Results from the Iowa caucus were expected within hours of voting on Monday night. Instead, three days later,the Associated Press declared it still couldn’t determine a winnerbecause of the race’s extreme closeness and issues in how the votes were counted.
As of Thursday night, according to the AP, 99.94 percent of voting precincts in Iowa had at last reported their results.
After days of counting and “quality control checks” on the results reported from the caucus’ complicated rules, former Indiana mayorPete Buttigiegwas just barely ahead of Vermont Sen.Bernie Sandersin the “state delegate equivalents,” which is the metric commonly used to determine who won the caucus.
Massachusetts Sen.Elizabeth Warrenwas in third place while former Vice PresidentJoe Bidenwas in fourth and Minnesota Sen.Amy Klobucharwas fifth.
The Iowa Democratic Party said the bizarre delay in counting the votes was because of “quality control checks” and a “coding issue” with a smartphone app intended to collect the results from the approximately 1,700 voting locations.
It appears many caucus officials reported their results over the phone, instead of with the app, and relied on paper backups to corroborate the results — though that paper trail had its own problems, given the intricacies of calculating caucus winners.
According toThe New York Times, “more than 100 [Iowa caucus] precincts reported results that were internally inconsistent, that were missing data or that were not possible under the complex rules of the Iowa caucuses.”
TheTimesnoted that “there is no apparent bias in favor of the leaders Pete Buttigieg or Bernie Sanders, meaning the overall effect on the winner’s margin may be small.”
Unlike the voting most Americans are familiar with, in Democratic caucusing people must openly declare their votes in a public meeting that lasts an hour or more, in which those votes can change if someone’s first-choice is knocked out because they don’t get enough support.
Accordingto the AP, both Buttigieg and Sanders will each earn at least 11 of those national delegates. And each of them declared victory as they head next to New Hampshire’s primary on Tuesday.
“What I wanna do today, three days late, is to thank the people of Iowa for the very strong victory they gave us for the caucuses Monday night,” Sanderstold supportersin New Hampshire on Thursday.
Sanders added, “I think what has happened with the Iowa Democratic Party is an outrage. That they were that unprepared, that they put forth such a complicated process, relied on untested technology.”
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The Iowa Democratic Party fell under heavy criticism following Monday’s debacle, primarily over the hiccups with the app the caucuses used to report votes from precincts around the state amid the caucus’ already complicated format.
“The errors suggest that many Iowa caucus leaders struggled to follow the rules of their party’s caucuses, or to adopt the additional reporting requirements introduced since 2016,” TheTimesreported. “They show that the Iowa Democratic Party, despite the long delays, failed to validate all of the results fully before releasing them to the public.”
Despite an official winner yet, Buttigieg, like Sanders, said he had emerged successful.
Without a clear winner, the Democratic Party’s kick-off to the 2020 presidential campaign remained basically as muddled as it was before Monday’s caucus.
Historically, despite its small size, the Iowa caucus is seen as helping determine which candidates actually resonate with voters — giving a momentum boost to those successful candidates as they move onto the next primaries, in New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina.
However, the Iowa caucus did little to clear up the Democratic Party’s choice for a presidential nominee to run up against the incumbent,Donald Trump.
The national Democratic Party has also called for a re-canvass — in which the vote counts are all re-examined, but not done over again — though it’s unclear if one will happen. Tom Perez, the national party chair,later saidhe wanted only a recanvass of certain caucus locations.
“Just about every election night includes reporting errors,” according to theTimes. “They can be difficult to identify, but can often be corrected during a recount or a post-election canvass. This year’s Iowa caucuses are the reverse: Errors are now easy to identify, and hard to correct.”
source: people.com