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2016 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses

The 2016 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses were held on Monday February 1 in Iowa, as usual marking the Democratic Party's first nominating contest in their series of presidential primaries ahead of the 2016 presidential election.

2016 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses

← 2012 February 1, 2016 (2016-02-01) 2020 →
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51 Democratic National Convention delegates
(44 pledged, 7 unpledged)
 
Candidate Hillary Clinton Bernie Sanders
Home state New York Vermont
Delegate count 23 21
SDEs 700.47 696.92
Percentage (of SDEs) 49.84% 49.59%

Iowa results by county (state delegate equivalents)
  Hillary Clinton
  Bernie Sanders
  Tie

The Republican Party held its own Iowa caucuses on the same day.

Despite a close challenge, Hillary Clinton was able to defeat Bernie Sanders in the first-in-the-nation Iowa Caucus by the closest margin in the history of the contest: 49.8% to 49.6% (Clinton collected 700.47 state delegate equivalents to Sanders' 696.92, a difference of one quarter of a percentage point).[1] The victory, which was projected to award her 23 pledged national convention delegates (two more than Sanders), made Clinton the first woman to win the Caucus and marked a clear difference from 2008, where she finished in third place behind Obama and John Edwards.[2][3][4][5] Martin O'Malley suspended his campaign after a disappointing third-place finish with only 0.5% of the state delegate equivalents awarded, leaving Clinton and Sanders the only two major candidates in the race.[6] 171,517 people participated in the 2016 Iowa Democratic caucuses.[7]

Hillary Clinton launched her campaign in Iowa, April 2015
Bernie Sanders campaigns in Iowa in January 2016
Sanders supporters in Iowa, January 31, 2016

Procedure edit

There was no ballot; instead, a unique form of debate and groupings chose delegates to county conventions supporting Hillary Clinton, Martin O'Malley, and Bernie Sanders. The Iowa Democratic Party did not release vote counts or the numbers of these delegates. Instead, they released the estimated amount of state delegates supporting each candidate.[8] The county conventions selected delegates to district and state conventions, which in turn selected the delegates to the Democratic National Convention. The delegates at the county, district and state conventions were not pledged and were allowed to change their preference, meaning that the final result of the state delegates could have been different from what was estimated at the Iowa precinct caucuses.

Delegates to the 2016 Democratic National Convention were selected at district and state conventions. The First and Second congressional districts received 8 district delegates, the Third received 7 and the Fourth received 6. These district delegates were elected at the District Conventions based on the result in each Congressional District.[9]

At the State Convention, the 15 statewide pledged delegates were elected based on the statewide results. 9 of these delegates were At-Large and 6 were Party Leaders and Elected Officials (PLEO) who were pledged based on the proportion of At-Large delegates supporting candidates. The Iowa delegation also included 8 superdelegates who were not pledged based on the result of the caucus process, which included 1 U.S. Representative and 7 Democratic National Committee members.[9]

Debates and forums edit

November 2015 debate in Des Moines edit

On November 14, 2015, the Democratic Party held a second presidential debate at the Sheslow Auditorium at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa. Hosted by CBS News Political Director John Dickerson, it aired on CBS News and was also broadcast by KCCI and The Des Moines Register. With the remaining candidates Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders, and Martin O'Malley participating, it was the first debate to be broadcast over nationwide network television, the previous debate having gone over cable.[10]

As the day before the debate, November 13, was the day of the November 2015 Paris attacks, CBS announced that the debate would focus on foreign policy and terrorism.[11] In addition, a moment of silence was held at the beginning of the debate in memory of the victims.

