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PoliticsAnalysis

Iowa caucuses going down to the wire as U.S. primary season kicks off

The U.S. presidential primary season begins with the Iowa caucuses on Monday, and the polls give no clear indication of who will win either the Democratic or Republican contests. Poll analyst Eric Grenier breaks down the race.

Hillary Clinton faces unexpected challenge from Bernie Sanders; Donald Trump and Ted Cruz neck-and-neck

Hillary Clinton may face a tough challenge in Iowa, while Donald Trump has the opportunity to prove he can actually win over real voters in Monday's caucuses. (Rick Wilking, Mary Schwalm/Reuters)

It should bea vote with only marginal significance. Iowa, afterall, sends a tiny number of delegates to the Democratic and Republican national conventions, which select each party's presidential nominee for the election in November.

But in being the first to cast a ballot, the Iowa caucuses on Monday carry an outsized weight in the long U.S. presidential campaign.

And current polls suggest that no candidate has therace for either partylocked up.

In the campaign for the Democratic nomination, former secretary of state Hillary Clinton is leading Vermont Senator Bernie Sandersin the Iowa polls by a narrow margin. As of Jan. 26, websiteFiveThirtyEightcalculates that Clinton has thesupport of 48 per cent of Democratic voters, with Sanders at 43per cent.

Other aggregators, like RealClearPolitics and Huffington Post Pollster, put the gap between Clinton and Sanders at about one percentage point.

The race is also closefor the Republican nod. Businessman and reality TV host Donald Trump leads the race with an average of 31 per cent support according to FiveThirtyEight, followed closely by Texas Senator Ted Cruzwith 27 per cent. Florida Senator Marco Rubiorounds out the top three with 12 per cent.

Trailing these candidates is a paradeof Republican hopefuls, none of whom are polling in double-digits.

While primaries and caucuses are notoriously difficult to gauge turnout is often little better than 20 per cent of each party's registered voters recent polls have also shown a high degree of inconsistency.

For example, theyhave given Clinton anywhere from 43 to 59 per cent support against Sanders's 30 to 51 per cent. Trump has scored between 19and 39 per cent while Cruz has managed between 23 and 34 per cent.

Iowa caucuses down to the wire

9 years ago
Duration 3:55
Poll analyst Eric Grenier looks at the polls in the race to the White House ahead of the Monday's Iowa caucuses

Firstbut not most

The Iowa caucuses are only the first salvoes in a campaign that will drag on for months, but theywill have a big influence on what happens further down the line.

Only voters registered with each party havethe opportunity to vote in the Iowa caucuses. Republicans vote in a secret ballot, with delegates for the national convention being awarded in proportion tothe votes each candidate receives. Meanwhile,the Democrats hold a public vote that harkens back to an earlier age.

In the Democratic caucuses, voters attend meetingsin which they group around their preferred candidates. Minimum thresholds have to be met for each candidate to continue to the next round, when Democrats have the opportunity to try to woo supporters of their opponents onto their sides (literally). Ballots aren't counted people are.

Iowa sends only about oneper cent of delegates to the national conventions, but carries an important weight in the presidential primaries because of its lead-off position, something it has jealously guarded since the 1970s.

While a win in Iowa means little in the final delegate count, it has shown the ability to turn around campaigns in which a candidate had previously been written off.

Springboard to the White House?

Over the last 10 elections in which the Iowa caucuses were contested, the state has selected each party's eventual nominee a majority of the time. Al Gore, John Kerry, and Barack Obama all kicked off their successful bids for the Democratic nomination in Iowa the last two being unexpected victories that changed the contours of their respective races.

Sen. Bernie Sanders appears to have the momentum in Iowa. (Jae C. Hong/Associated Press)

It's been different forthe Republicans. After selectingBob Dole in 1996 and George W. Bush in 2000, Iowa has backed unsuccessful candidates: Mike Huckabee in 2008 and Rick Santorum in 2012.

Nevertheless, winning early on in primary season sends a strong signal.

With only oneexception since 1980,the Democratic and Republican nominee has won either Iowa or New Hampshire, or both. After losing Iowa in 2008 and 2012, for instance, John McCain and Mitt Romneywon New Hampshire, the second state to vote, only dayslater.

Polls onlypart of the story

But just how predictive are these currentpolls in Iowa? With six daysto go before the 2012 vote, Santorum who would eventually prevail with 25 per cent of the vote was pegged to have about10per cent support. By election day, the polls were still underestimating Santorum's support, as they did Obama's in 2008.

There are a number of other factors muddyingthe waters for both the Republicans and the Democrats.

While Trump and Cruz are leading in the polls in Iowa and nationwide, they are far from the favourite choices of the party establishment, which has favoured Rubio and Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor.More locally, Rubiorecentlylanded the endorsement of the Des Moines Register, the largest newspaper in the state.

Senator Ted Cruz has lost the lead in Iowa in the past few weeks, polls say. (Jason Reed/Reuters)

Also, in a caucus with low turnout, victory often goes to the candidate with the best organization. Cruz is considered to be much better positioned than Trump, who has a light organization on the ground in Iowa.

Social conservatives like Cruz also outperformed their polls in the Republican caucuses in2008 and 2012.

For the Democrats, the results inIowamay prove to be deeply unrepresentative. Sandersis tied with Clinton among white Democrats nationwide, but trails by a margin of 2-to-1 among Hispanics and 3-to-1 among African-Americans who support the party.

Iowa is much whiter than the rest of the country. While Sanders might be capable of pulling off an upsetin Iowa and winNew Hampshire, which neighbours his home state, he will have more difficulty winning in other regions of the country.

Sanders may evenhave difficulty delivering on his strong polling numbers in Iowa. Clinton is reported to lead Sanderscomfortably amongvoters deemed more likely to cast a ballot.Support for the self-described socialist is also heavily concentratedamong Democrats under the age of 34.

But Sandershasmomentum. Only two weeks ago, Clinton was enjoying a double-digit lead over Sanders in Iowa. Trump, too, is picking up steam.Cruz was leading instate polls just two weeks ago.

The results for both the Democratic and Republican nominations could be close or surprisingly lopsided, such is the uncertainty that exists in the U.S. primary elections. And then it will be off to New Hampshire on Feb. 9, another small, unrepresentativestate with an out-sized importance in this marathon campaign.