6 Takeaways From Trump’s Historic Win in Iowa

DES MOINES, Iowa—Former President Donald Trump claimed a huge victory in the Iowa caucuses, cementing his place as the prohibitive favorite in the race for the Republican presidential nomination.

The night was not a total loss for others as Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis claimed a second-place finish, scoring well above his recent standing in the polls. Former U.N. Ambassador finished third, falling below expectations based on recent polls that showed her in second place.

The tally with 97 percent of votes counted showed President Trump at 51 percent, Mr. DeSantis at 21 percent, Ms. Haley at 19 percent, and Vivek Ramaswamy at just under 8 percent.

Trump’s Big Win

President Trump proved the polls correct, winning the Iowa caucuses with 51 percent of the vote and establishing his dominance in the race for the Republican nomination.

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The former president consistently polled around 50 percent of support from likely Republican caucusgoers, a finding that Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis had dismissed as misleading.

In the end, the voters slightly exceeded the polling in their preference for President Trump, who mounted a formidable ground game, enlisting some 2,000 precinct captains, who committed to bring 10 people with them to support President Trump on caucus night. The campaign gathered over 50,000 commit-to-caucus cards, nonbinding agreements to support the former president.

President Trump’s 30-point victory is the largest in the history of the Iowa caucuses.

The frontrunner is now expected to parlay this decisive win to build momentum in the next presidential-preference contests in other states.

A big victory for President Trump “would likely blunt momentum that Haley has in New Hampshire,” Thomas Hagle, a professor at the University of Iowa, told The Epoch Times before the caucuses.

“If Trump wins Iowa, New Hampshire, and then in South Carolina, it would seem to be very difficult to stop him unless some extraneous event shakes up the race,” he said.

Early Call for Trump

Multiple media outlets called the Iowa Republican presidential caucus for President Trump very early—a little more than half an hour after caucusing first began at 7 p.m. CT, and at a point when many Iowans were still voting—and could easily check the results on their smartphones.

In Pleasant Hill, Iowa, The Epoch Times’ Nathan Worcester learned of the call while the caucus was going on around him.

“This is the earliest I can remember ever calling such a thing,” CNN’s Jake Tapper said moments after CNN projected a victory for President Trump.

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Former President Donald Trump speaks at his caucus night event at the Iowa Events Center in Des Moines, Iowa, on Jan. 15, 2024. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Mr. DeSantis’s team reacted swiftly and negatively to the move.

“Absolutely outrageous that the media would participate in election interference by calling the race before tens of thousands of Iowans even had a chance to vote. The media is in the tank for Trump, and this is the most egregious example yet,” Mr. DeSantis’s communications director, Andrew Romeo, wrote on X a few minutes after calls were made across broadcast and online media.
Some have claimed AP violated its own guidelines on races, which state, “AP will not call the winner of a race before all the polls in a jurisdiction are scheduled to close.”

The Epoch Times has reached out to AP for comment on these assertions.

“The Associated Press declared the former president the winner based on an analysis of initial returns as well as results of AP VoteCast, a survey of voters who planned to caucus on Monday night. Both showed Trump with an insurmountable lead,” the news service wrote in an article explaining its decision.

“That’s insane to call it that early. We didn’t even vote until at least 7:30,” said Alyssa Wallace who, with her husband Seth, attended candidate Vivek Ramaswamy’s watch party in Des Moines.

“Thank you Iowa, I love you all!!! Donald J. Trump,” the former president wrote on Truth Social after 9 p.m. CT.
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Former President Donald Trump speaks at his caucus night event at the Iowa Events Center in Des Moines, Iowa, on Jan. 15, 2024. Iowans voted today in the state’s caucuses for the first contest in the 2024 Republican presidential nominating process. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Vivek Bows Out, Backs Trump

While the three main players in the ongoing Republican campaign remain in the race, the avatar of what he has called MAGA 2.0 has bowed out in favor of MAGA Original.

Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy ended his campaign late on Jan. 15 after finishing in a distant fourth place in Iowa’s Republican caucus, much to the dismay of his supporters.

“This one’s hard for me, I’ve got to admit this,” Mr. Ramaswamy said in a video that he live-streamed on X, formerly Twitter.

“We did not achieve the surprise that we wanted to deliver tonight—and I think that that’s just a hard fact that we’re going have to accept as a campaign,” Mr. Ramaswamy said.

“There is no path for me to be the next president absent things that we don’t want to see happen in this country,” the entrepreneur and anti-woke investor told a crowd of supporters.

“I am so proud of every one of you who have lifted us up,” he told the crowd.

Mr. Ramaswamy then revealed that President Trump would enjoy his “full endorsement.”

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Republican presidential candidate and businessman Vivek Ramaswamy listens to former president Donald Trump speak to voters during a visit to a caucus site at the Horizon Event Center in Des Moines, Iowa, on Jan. 15, 2024. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Angie Marie of Des Moines, a first-time caucus-goer, didn’t understand why Mr. Ramaswamy opted to end his campaign.

“I want to cry,” she said. “It’s just the first one. Why stop now?”

She was even more unhappy that he endorsed former President Donald Trump who has “had nothing nice to say about him for the last 72 hours.”

Asked if she would support Mr. Trump, her answer was a sharp, “No!”

Matthew Garcia, 34, also a first-time caucus-goer from Des Moines expressed similar sentiments.