January 2016 forum in Des Moines edit

On January 11, 2016 the "Black and Brown" forum was held at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa. Focusing on minority issues, it aired on Fusion.[12]

Opinion polling edit

Poll source Date 1st 2nd Other
Caucus results February 1, 2016 Hillary Clinton
49.9%
Bernie Sanders
49.6%
Martin O'Malley 0.6%
Emerson College[13]
Margin of error: ± 5.6%
Sample size: 300
January 29–31, 2016 Hillary Clinton
51%
Bernie Sanders
43%
Martin O'Malley 4%
Undecided 2%
Quinnipiac University[14]
Margin of error: ± 3.2%
Sample size: 919
January 25–31, 2016 Bernie Sanders
49%
Hillary Clinton
46%
Martin O'Malley 3%
Undecided 2%
Des Moines Register– Bloomberg–Selzer[15]
Margin of error: ± 4%
Sample size: 602
January 26–29, 2016 Hillary Clinton
45%
Bernie Sanders
42%
Martin O'Malley 3%
Undecided or Not Committed 9%
Public Policy Polling[16]

Margin of error ± 3.4%
Sample size: 851

January 26–27, 2016 Hillary Clinton
48%
Bernie Sanders
40%
Martin O'Malley 7%
No preference 5%
Gravis Marketing[17]

Margin of error ± 3%
Sample size: 810

January 26–27, 2016 Hillary Clinton
53%
Bernie Sanders
42%
Martin O'Malley 5%
No preference 0%
Monmouth University[18]

Margin of error ± 4.4%
Sample size: 504

January 23–26, 2016 Hillary Clinton
47%
Bernie Sanders
42%
Martin O'Malley 6%
Undecided 5%
American Research Group[19]

Margin of error ± 5.0%
Sample size: 400

January 21–24, 2016 Bernie Sanders
48%
Hillary Clinton
45%
Martin O'Malley 3%
No preference 4%
Quinnipiac University[20]

Margin of error: ± 4%
Sample size: 606

January 18–24, 2016 Bernie Sanders
49%
Hillary Clinton
45%
Martin O'Malley 4%
Undecided 2%
ISU/WHO-HD[21]

Margin of error: ±
Sample size: 356

January 5–22, 2016 Hillary Clinton
47%
Bernie Sanders
45%
Martin O'Malley <1%
Undecided 7%
Fox News[22]

Margin of error ± 4.5%
Sample size: 432

January 18–21, 2016 Hillary Clinton
48%
Bernie Sanders
42%
Martin O'Malley 3%
No preference 7%
YouGov/CBS News[23]

Margin of error ± 8.9%
Sample size: 906

January 17–21, 2016 Bernie Sanders
47%
Hillary Clinton
46%
Martin O'Malley 5%
No preference 2%
Emerson College Polling Society[24]

Margin of error: ± 5.9%
Sample size: 271

January 18–20, 2016 Hillary Clinton
52%
Bernie Sanders
43%
Martin O'Malley 3%
Undecided 2%
CNN/ORC[25]

Margin of error: ± 6%
Sample size: 280

January 15–20, 2016 Bernie Sanders
51%
Hillary Clinton
43%
Martin O'Malley 4%
Undecided 2%
Monmouth College/KBUR[26]

Margin of error: ± 4.1%
Sample size: 500

January 18–19, 2016 Hillary Clinton
47.7%
Bernie Sanders
39.3%
Martin O'Malley 7.4%
Undecided 5%
Loras College[27]

Margin of error: ± 4.4%
Sample size: 580

January 8–10, 2016 Hillary Clinton
46%
Bernie Sanders
40%
Martin O'Malley 8%
Undecided 5%
Public Policy Polling[28]

Margin of error: ± 4.1%
Sample size: 580

January 8–10, 2016 Hillary Clinton
46%
Bernie Sanders
40%
Martin O'Malley 8%
Undecided 5%
Bloomberg/DMR[29]

Margin of error: ± 4.4%
Sample size: 503

January 7–10, 2016 Hillary Clinton
42%
Bernie Sanders
40%
Martin O'Malley 4%
Other/Undecided 14%
American Research Group[30]

Margin of error: ± 4.0%
Sample size: 600

January 6–10, 2016 Bernie Sanders
47%
Hillary Clinton
44%
Martin O'Malley 3%
Undecided 5%
Quinnipiac University[31]

Margin of error: ± 4.4%
Sample size: 492

January 5–10, 2016 Bernie Sanders
49%
Hillary Clinton
44%
Martin O'Malley 4%
Undecided 3%
Mason-Dixon/AARP[32]

Margin of error: ±
Sample size: 503

January 4–8, 2016 Hillary Clinton
49%
Bernie Sanders
42%
Martin O’Malley 5%
Not Reported 4%
NBC News/WSJ/Marist[33]

