By Janice Hisle
DES MOINES, IowaâFormer President Donald Trump has captured the 2024 Iowa caucus, according to multiple early projections.
The Associated Press declared a victory for the former president just 32 minutes into the voting process on the evening of Jan. 15. Other media have also called the race for President Trump.
No Republican has ever won the Iowa caucuses with a margin of more than 12 percentage points. The president was ahead by a multiple of that amount when the race was called. The final vote count was expected to be in by 1 a.m. EST.
Former President Donald Trump told Fox News Digital after being announced the victor in the Iowa Caucus that he âfeels great.âÂ
âI am greatly honored by such an early call,â President Trump said, referencing the Associated Press calling the race for him at 8:31 p.m. ET.Â
âIt really is an honor that, minutes after, theyâve announced Iâve wonâagainst very credible competitionâgreat competition, actually,â President Trump said. âIt is a tremendous thing and a tremendous feeling.â
âWe have to get our country back,â he added. âOur country has gone through so many bad things over the last three years and it is continuing to go through bad things.â
As of 10 p.m. ET, President Trump held 52.8 percent of the vote. Trailing him in the polls were Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis with 20 percent, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley with 18.7 percent, and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy with 7.7 percent.
The former president is poised to eclipse the record to win the caucuses by the widest margin ever. The current record margin 12.8 percent.
For many months, polls had shown that President Trump held a commanding lead over all his Republican rivals.
Two days before the caucuses, an influential poll published by the Des Moines Register, NBC News, and Mediacom Communications Corp., showed that President Trump had support from 48 percent of likely caucusgoers.
In the final days of the Iowa contest, the four remaining major candidates battled inhospitable pre-caucus weather. Winter storms dumped several inches of snow throughout the state, leaving many roads impassable. After the snow slowed, strong winds created massive snowdrifts and produced life-threatening wind chills.
Mr. Ramaswamy continued to hold events, while other candidates canceled some appearances during the final few days before caucus night.
After a blizzard warning expired on Jan. 13, President Trump resumed campaigning with an in-person rally in Indianola, south of Des Moines, on Jan. 14. An overflow crowd of more than 800 people turned out despite temperatures hovering at roughly minus 17 degrees.
A second in-person rally for President Trump had been slated for Cherokee, a 3 1/2-hour drive under normal conditions. But with many roads still slow-going because of compacted snow, the Trump campaign replaced that event with a âtele-rallyâ via livestream.
Thomas Hagle, a professor at the University of Iowa, told The Epoch Times that the inhospitable weather added more unpredictability to the contest.
A dangerously cold wind chill factor was âlikely to deter some people from turning outâ on caucus night, but it would be hard to say which candidateâs supporters would be most affectedâand to what degreeâMr. Hagle said on Jan. 14.
âOlder people might be particularly concerned about the severely cold weather, but they are also the most reliable voters. Younger people have lower turnout in general, and less experience with the caucuses, so they might be likely to change their minds about attending,â he said.
âEven assuming that turnout will be down because of the weather, itâs hard to say which, if any, of the campaigns will be affected more. Each campaignâs ground game will be important in this respect.
âA better ground game should help to keep supporters sufficiently energized that they wonât waver about attending their precinctâs caucus.â
Momentum Versus Organization
Pollster Rich Baris, in his Big Data Poll of Iowa released on Jan. 12, said the three lesser-performing candidates were in a âstatistical dead heatâ in Iowa.
âThis has become a classic case of momentum versus organization,â Mr. Baris said in a press release. âAmbassador Haley has momentum, albeit potentially fizzling, while Governor DeSantis has touted a superior organization.
âMr. Ramaswamy appears to have a little of both, though he remains challenged by his failureâat least thus farâto break through with key demographics critical to the Iowa Republican Caucuses.â
Mr. DeSantis and Mr. Ramaswamy both campaigned extensively in Iowa; Ms. Haley ramped up her presence in the state somewhat later in the game, largely thanks to an endorsement that, unlike many such votes of confidence, came with added firepower.
âAmericans for Prosperity endorsed her, and I think thatâs a big reason sheâs doing better in Iowa [than previously],â said Gary Leffler, a 62-year-old former congressional candidate who remains well-connected in Iowa political circles.
âBefore that, she didnât have a ground game.â
Joan Walsh, a national affairs correspondent for The Nation magazine, criticized Americans for Prosperityâs (AFPâs) late-November 2023 endorsement of Ms. Haley as âtoo little, too late.â Ms. Walsh also predicted that President Trump would win the Republican nomination just as he did in 2016 because of âvain politicians again splintering the anti-Trump vote.â
Noting that the Iowa caucuses were then only seven weeks away, Ms. Walsh wrote that AFPâs pledge to activate its grassroots operation for Ms. Haley felt like âanother exercise in political delusion: a powerful mainstream Republican force pretending Trump doesnât control the party.â
Tone Set for Next Contests
The Iowa result has implications for the next presidential-preference contests in other states, Mr. Hagle said.
A big victory for President Trump âwould likely blunt momentum that Haley has in New Hampshire,â Mr. Hagle said before the caucuses.
âIf 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,â he said.
As for Mr. DeSantis, he needed a strong showing in Iowa âto argue that he has momentum and he plans to go to South Carolina after Iowa,â according to Mr. Hagle.
But if Ms. Haley had tied or beaten Mr. DeSantis in Iowa, she would have had âmore momentum in New Hampshire and might be able to get very close to Trump there, or maybe even beat him.â
âThat would give her momentum going into her home state of South Carolina,â Mr. Hagle said.
The goal was for Ms. Haley and Mr. DeSantis âto do well enough in Iowa to be able to make the case that they are the most viable Trump alternative,â he said.
Joseph Lord contributed to this report.Â