Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Confusion reigned in Iowa caucus

Even before the chaotic results

- Stateline.org (TNS)

DES MOINES, Iowa – Reyma Mccoy Mcdeid designed an Iowa caucus precinct that was tailored to voters with disabiliti­es. But it almost got derailed.

While normal Democratic caucuses are standing affairs, every caucusgoer at the Central Iowa Center for Independen­t Living in Des Moines had a chair in their candidate’s section. When it was time for supporters to give speeches for their candidate, they had a microphone wheeled to them. In an adjacent room, around 20 people with hearing impairment participat­ed in the state’s only all-sign-language caucus.

But a half-hour after residents were supposed to begin caucusing here, long lines and confusion with the Iowa Democratic Party about whether participan­ts had to pre-register left Mccoy Mcdeid, the center’s executive director, visibly shaken.

“I’m really irritated,” she said, wearing a black T-shirt and jeans. “The messaging around accessibil­ity has been great, but the reality has not been great. It’s enraging to me. It’s absurd.

“I call it ‘Iowa-nice’ voter suppressio­n.”

Some who waited to get in, like Jamie Cotten, who is hampered by an injured ankle and using a knee scooter, didn’t know whether they would have to find another location to caucus.

This was not what the Iowa Democratic Party had in mind when it attempted to open up caucuses to more participan­ts this year by shortening the candidate selection process and establishi­ng satellite locations that could run hours before the normal 7 p.m. start of other caucuses throughout the state.

The state party did not respond to repeated requests from Stateline for comment. The Democratic National Committee emailed a statement from former U.S. Rep. Tony Coelho of California, the party’s disability council chairman, who said he was “proud of the historic steps” to increase participat­ion.

It wasn’t just uncertaint­y and the delays in reporting the results of the caucuses that tarnished the process. While caucusgoer­s throughout the state enjoyed the greater access on Monday, confusion about the system kept some Iowans from being counted and left advocates for the disability community frustrated with remaining barriers.

These setbacks could even threaten the future of caucuses as a voting method and Iowa’s place as the first presidenti­al contest every four years, said Rachel Paine Caufield, a professor of political science at Des Moines-based Drake University.

Caucuses are not like other contests in the presidenti­al primary season. Instead of showing up anytime on Election Day to cast a ballot, Democrats in Iowa gather at local precincts to hear campaign pitches and haggle with neighbors before dividing the room by preferred candidate. If a candidate doesn’t reach a certain threshold in the room, supporters join another campaign.

This complex process can last hours, but it’s a point of pride for many Iowans who are reluctant to give up the process for a more traditiona­l primary. But voter access is an issue, especially for people with disabiliti­es, nightshift workers, students, single parents or anybody else who can’t participat­e in an hourslong, mobility-intensive democratic exercise.

Caufield said potential fixes such as allowing absentee participat­ion and shortening the process are challengin­g to execute.

“Caucuses are particular­ly difficult to adopt some of the standard fixes that you would apply in a primary state,” she said. “The caucus is such a unique civic culture and practice that involves movement around a space.”

The Iowa Democratic Party, however, had a plan to increase access this year.

In addition to normal caucus locations, the party approved 60 in-state, 24 out-of-state and three internatio­nal satellite locations to allow Iowa Democrats to participat­e at different times in the day or with special accommodat­ions, including disability and foreign language services. Alternativ­e locations included mosques, community centers and colleges around the state.

This allowed Mebrhtom Geberetati­os and Fiseha Tesfamaria­m to caucus at the UFCW Local 230 union hall in Ottumwa, Iowa – an industrial community of 25,000 along the Des Moines River, an hour and a half southeast of the state capital.

The two men, both wearing black leather jackets and white “Bernie for Iowa” T-shirts, could not caucus later in the evening _ the 7 p.m. start time was right in the middle of their shift at the local JBS meatpackin­g plant. But they were among the 15 secondshif­t workers who showed up at the union hall, where caucusing began at noon.

But the Ottumwa caucus wasn’t without its hitches. Michelle Grear, who wouldn’t get off work at Tenco Industries until after that evening’s regular caucuses began, attempted to join the satellite caucus but was turned away.

She had failed to pre-register by Jan. 17 _ a requiremen­t for satellite caucus participat­ion that she hadn’t heard about. Party leaders, fearing people might caucus multiple times, this year added the pre-registrati­on requiremen­t for satellite locations.

“It’s really disappoint­ing,” she said outside the union hall on an unusually mild winter morning. “I wanted to come and participat­e and get my vote in. I understand there are snafus here or there, but it’s still frustratin­g.”

Zach Simonson, the Wapello

County Democratic chairman, understood her frustratio­n. The party should have gotten the word out sooner, he said.

“This event was organized on a tight schedule,” he said. “I wish we had more time.”

This confusion also was apparent in Des Moines, where Drake University students and professors and people living near the school gathered at 4 p.m. inside the campus’s field house. Candidate names were taped to track hurdles spread across the turf field.

Sophomore Adam Koch thought he was being extra prepared, by printing out what he thought was a confirmati­on email for the satellite caucus. But when he tried to check in, he was turned away, having mistakenly registered for a caucus running later that evening.

“In an effort to make caucusing more convenient, it actually became more confusing and difficult,” Koch said, rubbing his forehead in bewilderme­nt. “It’s frustratin­g that after two years of meeting candidates, this happens.”

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 ?? Getty Images/tns ?? Reyma Mccoy Mcdeid explains the caucus process to a group of voters with disabiliti­es at the Central Iowa Center for Independen­t Living in Des Moines. Mccoy Mcdeid, along with other disability advocates, expressed frustratio­n with the caucus process.
Getty Images/tns Reyma Mccoy Mcdeid explains the caucus process to a group of voters with disabiliti­es at the Central Iowa Center for Independen­t Living in Des Moines. Mccoy Mcdeid, along with other disability advocates, expressed frustratio­n with the caucus process.

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