Margin of error: ± 4.8%
Sample size: 422

January 2–7, 2016 Hillary Clinton
48%
Bernie Sanders
45%
Martin O’Malley 5%
Undecided 3%
Polls in 2015
Poll source Date 1st 2nd Other
Gravis Marketing[34]

Margin of error ± 5%
Sample Size: 418

December 18–21, 2015 Hillary Clinton
49%
Bernie Sanders
31%
Martin O'Malley 10%
Unsure 10%
YouGov/CBS News[35]

Margin of error ± 5.3%
Sample Size: 1252

December 14–17, 2015 Hillary Clinton
50%
Bernie Sanders
45%
Martin O'Malley 4%
No preference 1%
Public Policy Polling[36]

Margin of error: ± 4.3%
Sample Size: 526

December 10–13, 2015 Hillary Clinton
52%
Bernie Sanders
34%
Martin O'Malley 7%
Undecided 6%
Quinnipiac University[37]

Margin of error: ± 3.6%
Sample Size: 727

December 4–13, 2015 Hillary Clinton
51%
Bernie Sanders
40%
Martin O'Malley 6%
Undecided 3%
Fox News[38]

Margin of error: ± 5.0%
Sample Size: 357

December 7–10, 2015 Hillary Clinton
50%
Bernie Sanders
36%
Martin O'Malley 5%
Other 4%
Undecided 10%
Loras College[39]

Margin of error: ± 4.4
Sample Size: 501

December 7–10, 2015 Hillary Clinton
59%
Bernie Sanders
27%
Martin O'Malley 4%
Undecided 10%
Des Moines Register/Bloomberg/Selzer[40]

Margin of error ± 4.9%
Sample Size: 404

December 7–10, 2015 Hillary Clinton
48%
Bernie Sanders
39%
Martin O'Malley 4%
Undeicded 8%
Monmouth[41] Margin of error ± 4.9%

Sample Size: 405

December 3–6, 2015 Hillary Clinton
55%
Bernie Sanders
33%
Martin O'Malley 6%
CNN/ORC[41] Margin of error ± 4.5%


Sample Size: 442

November 28 – December 6, 2015 Hillary Clinton
54%
Bernie Sanders
36%
Martin O'Malley 4%
Quinnipiac University[42]

Margin of error ± 4.2%
Sample Size: 543

November 16–22, 2015 Hillary Clinton
51%
Bernie Sanders
42%
Martin O'Malley 4%
Undecided 3%
YouGov/CBS News[43]

Margin of error ± 7.6%
Sample Size: 602

November 15–19, 2015 Hillary Clinton
50%
Bernie Sanders
44%
Martin O'Malley 5%
Undecided 1%
CNN/ORC[44]

Margin of error ± 4.5%
Sample Size: 498

October 29 – November 4, 2015 Hillary Clinton
55%
Bernie Sanders
37%
Martin O'Malley 3%
None 1%
No Opinion 3%
Gravis Marketing/One America News Network[45]

Margin of error ± 3.0%
Sample Size: 272

October 30 – November 2, 2015 Hillary Clinton
57.1%
Bernie Sanders
24.8%
Martin O'Malley 2.9%
Not Sure 15.2%
Public Policy Polling[46]

Margin of error ± 3.9%
Sample Size: 615

October 30 – November 1, 2015 Hillary Clinton
57%
Bernie Sanders
25%
Martin O'Malley 7%
Lawrence Lessig 1%
Not Sure 9%
KBUR-Monmouth[47]

Margin of error: ± 3.76%
Sample size: 681

October 29–31, 2015 Hillary Clinton
45.8%
Bernie Sanders
31.7%
Martin O'Malley 5.4%
Undecided 17.0%
Monmouth University[48]

Margin of error ± 3.76%
Sample size: 681

October 29–31, 2015 Hillary Clinton
45.8%
Bernie Sanders
31.7%
Martin O'Malley 5.4%
Undecided 17%
Monmouth University[49]

Margin of error ± 4.9%
Sample size: 400

October 22–25, 2015 Hillary Clinton
65%
Bernie Sanders
24%
Martin O'Malley 5%
Lawrence Lessig 1%
Undecided 5%
YouGov/CBS News[50]

