Category Archives: Iowa Caucuses

Iowa Caucuses 2024

The 2024 presidential primaries officially kicks off on Monday night in the frigid cold of Iowa.

Traditionally, the Iowa Caucuses have three major components.  First, they are used to create the local organization of the political parties as caucus attendees elect the precinct’s representatives to the county committee.  Second, they are used to choose the delegates to the county convention (which in turn will choose the congressional district/state convention delegates who will elect the national convention delegates).  Third, a preference vote is taken which is used to allocate national convention delegates.

Thanks in part to Iowa’s move to the right and past problems with counting and report the preference vote, the national Democratic Party has rescinded its permission for Iowa to conduct a pre-March preference vote.  Unlike their counterparts in New Hampshire, Iowa Democrats have worked with the national party (in the hopes that in the future they might get a pre-March spot back).  But it is helpful to have both parties hold their precinct caucuses on the same date and holding a later event would create timing issues.  So the Democrats will use their caucuses for the purposes of electing party officials and the delegates who will attend the county conventions.  But to comply with national party rules, there will be no presidential preference vote on Monday.  Instead, there will be a party-run primary that will conclude in March. Continue Reading...

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Who Wins Iowa?

No, this post is not about which candidate I believe will actually win Iowa.  Rather, it is about how the networks will report the result in Iowa this evening.

As discussed in last week’s post on delegate math,  the delegate selection plan for Iowa has the Iowa Democratic Party reporting three separate counts from tonight’s caucuses.  And it will be interesting to see how the media treats these numbers in assessing the results.

The first count is the initial preference votes from the precinct caucuses.  This vote is the vote that most accurately reflects the support that each candidate has and is the closest thing to the votes in other states (excluding those with ranked-choice voting).  In years past, this number has not been available to the media.  There are strong arguments for using this number in determining who “won” Iowa. Continue Reading...

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Strategic Voting in Iowa

Most voters in most states (heck even most voters in Iowa) have never experienced anything like the Iowa Caucuses.  For most people, voting is going down to your local precinct (or maybe putting a ballot in the mail).  You get a ballot from the election judge, fill it out in the privacy of a “booth,” and then drop it in the ballot box.  (Or maybe, you use a touchscreen terminal in your precinct.)  In any case, unless you have a long wait in line to get your ballot, you can be in and out of the precinct in less than fifteen minutes.

In Iowa, especially on the Democratic side, the precinct caucus is a meeting.  After some introductory comments and business (like electing the chair and secretary of the caucus), the local representative of each candidate will get a chance to make a speech.  The attendees will then divide into preference groups.  After the initial division, a count is done of each preference group and the chair calculates which groups are “viable” (i.e. have a high enough percent to qualify for delegates to the county convention).  At that point, there is a chance to realign.  After the realignment, there is a second count.  The actual allocation of delegates is based on the second count.

In the past, the first vote was a test vote.  Regardless of whether your candidate had enough votes to win delegates or not, you were free to change your mind before the second vote.  And this opportunity to change your vote gave the opportunity for strategic voting.  For example, imagine that your precinct gets 5 delegates and there are 101 attendees.  In the first round, 5 candidates get votes — candidate A got 31 votes, candidate B got 25 votes, candidate C got 20, candidate D got 14, and candidate E got 11.  Under the pre-2020 rules, the supporters of the top three candidate had a choice, some of them could defect to candidate D or candidate E to help those candidates get to 16 attendees so that they to would get a delegate.  Alternatively, they could make promises to those supporters (perhaps guaranteeing that if their candidate got a second or third delegate they would give that additional delegate to the supporters of the failed candidate).  What deal was given might depend on which candidates were not viable and who was leading.  If you were a supporter of candidate B and you thought that — if forced — the supporters of candidates D and E would support candidate A, you might be willing to send seven attendees to those two candidates so that everybody got 1 delegate from the precinct (effectively counting as a tied precinct toward the state numbers) rather than candidate A winning 3-1-1.  On the other hand, if you think that they would naturally support candidate B, you might offer the delegate slot knowing that it would get you a 2-2-1 split (losing nothing to candidate A and beating candidate C). Continue Reading...

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Delegate Math 2020 — Iowa

We’re back with that quadrennial feature — delegate math.  As we were reminded by the 2016 election, the United States uses an indirect system for electing president.  Under this system, it’s not the total popular vote that counts.  It’s how that popular vote translates into electoral votes.  Likewise, for the nomination, the task is to turn popular votes into delegates.  Back in 2008, the difference between Secretary Clinton and President Obama was the Obama’s campaign success at figuring out where they could gain an extra delegate here and there.

In a short period of time, voting will start with the Iowa caucuses.  While the number of caucuses have dwindled to almost nothing (Iowa, Nevada, and Wyoming being the only real caucus states left), a caucus is different from a normal primary.  In a caucus, rather than showing up, casting a ballot, and then leaving, voters actually have to take part in a meeting in which voting takes place in the middle of the meeting.  The other key feature of a caucus is that voting is public, not secret.  The participants literally go to different parts of the meeting facility depending upon which candidate they are supporting.  Your friends and neighbors get to see who is heading to the Biden corner/room and who is heading to the Gabbard corner/room.    In addition, for the purpose of any later “recount,” participants sign a pledge of support form for their candidate.

For all the states and territories, the first key number is 15%.  Whether in the precinct caucus itself or at the congressional district level or at the state level, a candidate needs to get 15% of the vote to win delegates.  (Some smaller precincts have higher thresholds because they are only selecting two or three delegates, but 15% is still a good general rule of thumb in looking at polling numbers.)  What makes a caucus different than most primaries is that there will be a chance after the initial division of the precinct into the separate candidate areas for voters to realign. Continue Reading...

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Could this be the end of the Iowa Caucuses?

The DNC has decided against Iowa’s virtual caucus plan. The Iowa plan was in response to the DNC’s requirement after 2016 that 2020 caucuses allow some sort of absentee voting. So this virtual voting was Iowa’s plan. The DNC said it was too easy to hack. And so, back to the drawing board, with a new plan to be delivered by mid-September. On the one hand, caucuses are long, not everyone can attend, and it’s a good idea to find a workaround. But, if you allow absentee voting, is it really that different from a primary?

Well, enter New Hampshire, which by law sets its primary at least a week prior to any other primary. If Iowa cannot come up with a way to please the DNC’s goal of increasing participation in caucuses without making their system a primary, then the calendar (which starts in only 5 months) may shift. Because if you cannot vote virtually, and you have to show up in person AND there has to be absentee voting, it certainly looks like a heavy lift to hold a caucus.

We know that the new Iowa plan favored activists over less-engaged voters. That is, the value of an in-person vote was greater than that of a virtual vote. And while I sadly cannot find the poll in question, I’d read that more of Warren and Sanders’ caucus-goers were in-person, compared to Biden’s. Continue Reading...

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