The once-every-four-years Iowa caucuses grew to be an entrenched part of U.S. politics, catapulting little-known one-time peanut farmer Carter’s bid for the White House. 

In 2008, the state gave Illinois Sen. Barack Obama his first win over Hillary Clinton, one of the most storied names in Democratic politics.

Iowa caucus updates: What to know in final 24 hours before Monday's caucuses

FILE - Then-Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., arrives at a rally in Des Moines, Iowa, Friday, Oct. 31, 2008. The once-every-four-years Iowa caucuses grew to be an entrenched part of U.S. politics, introducing the world to Barack Obama in 2008. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)
Jae C. Hong
Then-Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., arrives at a rally in Des Moines, Iowa, Friday, Oct. 31, 2008. The once-every-four-years Iowa caucuses grew to be an entrenched part of U.S. politics, introducing the world to Barack Obama in 2008.

But when Iowa's Republican caucuses start the 2024 election race on Jan. 15, the way voters begin choosing the two major parties’ nominees will look different.

The order in which states vote has changed. So have some of the rules.

It's a sign of our tumultuous politics, and also how the two front-runners — President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump — have moved party levers to give themselves an advantage, at times sowing chaos and confusion.

IOWA CAUCUS PRIMER:

How did Iowa become the first to vote?

The way that presidential nominees are selected has changed significantly over the years — and hasn't always involved the will of the voters.

For decades during the 1900s the process was dominated by state and local party bosses, giving rise to the notion of the “smoke-filled room,” where top leaders were said to huddle secretly to determine their presidential candidate.

That legend began with the Republican convention of 1920, when party leaders met secretly in a three-room suite at the still-operating Blackstone Hotel in Chicago and Warren G. Harding emerged as the party’s surprise presidential nominee.

The party machine model continued until the bloody 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, when police clashed with street protesters including students opposing the Vietnam War. Democrats later said the chaotic scenes contributed to Republican Richard Nixon's subsequent victory. As a result, the party created a commission seeking to empower women, minority voters and young people in selecting their presidential nominee.

The post-1968 Democratic reforms had a lasting effect on Iowa. New party rules required more time to pass between the state party's four tiers of conventions, which ranged from local to statewide. That forced Iowa's Democratic leaders to start the process earlier in the calendar.

When it became clear Iowa’s caucuses could move ahead of New Hampshire — where the primary had kicked off presidential voting for decades — officials jumped at the chance.

“We finagled a little bit,” Bender recalled.

In January of that year, the corn-producing state tucked within America’s heartland hosted the Democratic Party’s opening presidential contest for the first time. Republicans followed four years later.

How are the nominees chosen now?

Voters today weigh in on who should be the major parties' general election candidates through a series of contests held over the first half of the year.

Candidates accumulate delegates — those people who will formally select the nominee at the parties' national conventions this summer — based off state-level performance, using complex rules that vary by party and place. Officially, neither party will have a nominee until a candidate wins the number of delegates needed at the convention to clinch the nomination.

Besides the delegate race, how a candidate performs early on is critical to gaining campaign momentum and media attention. That's why the order in which states vote matters so greatly.

It's also why candidates for years have spent so much time in Iowa, from stopping at the state fair to chat up voters while working the storied pork chop grill to talking policy at swanky GOP dinners or tiny town halls deep in corn country.

“Primary voters in later states pay attention to what happened in early states and they react to what they learn,” said David Redlawsk, a University of Delaware professor and co-author of a book about the Iowa caucuses.

What's different for 2024?

This year, Iowa will again hold the first Republican contest. But Biden last year directed the Democratic National Committee to shake up the party's primary calendar to start in South Carolina, which used to follow Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada.

South Carolina, where the population is 26% Black, has a primary electorate that's much more representative of the Democratic Party's diverse coalition than Iowa and New Hampshire, two of the whitest states in the nation. The state also is safer political terrain for Biden, who struggled badly in Iowa and New Hampshire in 2020 before a victory in South Carolina resurrected his campaign.

The DNC also voted to put Nevada on the same day as New Hampshire, followed by Georgia and Michigan — other more diverse states — next after South Carolina, which votes Feb 3. But Georgia Republicans refused to move their state's primary date and New Hampshire opted to push ahead with its primary on Jan. 23 anyway. Biden won't be on the ballot, but could still win as a write-in candidate.

Iowa Democrats also are going ahead with voting on the same day as Republicans, though they'll do so by mail and say results won’t be publicly announced until March, so they comply with party rules letting the other states go earlier.

Biden, 81, is expected to win the Democratic nomination. The president faces token opposition from Minnesota Democratic Rep. Dean Phillips and progressive author Marianne Williamson.

Meanwhile, Republicans have continued to open with Iowa.

Trump, 77, is Republicans' overwhelming favorite, though he faces several significant GOP challengers, including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, 45, and former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley, 51. He also has been indicted multiple times, and a trial for one criminal case could begin in the middle of the primary campaign.

NEWTON, IOWA - January 6: Former president Donald Trump signs autographs at a campaign rally at Des Moines Area Community College in Newton, Iowa on Saturday, January 6, 2024. 

(Photo by Jordan Gale/For The Washington Post via Getty Images)
The Washington Post
Former president Donald Trump signs autographs at a campaign rally at Des Moines Area Community College in Newton, Iowa on Saturday, January 6, 2024.

While their campaign strategies have varied, the GOP candidates know one of the keys to winning over Iowa voters is spending time in person courting them and embracing some of the state's political traditions.

Ron DeSantis completed an Iowa campaign milestone by visiting all of its 99 counties.

Nikki Haley greeted voters at the Iowa State Fair.

Donald Trump tossed autographed footballs into the crowd at a fraternity house ahead of a college football game.

DES MOINES, IOWA - JANUARY 10: Republican presidential candidates Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley participate in the CNN Republican Presidential Primary Debate in Sheslow Auditorium at Drake University on January 10, 2024 in Des Moines, Iowa. DeSantis and Haley both qualified for this final debate before the Iowa caucuses, while former President Donald Trump declined to participate and instead held a simultaneous town hall event live on FOX News. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
Chip Somodevilla
Republican presidential candidates Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley participate in the CNN Republican Presidential Primary Debate in Sheslow Auditorium at Drake University on January 10, 2024 in Des Moines, Iowa. DeSantis and Haley both qualified for this final debate before the Iowa caucuses, while former President Donald Trump declined to participate and instead held a simultaneous town hall event live on FOX News. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

What's happening next?

But winning — or losing — in Iowa isn’t everything. In the earliest contests, candidates are really playing an expectations game.

BOOKMARK THIS LINK: 2024 Iowa Republican caucus results statewide, county by county

In the 1976 caucuses, Carter finished second to those who chose not to commit to any candidate — but it was far better than expected and served to lift his campaign. In 1992, Bill Clinton finished fourth in Iowa but notched a stronger-than-expected second-place New Hampshire finish, declaring himself the “Comeback Kid.”

Trump lost Iowa in 2016 to Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, but then dominated in New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada.

This year, GOP voters will gather in local schools or other community sites for hours to be part of caucuses, which are party-run events conducted by local officials and volunteers.

Voting is open only to registered Republicans. Those who show up — typically a fraction of the state's eligible voters — hear from representatives of the campaigns before making their selections.

Trump is hoping for a commanding win so he looks unstoppable going forward. If he's successful, Iowa can claim to once again hold a central role in U.S. politics, and in how the nation chooses a president.