Margin of error ± 6.9%
Sample size: 555

October 15–22, 2015 Hillary Clinton
46%
Bernie Sanders
43%
Martin O'Malley 3%
Lincoln Chafee 1%
Lawrence Lessig 0%
No preference 7%
Des Moines Register/Bloomberg Politics[51]

Margin of error ± 4.9%
Sample size: 402

October 16–19, 2015 Hillary Clinton
48%
Bernie Sanders
41%
Martin O'Malley 2%
Jim Webb 1%
Lincoln Chafee 1%
Uncommited 3%
Not Sure 4%
NBC News/WSJ/Marist[52]

Margin of error: ± 5.3%
Sample size: 348

September 23–30, 2015 Hillary Clinton
33%
Bernie Sanders
28%
Joe Biden 22%
Martin O'Malley 3%
Jim Webb 1%
Lincoln Chafee <1%
Undecided 12%
Hillary Clinton
47%
Bernie Sanders
36%
Martin O'Malley 4%
Jim Webb 1%
Lincoln Chafee <1%
Undecided 13%
Public Policy Polling[53]

Margin of error ± 4.4%
Sample size: 494

September 18–20, 2015 Hillary Clinton
43%
Bernie Sanders
22%
Joe Biden 17%
Martin O'Malley 3%
Jim Webb 3%
Lincoln Chafee 2%
Lawrence Lessig 0%
Undecided 9%
YouGov/CBS News[54]

Margin of error ± 6.6%
Sample size: 646

September 3–10, 2015 Bernie Sanders
43%
Hillary Clinton
33%
Joe Biden 10%
No preference 7%
Martin O'Malley 5%
Lincoln Chafee 1%
Jim Webb 1%
Quinnipiac University[55]

Margin of error: ± 3.4%
Sample size: 832

Posted September 10, 2015 Bernie Sanders
41%
Hillary Clinton
40%
Joe Biden 12%
Martin O'Malley 3%
NBC News/Marist Poll[56]

Margin of error: ± 5.3%
Sample size: 345

Published September 6, 2015 Hillary Clinton
38%
Bernie Sanders
27%
Joe Biden 20%
Martin O'Malley 4%
Jim Webb 2%
Lincoln Chafee 1%
Undecided 8%
Hillary Clinton
48%
Bernie Sanders
37%
Martin O'Malley 4%
Jim Webb 2%
Lincoln Chafee 1%
Undecided 8%
Loras College[57]

Margin of error ± 4.37%
Sample size: 502

August 24–27, 2015 Hillary Clinton
48.2%
Bernie Sanders
22.9%
Joe Biden 16.3%
Martin O'Malley 4%
Lincoln Chafee 0.6%
Jim Webb 0.4%
Undecided 6.4%
Selzer & Co. of Des Moines[58]

Margin of error: ± 4.9%
Sample size: 404

August 23–26, 2015 Hillary Clinton
43%
Bernie Sanders
35%
Martin O'Malley 5%
Jim Webb 2%
Lincoln Chafee 1%
Not sure 8%
Uncommitted 6%
Hillary Clinton
37%
Bernie Sanders
30%
Joe Biden 14%
Martin O'Malley 3%
Jim Webb 2%
Lincoln Chafee 1%
Not sure 8%
Uncommitted 6%
Suffolk University[59]

Margin of error: ± 4.4%
Sample size: 500

August 20–24, 2015 Hillary Clinton
54%
Bernie Sanders
20%
Joe Biden 11%
Martin O'Malley 4%
Jim Webb 1%
Lincoln Chafee 0%
Undecided 9%
CNN/ORC[60]

Margin of error: ± 4.5%
Sample size: 429

August 7–11, 2015 Hillary Clinton
50%
Bernie Sanders
31%
Joe Biden 12%
Martin O'Malley 1%
Jim Webb 1%
Lincoln Chafee 0%
Not sure 11%
Public Policy Polling[61]

Margin of error: ± 4.1%
Sample size: 567

August 7–9, 2015 Hillary Clinton
52%
Bernie Sanders
25%
Martin O'Malley 7%
Jim Webb 3%
Lincoln Chafee 1%
Not sure 11%
NBC News/Marist[62]

