FiveThirtyEight
Nathaniel Rakich

Following up on my post earlier about the Grinnell College precinct, here are the post-realignment vote shares.

https://twitter.com/AndrewSolender/status/1224520885840809984

So Warren gained about 7 points, Sanders gained about 2 points and the other caucusgoers decided to go uncommitted.

Kaleigh Rogers

Meanwhile, on the misinformation front, a 2008 tweet announcing Biden’s decision to drop out of the Democratic race has started being retweeted as if it’s current. It’s been shared so many times, the NBC News account that tweeted it has had to tweet a clarification:

Josh Putnam

To pick up on Geoffrey’s point about the Republican caucuses, there is, unsurprisingly, little suspense. Trump will win the Republican caucuses in Iowa. However, the Iowa GOP is one of the few state parties that made no changes to their delegate allocation process for 2020. The state GOP still uses a proportional allocation method with no threshold to qualify for delegates. Walsh and Weld may end up with some small share of the 41 delegates at stake, but it will only be a temporary allocation as it was in 2016. If, at the national convention, Trump’s is the only name placed in for the nomination, then all of the Iowa delegates will, by rule, vote for him.


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