What's at stake for Trump, Haley and DeSantis in Monday's Iowa caucuses?
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[January 15, 2024]
By James Oliphant
(Reuters) - Donald Trump is looking to seal the deal. Three other
Republicans are hoping to slow his march toward the Republican
nomination.
That's the set-up for Monday's Iowa caucuses, the first nominating
contest of the 2024 election.
For Trump's top rivals, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and former UN
ambassador Nikki Haley, the caucuses will be a test of their continued
viability as candidates. The pressure is on DeSantis, who has made a
strong finish in Iowa his top priority.
The caucuses not only provide an early snapshot of how voters view the
presidential field but can also sometimes boost a lesser candidate or
finish off a struggling one.
In the end, however, sometimes the caucuses don’t end up meaning much.
In the last three competitive Republican contests — in 2016, 2012 and
2008 — the winner did not go on to be the party’s nominee.
Here is a look at the stakes for each candidate vying to challenge
President Joe Biden, a Democrat, in November:
DONALD TRUMP
Trump is highly favored to win the caucuses, but there is some question
whether he needs a victory. After all, he didn’t win them in 2016 and
went on to cruise to the Republican nomination anyway.
On the other hand, a Trump loss or narrow win could upend the race,
showing voters that his support is softer than it looks and providing
encouragement — and a fresh wave of campaign donations — to Haley and
DeSantis. The pressure on Trump to win the second contest in New
Hampshire primary on Jan. 23 would escalate dramatically.
Trump has not been taking Iowa for granted. Although he has not engaged
in the kind of county-by-county campaigning favored by DeSantis, Trump
has stepped up his presence in the state. He has staged several rallies
before large crowds in the last two weeks.
RON DESANTIS
The Florida governor has thrown most of his time and resources into
Iowa. He has repeatedly crisscrossed the state, trying to demonstrate to
Iowans that he will put in the work necessary to win the nomination, and
he has fiercely courted Iowa’s influential evangelical voters.
That was a strategy that worked for U.S. Senator Ted Cruz in 2016. But
Trump is more popular with Iowans than he was then.
After months of telling reporters that Iowa was a do-or-die state,
DeSantis’ campaign of late has tried to soften expectations, arguing the
pressure to succeed is now on Haley, who has spent the most money in the
race. Since he entered the Republican fray last April, DeSantis has
never really enjoyed any kind of real momentum, and it increasingly
looks like Iowa won’t provide the boost he needs.
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Signage for the 2024 Iowa Caucuses is seen taken with a long
exposure at the Iowa Caucus media center at the Iowa Events Center
ahead of the Iowa caucus vote in Des Moines, Iowa, U.S., January 14,
2024. REUTERS/Cheney Orr
Should he finish a distant second or third behind Trump, it may be
hard to find a rationale for his candidacy to go forward.
NIKKI HALEY
Haley has seen a surge in support over the last few months, largely
based on a series of strong debate performances. That has also
translated into an infusion of campaign cash that has helped her
blanket Iowa with TV ads.
Not long ago, Iowa appeared to be somewhat of an afterthought for
Haley, with the expectation among her allies that she would perform
better in the more moderate state of New Hampshire. But her campaign
now senses an opportunity to knock DeSantis from the race and make
clear that Haley is the only true alternative in the party to Trump.
A second-place finish could accomplish that goal and allow Haley to
turn to New Hampshire claiming some kind of momentum and leaving
DeSantis without much of a case to make. And even a decent
third-place result bunched with DeSantis behind Trump would help her
stake out more ground as the single Trump alternative.
Certainly, she has less to lose in Iowa than DeSantis does.
VIVEK RAMASWAMY
Outspoken entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy is still in the race despite
his campaign looking like it has run out of steam and his support
stalling in the low, single digits.
Yet, there has been chatter in Iowa political circles that he still
could end up picking up a few delegates. He remains popular with a
slice of the electorate that backs Trump’s “America First” agenda
but would rather move on from Trump himself.
A decent showing could boost Ramaswamy’s political future — whether
it lies in another run for president in four years or a top job in a
second Trump administration. He has shown nothing but fealty for
Trump on the campaign trail, and his name could also be in the mix
as a possible vice-presidential choice.
(Reporting by James Oliphant in Washington; Editing by Ross Colvin
and Lisa Shumaker)
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