An independent who had never engaged much with politics, he said Mr. Ramaswamy was “open-testing hypothesis on how to approach connecting with our generation” and had impressed him through his podcasts and social media discussions. Mr. Garcia said he doesn’t know who to support now.

“He’s young and he’s now on the radar,” he said. “I think he should run again. I think he will run again.”

Former President Trump spoke positively of Mr. Ramaswamy during his victory address.

A live stream of Mr. Ramaswamy after the announcement showed him hobnobbing with his supporters.

“A good run and ended with class,” SpaceX founder Elon Musk wrote on X in response to a post from Tim Pool about the campaign’s suspension.

Haley’s Path an Open Question

As the night wore on, President Trump retained a strong lead over Ms. Haley and Mr. DeSantis, with Mr. DeSantis ultimately coming out ahead.

In at least some parts of Iowa, however, the former ambassador to the United Nations may have done better than the big map suggests.

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Republican presidential candidate former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley speaks at her caucus night event in West Des Moines, Iowa, on Jan. 15, 2024. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

“Everywhere we’ve been, Nikki Haley won,” Jacqueline Rieckena, a caucus captain for Vivek Ramaswamy, told The Epoch Times at the watch party for candidate Vivek Ramaswamy at The Surety Hotel in Des Moines.

One big question is what the results mean for Ms. Haley.

In some respects, the next few primaries may look favorable to her. She will soon compete in South Carolina, a state where her past service as governor may give her an edge, though likely not enough to defeat President Trump.

In New Hampshire, which will hold the next GOP primary on Jan. 23, RealClearPolitics’ polling average has her at 29.3 percent to President Trump’s 43.5 percent. New Hampshire holds an open primary, meaning Democrats and independents can more easily participate in that contest than in Iowa’s caucus.

“I think as we head into New Hampshire and then again into South Carolina, it’s going to look brighter and brighter,” David Roberts, a Haley supporter, told The Epoch Times at the Haley party.

Yet, even in Iowa, many participants registered as Republicans long enough to vote against President Trump by choosing the least threatening alternative for many Democrats and liberal-leaning independents—Ms. Haley.

“He wants to be a dictator,” Christine Urish told The Epoch Times. She said she had registered as a Republican to vote for Haley at the Pleasant Hill, Iowa, caucus site.

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Advertising for the Iowa caucus line the streets of Des Moines, Iowa, on Jan. 15, 2024. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)

Yet for all those factors, the trends in Iowa don’t bode well.

In urban and suburban counties where Ms. Haley would be expected to overperform, President Trump still came out ahead. In Des Moines’ Polk County, for example, President Trump had 37.5 percent of the vote to Ms. Haley’s 26.6 percent with just under 80 percent of the vote counted at 9:50 p.m. CT.

But Ms. Haley’s faithful, of whatever party or ideological persuasion, haven’t yet counted her out.

“I believe in her … I think she’s in it to win it,” Steph Herold, another Haley supporter, told The Epoch Times at the campaign’s party.

DeSantis Gains Slightly

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis took the stage at his watch party to tell an enthusiastic crowd of supporters that his campaign had overcome opposition to achieve its objective in Iowa and would now carry the fight to New Hampshire and South Carolina.

“In spite of all that they threw at us, we’ve got our ticket punched out of Iowa,” he said, indicating that Iowa voters had recommended him to the rest of the country as one of the top choices for president.

Mr. DeSantis managed to close the gap between himself and President Trump slightly, but enough to claim that he outperformed expectations. He also reasserted his position ahead of Ms. Haley, who had been widely expected to place second.

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Republican presidential candidate Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (C) smiles at his wife Casey DeSantis (R) as she is applauded by Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) (L) and Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) (2nd-L) during a campaign event at the Chrome Horse Saloon one day before the Iowa caucuses in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on Jan. 14, 2024. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Mr. DeSantis portrayed his campaign as carrying the torch to “preserve this sacred fire of liberty,” and exhorted his followers to carry on the fight.

“Don’t run away from this responsibility,” he said. “We welcome this responsibility.”

He left the rally to travel overnight to South Carolina, then on to New Hampshire, where campaign events are scheduled for Jan. 16.

On to New Hampshire

Mr. DeSantis gained a reprieve by placing second in Iowa but must now face Ms. Haley on tougher ground.

Ms. Haley is significantly ahead of Mr. DeSantis in the Granite State, whose primary is slated for Jan. 22, just eight days after the Iowa caucuses.

President Trump leads the polls in New Hampshire, though the margin is smaller than in Iowa. President Trump is polling at 44 percent in the Granite State compared to Ms. Haley’s 28 percent. Mr. DeSantis is a distant fourth at 7 percent, behind former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie who suspended his campaign a week ago. Some polls have placed Ms. Haley within 10 points of the former president.

If the polls are accurate, Ms. Haley could deliver to President Trump a black eye, if not an outright loss.

Ms. Haley seems very likely to beat Mr. DeSantis in New Hampshire. If so, Mr. DeSantis will likely need to gain ground on both Ms. Haley and President Trump in South Carolina, the next state to vote.

Ms. Haley is a native of and former two-term governor of South Carolina. South Carolina votes on Feb. 24.

Janice Hisle and John Haughey contributed to this report.

Original News Source Link – Epoch Times

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