Margin of error: ± 5.5%
Sample size: 320

July 14–21, 2015 Hillary Clinton
49%
Bernie Sanders
25%
Joe Biden 10%
Martin O'Malley 3%
Jim Webb 1%
Lincoln Chafee <1%
Undecided 11%
We Ask America[63]

Margin of error: 3.07%
Sample size: 1,022

June 27–29, 2015 Hillary Clinton
63%
Bernie Sanders
20%
Martin O'Malley 5%
Jim Webb 3%
Lincoln Chafee 1%
Undecided 8%
Quinnipiac University[64]

Margin of error: 3.6%
Sample size: 761

June 20–29, 2015 Hillary Clinton
52%
Bernie Sanders
33%
Joe Biden 7%
Martin O'Malley 3%
Jim Webb 1%
Lincoln Chafee 0%
Undecided 5%
Bloomberg

Margin of error: 4.9%
Sample size: 401

June 19–22, 2015 Hillary Clinton
50%
Bernie Sanders
24%
Martin O'Malley 2%
Lincoln Chafee 0%
Undecided 23%
Morning Consult

Margin of error: ?
Sample size: 322

May 31 – June 8, 2015 Hillary Clinton
54%
Bernie Sanders
12%
Joe Biden 9%
Martin O'Malley 1%
Jim Webb 1%
Lincoln Chafee 0%
Other 3%
Undecided 20%
Gravis Marketing

Margin of error: ± 5.0%
Sample size: 434

May 28–29, 2015 Hillary Clinton
59%
Bernie Sanders
15%
Martin O'Malley 3%
Jim Webb 2%
Bill DeBlasio 2%
Lincoln Chafee 1%
Unsure 17%
Bloomberg/Des Moines

Margin of error: ± 4.7%
Sample size: 437

May 25–29, 2015 Hillary Clinton
57%
Bernie Sanders
16%
Joe Biden 8%
Martin O'Malley 2%
Jim Webb 2%
Uncommitted 6%
Not sure 8%
Quinnipiac University

Margin of error: ± 3.7%
Sample size: 692

April 25 – May 4, 2015 Hillary Clinton
60%
Bernie Sanders
15%
Joe Biden 11%
Martin O'Malley 3%
Jim Webb 3%
Lincoln Chafee 0%
Undecided 7%
Public Policy Polling

Margin of error: ± 4.5%
Sample size: 466

April 23–26, 2015 Hillary Clinton
62%
Bernie Sanders
14%
Martin O'Malley 6%
Jim Webb 3%
Lincoln Chafee 2%
Undecided 13%
Loras College

Margin of error: ± 4.4%
Sample size: 491

April 21–23, 2015 Hillary Clinton
57%
Elizabeth Warren
14.7%
Joe Biden 5.9%
Martin O'Malley 2.4%
Bernie Sanders 2%
Jim Webb 1.2%
Lincoln Chafee 0%
Undecided 16.7%
Quinnipiac

Margin of error: ± 3.9%
Sample size: 619

February 16–23, 2015 Hillary Clinton
61%
Elizabeth Warren
19%
Joe Biden 7%
Bernie Sanders 5%
Jim Webb 2%
Martin O'Malley 0%
Undecided 6%
NBC News/Marist

Margin of error: ± 5.5%
Sample size: 321

February 3–10, 2015 Hillary Clinton
68%
Joe Biden
12%
Bernie Sanders 7%
Jim Webb 1%
Martin O'Malley <1%
Undecided 12%
Selzer & Co.

