Democrats' bid to challenge Trump off to a messy start in Iowa
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[February 04, 2020]
By Jarrett Renshaw and Ginger Gibson
DES MOINES, Iowa (Reuters) - The Democratic
Party's effort to choose an election challenger to Republican U.S.
President Donald Trump got off to a chaotic start in Iowa, with
officials blaming "inconsistencies" for an indefinite delay in the
state's caucus results.
Early on Tuesday, hours after voters made their choices at 1,600 schools
and other public locations, Iowa Democratic Party Chairman Troy Price
told reporters to expect results sometime on Tuesday in the state, the
first to hold a nominating contest.
The party said it had to make "quality checks" after finding
"inconsistencies" in the reporting of the data from the caucus sites,
sparking frustration in Democratic campaigns and criticism from
Republicans.
GRAPHIC: Inside the Iowa caucuses - https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ELECTION-IOWA/0100B5BX3CX/index.html
It was unclear when any results would be released.
Iowa voters were meeting to render judgment on a field of 11 Democratic
contenders led by front-runner Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont and his
rivals, former Vice President Joe Biden, former South Bend, Indiana,
Mayor Pete Buttigieg and Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts.
Party officials voiced confidence in their ability to ensure accurate
results, citing a paper trail to validate the votes.
Republican Brad Parscale, Trump's campaign manager, called it a
"Democratic Party meltdown," on Twitter. "They can't even run the caucus
and they want to run the government. No thank you."
But Republicans in Iowa have their own history of chaos. On the night of
the party's 2012 caucuses, Mitt Romney was declared to have won by eight
votes. But the party said two weeks later that Rick Santorum was the
actual winner by a 34-vote margin. Romney went on to be the nominee.
GRAPHIC: Calendar of each state’s Democratic nominating contest and its
allocated delegates - https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ELECTION-CALENDAR/0100B31F26V/index.html
DISMAY IN THE RANKS
Long lines and heavy crowds were reported in some locations on Monday,
but more than eight hours after the doors closed there was no word on
the outcome. State party officials twice had phone calls with the
candidates' campaigns to update them.
"Every second that passes undermines the process a little bit," said
Warren's campaign manager Roger Lau.
A source in Buttigieg's campaign said the delay would "delegitimize" the
win and dampen the immediate benefits of a strong night. Biden's general
counsel, Dana Remus, told state party officials in a letter there were
widespread failures in the party's system of reporting results.
Mostly white, rural Iowa is the first test in the state-by-state battle
to pick a Democratic nominee to face Trump in the Nov. 3 election. After
more than a year of campaigning and more than $800 million in spending,
the results in Iowa were expected to begin to provide answers for a
party desperately trying to figure out how to beat the
businessman-turned-president.
Voters are pondering whether to back someone with appeal to independents
and disaffected Republicans, like moderates Biden, Buttigieg and Senator
Amy Klobuchar of neighboring Minnesota, or someone who energizes the
party's liberal base and brings out new voters, like progressives
Sanders and Warren.
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Democratic presidential candidate and former South Bend, Indiana
Mayor Pete Buttigieg addresses supporters at a rally at Drake
University in Des Moines, Iowa, U.S., February 3, 2020.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
DECLARING VICTORY
With no results to celebrate or mourn, the candidates spun their own
upbeat view of the outcome. The Sanders campaign released what it
said were its internal numbers collected at 40% of precincts,
showing him in first, ahead of Buttigieg, Warren and a trailing
Biden in fourth place.
"I have a strong feeling that at some point the results will be
announced, and when those results are announced I have a good
feeling we’re going to be doing very, very well here in Iowa,"
Sanders told cheering supporters.
Buttigieg told his supporters in Iowa that "we don't know the
results" but was looking ahead to the next contest on Feb. 11 in New
Hampshire.
"By all indications, we are going to New Hampshire victorious," he
said.
Several of the candidates, including Biden, Klobuchar and Warren,
headed to New Hampshire immediately after the caucuses. Sanders
planned to fly there on Tuesday morning.
"Of course we don't know the results yet - minor problem - but we
know we did incredibly well," Klobuchar told a small group of
cheering supporters who met her at the Manchester, New Hampshire,
airport.
At the caucus sites in Iowa, voters had gathered in groups by
candidate preference in a public display of support. If a candidate
did not reach a threshold of support of 15% of voters, the total
needed to be considered viable, that candidates' supporters were
released to back another contender, leading to a further round of
persuasion.
Even if one candidate wins by a commanding margin in Iowa once the
results are announced, Democrats may still lack clear answers as the
race moves on to the other three early voting states of New
Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina later in February.
Whoever remains in the race by Super Tuesday on March 3, when 15
states and territories vote, will also confront billionaire former
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who is skipping the early states
in favor of focusing on states rich in delegates to the Democratic
National Convention in July.
Sanders, who finished in a virtual dead heat with eventual nominee
Hillary Clinton in Iowa during his first presidential run in 2016,
has surged in many Iowa polls to move just ahead of Biden.
Beating Trump was the prime consideration for voters as they entered
the caucus, according to a poll of 1,512 Iowa Democrats conducted by
the National Election Pool, with 62% saying they want someone who
can beat Trump and 36% wanting a nominee who agrees with them on
major issues.
The entrance poll also found 57% backed a government-run healthcare
plan similar to the Medicare for All proposals of Sanders and
Warren, a potentially good sign for them.
Republicans were also holding Iowa caucuses on Monday, with Trump,
who has around 90 percent support in his party, declared the
projected winner by various media outlets.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt, Joseph Ax, Tim Reid, Simon Lewis,
Jarrett Renshaw and Ginger Gibson; Writing by John Whitesides;
Editing by Howard Goller)
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