Volunteers flock to Iowa for high-stakes Democratic nominating contest
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[February 03, 2020]
By Pavithra George
DES MOINES, Iowa (Reuters) - Scores of
volunteers from across the United States descended on icy Iowa ahead of
Monday's Democratic caucus with one goal: nominating a candidate who can
defeat Republican President Donald Trump in November.
Walking door-to-door to try to win over campaign-wary Iowans can be
lonely and thankless work, but opinion polls showing a tight race and
Democrats' widespread aversion to Trump have kept volunteers coming to
the rural state that hosts the nation's first nominating contest of the
2020 election.
Maryland native Dylan Newberry, 27, moved to Iowa in early January to
volunteer for U.S. Senator Cory Booker. He then extended his stay and
switched his support to former South Bend, Indiana, mayor Pete Buttigieg
after Booker dropped out.
"Our leader (Trump) is very much trying to divide us with hate,"
Newberry said as he carried a clipboard door-to-door in a quiet
neighborhood in Des Moines. "I really think we need to win this
election."
Newberry is one of thousands volunteering for Buttigieg, who is trailing
U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders and former Vice President Joe Biden in most
opinion polls and needs a strong showing in Iowa to remain in
contention.
The Sanders campaign, which has seen a recent surge in support in Iowa,
said volunteers from all over the country knocked on 130,000 doors
during the last weekend of January alone. The campaigns declined to give
exact numbers of volunteers working in the state.
The caucuses have no paper ballots and choose candidates entirely by
turn-out at 1,600 meetings, giving volunteers an outsize role in the
process, said Judy Downs, executive director of the Polk County
Democrats.
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2020 U.S. presidential candidate and U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren
(D-MA) speaks at a Get Out the Caucus rally in Davenport, Iowa,
U.S., February 1, 2020. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
"Whether that's providing rides or childcare, the campaign that can
turn out voters the best is going to win," said Downs.
Opinion polls show Sanders and Biden in a dead heat, with Buttigieg
and U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren close behind. U.S. Senator Amy
Klobuchar is fifth, the only other candidate within striking
distance of the leaders.
On one recent chilly morning, Newberry struggled to find residents
who would agree to caucus for Buttigieg. Most were either at work or
unwilling to open their door to yet another campaign representative.
Sometimes residents have accused him of trespassing or soliciting.
Hostile dogs have forced him to skip a house. Life as a volunteer
can be lonely and stressful, Newberry said as he trudged through the
snow.
Newberry has volunteered on behalf of candidates in other elections,
but said the stakes seem higher this time in Iowa, where a crowded
field is vying to win their party's nomination for a chance to
topple Trump.
"I get up every day in this cold just with that motivation," he
said. "I just have to reach as many people as possible."
(Reporting by Pavithra George; Additional reporting by Simon Lewis
and Jarrett Renshaw; Writing by Caroline Stauffer; Editing by Daniel
Wallis)
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