Most Iowans Don't Care About the Caucuses. You Shouldn't Either.
How do the Iowa caucuses work? The fact that people have to ask every four years shows why this tradition should end.

CEDAR RAPIDS—Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley got in trouble last week for having the gall to mock Iowans, the sacred hogs of presidential election years.
"You know Iowa starts it. You know that you correct it," Haley told an audience in New Hampshire, pitting the first caucus state against the first primary state. She later walked back the comment, chalking it up to friendly banter between early-state voters (her home state of South Carolina is third in the lineup).
As an Iowan who has weathered four GOP presidential caucuses as a voter, activist, and journalist, I think Haley got it right the first time. New Hampshire Republicans are better than us at picking nominees. The top candidate in Iowa GOP caucuses has gone on to win the nomination in competitive contests only once this century, compared to three times for New Hampshire GOP primaries.
The convention delegates at stake in Iowa are almost negligible and the GOP results rarely foretell the outcome, so why should anyone care about the 2024 Iowa caucuses? They shouldn't—and fortunately, most Iowans don't.
In an era when people can grocery shop and trade stocks on their phones from the couch, Iowans have had to show up to a specific place at a specific time to participate in the presidential nominating process. Caucus sites most often are schools, but sometimes churches, bars, or even a farmer's machine shed in the country. The meetings begin two hours after sunset and might be more than 20 miles from home for rural voters.
The forecasted high temperature on Monday is around zero, so participants will literally risk their limbs to sound off in a race where the end result—a third consecutive Donald Trump nomination—is all but certain.
The dozens of "how the caucuses work" explainers journalists publish each cycle are good evidence that it's a befuddling process. It's not service journalism, it's more like "look at the quirky shit these midwesterners do, running around high school gyms like idiots," and they're not wrong. The caucuses are as bad as the coastal journalists make them sound, if not worse.
Historically, Iowa Democrats moved around the room to sort themselves into candidate preference groups, then counted bodies to record the numbers. Candidates with too few backers were ruled not viable, so other groups yelled to persuade them and sometimes coin flips were involved. It was a kind of live-action ranked-choice voting that could drag on for hours.
In 2020, already facing internal criticism for the inaccessibility of their caucuses, Iowa Democrats botched reporting the results when they found "inconsistencies" in the returns submitted by precinct volunteers and took almost a week to come up with numbers. This year, with no serious challenger to President Joe Biden, they are removing the presidential race from the caucuses in favor of mail-in preference cards. That's better than mandatory attendance but by running a backdoor vote-by-mail primary, they're basically admitting that their caucuses were unworkable.
There's no running around at Iowa Republican caucuses, but they do still require in-person participation. Supporters can give short speeches for candidates and then attendees write down their choices to be counted by precinct officers. Yes, the party obsessed with the phantom threat of voter fraud entrusts the integrity of its vaunted first-in-the-nation nominating contest to old ladies tallying scraps of paper.
The whole thing is off-putting to normal people who would rather do anything else than spend a bitterly cold weekday night at the community center. The proof is in the numbers: Even in record-setting years (186,000 for Republicans in 2016; 240,000 for Democrats in 2008), total turnout was less than 20 percent of all registered voters. It's a good reminder that electoral politics is not real life and it's OK to tune out.
The caucuses have been good for me personally. They gave me access to candidates as a young journalist and job opportunities as a campaign staffer. Many other Iowans have also been enriched by this political tourist trap, which Reason's Peter Suderman called "a subsidy to Iowans at the nation's expense."
But most Iowans wouldn't be sad to see the caucuses go away. While party die-hards cling to the influence and money first-in-the-nation status offers them, regular people are just annoyed by the TV ads and robocalls.
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Don't care about the caucuses, Trump's gonna win. Pay attention to our whining or we'll have to slaughter some innocent civilians again. Do you want more covid? Because ignoring our whining is ho you get more covid.
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Just curious. Who pays for the caucuses? In most states, like my own South Carolina, the state pays for the Republican and Democrat primaries, which is grossly unfair to the taxpayers who are of neither party, and grossly unfair to the other political parties, who have to pay for their own nominating processes. It is as if most states treat the two big political parties as quasi-governmental agencies, which they are not. Does Iowa pay for these caucuses to take place?