Margin of error: ± 4.9%
Sample size: 401

January 26–29, 2015 Hillary Clinton
56%
Elizabeth Warren
16%
Joe Biden 9%
Bernie Sanders 5%
Jim Webb 3%
Martin O'Malley 1%
Uncommitted 4%
Not sure 6%
Loras College

Margin of error: ± 6.06%
Sample size: 261

January 21–26, 2015 Hillary Clinton
48.3%
Elizabeth Warren
16.5%
Joe Biden 12.6%
Bernie Sanders 3.8%
Jim Webb 2.3%
Martin O'Malley 0.4%
Undecided 16.1%
Polls in 2014
Poll source Date 1st 2nd Other
Fox News

Margin of error: ± 5%
Sample size: 352

October 28–30, 2014 Hillary Clinton
62%
Elizabeth Warren
14%
Joe Biden 10%
Andrew Cuomo 2%
Martin O'Malley 2%
Other 1%
None of the above 2%
Don't know 6%
Reuters/Ipsos

Margin of error: ± ?
Sample size: 552

October 23–29, 2014 Hillary Clinton
60%
Elizabeth Warren
17%
Joe Biden 4%
Andrew Cuomo 3%
Bernie Sanders 2%
Kirsten Gillibrand 1%
Martin O'Malley 1%
Wouldn't vote 12%
Selzer & Co.

Margin of error: ± 4.8%
Sample size: 426

October 1–7, 2014 Hillary Clinton
53%
Elizabeth Warren
10%
Joe Biden 9%
John Kerry 7%
Bernie Sanders 3%
Andrew Cuomo 1%
Brian Schweitzer 1%
Jim Webb 1%
Martin O'Malley 0%
Uncommitted 3%
Not sure 12%
CNN/ORC

Margin of error: ± 5.5%
Sample size: 309

September 8–10, 2014 Hillary Clinton
53%
Joe Biden
15%
Elizabeth Warren 7%
Bernie Sanders 5%
Andrew Cuomo 3%
Martin O'Malley 2%
Deval Patrick 1%
Someone else 1%
None/No opinion 15%
Suffolk

Margin of error: ± 7.09%
Sample size: 191

August 23–26, 2014 Hillary Clinton
66.49%
Elizabeth Warren
9.95%
Joe Biden 7.85%
Andrew Cuomo 4.19%
Martin O'Malley 2.09%
Undecided 7.85%
NBC News/Marist

Margin of error: ± 4.2%
Sample size: 539

July 7–13, 2014 Hillary Clinton
70%
Joe Biden
20%
Undecided 10%
Vox Populi Polling

Margin of error: ± 6.6%
Sample size: 223

June 4–5, 2014 Hillary Clinton
65%
Joe Biden
18%
Elizabeth Warren 12%
Andrew Cuomo 3%
Martin O'Malley 2%
Public Policy Polling

Margin of error: ±5.2%
Sample size: 356

May 15–19, 2014 Hillary Clinton
59%
Joe Biden
12%
Elizabeth Warren 11%
Cory Booker 3%
Andrew Cuomo 3%
Mark Warner 2%
Kirsten Gillibrand 1%
Martin O'Malley 1%
Brian Schweitzer 1%
Someone else/Not sure 8%
Joe Biden
34%
Elizabeth Warren
22%
Andrew Cuomo 7%
Cory Booker 4%
Kirsten Gillibrand 3%
Martin O'Malley 2%
Brian Schweitzer 1%
Mark Warner 1%
Someone else/Not sure 26%
Elizabeth Warren
31%
Andrew Cuomo
14%
Cory Booker 9%
Kirsten Gillibrand 5%
Martin O'Malley 2%
Mark Warner 2%
Brian Schweitzer 1%
Someone else/Not sure 36%
Suffolk

Margin of error: ± 8.4%
Sample size: 135

April 3–8, 2014 Hillary Clinton
62.96%
Elizabeth Warren
11.85%
Joe Biden 9.63%
Mark Warner 1.48%
Andrew Cuomo 0.74%
Deval Patrick 0.74%
Cory Booker 0%
Undecided 11.85%
Public Policy Polling

Margin of error: ±5.4%
Sample size: 335

February 20–23, 2014 Hillary Clinton
67%
Joe Biden
12%
Elizabeth Warren 5%
Mark Warner 3%
Andrew Cuomo 2%
Cory Booker 1%
Kirsten Gillibrand 0%
Martin O'Malley 0%
Brian Schweitzer 0%
Someone Else/Undecided 10%
Joe Biden
40%
Elizabeth Warren
13%
Andrew Cuomo 8%
Martin O'Malley 5%
Cory Booker 2%
Kirsten Gillibrand 2%
Mark Warner 2%
Brian Schweitzer 1%
Someone Else/Undecided 28%
Elizabeth Warren
21%
Andrew Cuomo
11%
Cory Booker 8%
Martin O'Malley 6%
Kirsten Gillibrand 3%
Brian Schweitzer 2%
Mark Warner 2%
Someone Else/Undecided 47%
Polls in 2013
Poll source Date 1st 2nd Other
Cygnal

