Iowa to hold Democratic, Republican caucuses on Monday

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Iowa to hold Democratic, Republican caucuses on Monday
 
Washington:  The US state of Iowa will on Monday hold Democratic and Republican caucuses, the first nomination contests for the 2020 presidential primary schedule.

On the Republican side, President Donald Trump, as the incumbent, is expected to sail through the caucus night and turn much of the nation’s attention to the Democratic events, reports Xinhua news agency.

Democrats seeking the party’s nomination to challenge Trump will vie for Iowa’s 41 pledged delegates to the Democratic National Convention, which will be held from July 13-16 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Though the delegates in Iowa account for only 2 per cent of the 1,991 national delegates, a candidate needs to win to be the Democratic nominee, a strong finish across the Hawkeye state’s 99 counties which could inject a strong momentum into the person’s campaign in a crowed race.

“Iowa is a gatekeeper. It’s a table setter. It historically has been an extremely important part of the presidential process,” veteran US pollster John Zogby told a recent briefing in Washington.

The Democratic caucuses are scheduled to begin at 1,678 precinct locations at 7 p.m. on Monday and will bring tens of thousands of Iowa’s registered voters to people’s homes, churches, public libraries, and school gyms.

Unlike a traditional primary, in which voters cast ballots, caucuses require people to show up to their precinct and physically move into designated parts of a room to show their preference for a certain candidate, the step which is commonly called “the first alignment”.

At most precincts, a presidential contender needs at least 15 per cent of the support at that caucus site to be eligible to receive any delegates.

If he or she does not meet the threshold, they get no delegates, and their supporters can re-sort and go to their second choice in the next and final alignment.

For the first time, caucus-goers this year will write down who they are supporting so there will be paper backups, in case recounts are necessary.

After the caucuses, the Iowa Democratic Party will report three numbers: the state-wide preference after the first alignment; the preference after the second alignment; and the final “State Delegate Equivalents (SDEs)”, numbers used to determine how the state’s national delegates are awarded to candidates.

While the first two results will be useful for analyses, the candidate who earns the most SDEs will surely declare himself or herself the winner of the Iowa caucuses.

Currently, there are 13 Democrats and three Republicans, including Trump, seeking the presidential nomination.

So far, 17 Democrats and one Republican have dropped out of the race in this election cycle.

According to the latest RealClearPolitics national Democratic primary polling average, former Vice President Joe Biden is leading the race with 27.2 per cent, followed by Senators Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren with 23.5 per cent and 15 per cent, respectively.

Sanders, meanwhile, is the frontrunner in the Iowa polling average, together with Biden, former Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Indiana, and Warren rounding out the top four.

Michael Bloomberg, who made a relatively late entry into the Democratic primary, is skipping early-voting states, including Iowa.

Trump won’t be in Iowa on Monday either but he held a rally in Des Moines, the state’s capital, days ago.

The Republican Party is expected to nominate Trump for a second term during the August 24-27 national convention in Charlotte, North Carolina.

The Iowa caucuses will be followed by the New Hampshire presidential primary, slated for February 11.


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