Most states pay for any party who gets X% in the prior election. It is a gate keeping measure, and the percent has climbed up due to the uniparty, but parties can get the same treatment.
Caucuses are always paid for by the parties themselves though they are often held at schools and such. They also are the only venue now for Aristotelian citizenship - defined as those who participate in governance, who hold office, and who are entitled to share in the deliberation of govt bodies. Voting, esp privately in a booth or via mail, is not meaningful citizenship.
Primaries are paid for by taxpayers everywhere, conducted by state and county clerks. What's worse is that some states still have closed primaries - so the state is basically doing the work of registering people away from independent and into the DeRps. Primaries are pure evil.
Political parties are, or anyway should be, voluntary associations of individuals for a common purpose. The caucus-and-convention system keeps the state out of party business.
Trump will win. If he doesn’t then there’s fraud to search for. If the fraud can’t be found then that means it was well hidden.
I'm surprised that you understand how US elections work now.
>>As an Iowan who has weathered four GOP presidential caucuses
you are the whiniest "Iowan" I have come across.
I'll try to whine harder, louder and crazier. Can't let this Adam guy outshine me.
lol I did Newton twice & my mom's still up there ... bitching about the foot of snow falling lol
Think of the economic chaos if political parties just got together and decided at their own expense who their nominees are, and then announced it.
No massive campaign expenses, no hordes of political consultants, no gazillion dollar ad campaigns, no meaningless we-are-first battles among states, just a party saying "this year we are running these two people to govern the country for you".
And what if they had a party platform to let people know what principles they would use to govern?
Madness, I know.
You beat me to it. Abolish primaries and caucuses. Go back to letting party officials pick their candidates. They will choose much more competent candidates. Primaries guarantee that candidates will be mostly demagogues and extremists of little or no education or real-world accomplishments. And greatly increase the salaries of Congressmen and the President to make the jobs attractive to people of substance.
Alternate title: "Most people are stupid and lazy. You should be stupid and lazy, too." Caucuses make perfect sense to Iowans who pay the slightest attention & are able to discuss pros and cons of candidates and their positions. Imagine the horror of moving to another state and finding nominees selected by every moron who can color in the dot that the late night TV hosts told them to.
I don't have to imagine the horror, I live in California.
How do the Iowa caucuses work? The fact that people have to ask every four years shows why this tradition should end.
From the "libertarian against careful political deliberations" desk.
Libertarians prefer voters with knee-jerk reactions to the latest propaganda messages! At least according to Reason.
Or even better, vote by mail with efficient ballot harvesting and tabulations, or one step more advanced, a voting app like the one the Dems used in the Iowa caucuses last time, that took 2 or 3 weeks to tally a few thousand votes, an app that was written by a friend of one of the candidates.
"This year, with no serious challenger to President Joe Biden..."
...because the Democrats had already rigged their primary system to ensure that RFK Jr. would not be permitted to win.
It's amazing that the Dems have stuck with Biden so long, when it's obvious that he's unfit for office and would lose to a sack of potatoes.
I suspect the reason is that party insiders don't want an actual primary campaign to pick a candidate popular with primary voters, they want to hand pick a replacement for Biden at the last minute.
would lose to a sack of potatoes
It's not clear yet that he'll lose to Trump. But if Trump is eliminated, the Dems will immediately dump Biden—there's no other likely Republican candidate he would beat.
Fine. How about your state swap primary dates with my state so I can have more influence in picking the nominee?
Why do you vote based on how other states do?
You know who else doesn't like the Iowa caucuses (or the New Hampshire primary) going first in the election cycle?
The Democrat Party, because Iowa and New Hampshire are "too white."
Joe Biden, because he depends on low-information/name recognition voters to win. Actual, politically engaged human beings who can see him up close and ask him questions would never vote for him in a thousand years.
So who cares if the people who don't participate aren't familiar with their procedures? You no play-a da game, you no make-a da rules. This is a dumb patronizing article.