Kuwait Times

How Iowa’s unusual caucus tradition launches US election

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The 2024 US presidenti­al election officially kicks off later this month, when voters in the rural farm state of Iowa head to school gymnasiums and public libraries to deliberate over who should become their party’s nominee for the White House.

This Midwestern state of three million people is proud of the unusual “caucus” system it employs to determine how many delegates will represent the respective candidates at the parties’ national nominating convention­s in the summer.

So, what is a caucus?

At a caucus, participan­ts physically show their candidate preference by gathering with other like-minded voters in a designated spot in the room — a sharp contrast to the confidenti­ality of filling out a paper ballot in a private voting booth.

Primary caucus voting, in which attendees are registered party members, happens in stages. For the Democrats, candidates usually need the backing of at least 15 percent of voters present to qualify for a second round.

Supporters of candidates who fall short of that threshold then have three choices during a second round that immediatel­y follows. They can move to another part of the room to support another finalist candidate; they can try to persuade fellow voters to help them push their own candidate over the 15 percent hurdle; or they cannot vote.

The procedure is similar for the Republican­s, though there is no minimum vote threshold candidates must win to be allocated delegates. Advocates of the quirky custom praise it as democracy in action, as citizens physically move around the room, sharing their views and collaborat­ing to choose their leaders.

Iowa’s special status

In the vast majority of US states, the Republican and Democratic Parties hold primary elections to determine which candidates will win those states’ delegates. But during the 2024 cycle, seven states will host caucuses for at least one of the two major parties throughout the winter and spring.

Political watchers turn a keen eye toward Iowa, as results in the state — which since the 1970s has scheduled voting to come first on the nation’s political calendar — often influence outcomes in the primary elections and caucuses that follow. That means the size and effectiven­ess of candidates’ early operations in Iowa are important to their longterm success, despite the relatively few delegates up for grabs there.

The community involvemen­t required at a caucus is not universall­y beloved: some voters are turned off by the idea of a long Monday evening debating — or arguing — with crowds of strangers. And others struggle with the logistical challenges presented by Midwestern January weather, work obligation­s or lack of childcare.

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