Margin of error: ±2.1%
Sample size: 2,175

July 10–12, 2013 Hillary Clinton
55.6%
Joe Biden
7.8%
Elizabeth Warren 5%
Andrew Cuomo 1.1%
Kirsten Gillibrand 0.5%
Martin O'Malley 0.2%
Unsure 29.7%
Public Policy Polling

Margin of error: ±6.1%
Sample size: 260

July 5–7, 2013 Hillary Clinton
71%
Joe Biden
12%
Elizabeth Warren 5%
Kirsten Gillibrand 2%
Mark Warner 2%
Cory Booker 1%
Andrew Cuomo 1%
Martin O'Malley 1%
Brian Schweitzer 0%
Someone Else/Undecided 5%
Joe Biden
51%
Elizabeth Warren
16%
Andrew Cuomo 9%
Cory Booker 6%
Kirsten Gillibrand 2%
Martin O'Malley 2%
Mark Warner 1%
Brian Schweitzer 0%
Someone Else/Undecided 13%
Elizabeth Warren
20%
Andrew Cuomo
18%
Cory Booker 12%
Kirsten Gillibrand 7%
Martin O'Malley 4%
Brian Schweitzer 3%
Mark Warner 2%
Someone Else/Undecided 33%
Public Policy Polling

Margin of error: ±5.5%
Sample size: 313

February 1–3, 2013 Hillary Clinton
68%
Joe Biden
21%
Andrew Cuomo 2%
Mark Warner 2%
Elizabeth Warren 2%
Deval Patrick 1%
Kirsten Gillibrand 0%
Martin O'Malley 0%
Brian Schweitzer 0%
Someone Else/Undecided 3%
Joe Biden
58%
Andrew Cuomo
13%
Elizabeth Warren 7%
Kirsten Gillibrand 6%
Deval Patrick 3%
Mark Warner 2%
Brian Schweitzer 1%
Martin O'Malley 0%
Someone Else/Undecided 11%
Andrew Cuomo
26%
Elizabeth Warren
17%
Martin O'Malley 8%
Kirsten Gillibrand 5%
Deval Patrick 3%
Brian Schweitzer 2%
Mark Warner 2%
Someone Else/Undecided 37%
Harper Polling

Margin of error:
Sample size: 183

January 29, 2013 Hillary Clinton
65.38%
Joe Biden
13.74%
Andrew Cuomo 3.85%
Undecided 17.03%


Results edit

e • d 2016 Democratic Party's presidential nominating process in Iowa
– Summary of results –
Candidate State delegate equivalents Estimated delegates
Count Percentage Pledged Unpledged Total
  Hillary Clinton 700.47 49.84% 23 6 29
Bernie Sanders 696.92 49.59% 21 0 21
Martin O'Malley 7.63 0.54% 0 0 0
Uncommitted 0.46 0.03% 0 1 1
Total 1,405.48 100% 44 7 51
Source: The Green Papers, Iowa Democrats
Iowa Democratic county conventions, March 13, 2016
Candidate State delegates Estimated delegates
Count Percentage Pledged Unpledged Total
Hillary Clinton 704 50.07% 23 6 29
Bernie Sanders 700 49.79% 21 0 21
Martin O'Malley 1 0.07% 0 0 0
Uncommitted 1 0.07% 0 1 1
Total 1,406 100% 44 7 51
Source: Iowa Democrats
Iowa Democratic District conventions, April 30, 2016
Candidate State delegates Estimated delegates
Count Percentage Pledged Unpledged Total
Hillary Clinton 697 50.40% 23 6 29
Bernie Sanders 686 49.60% 21 0 21
Uncommitted 1 1
Total 1,383 100% 44 7 51
Source: Iowa Democrats
Iowa State Democratic Convention, June 18, 2016
Candidate State delegates Estimated delegates
Count Percentage Pledged Unpledged Total
Hillary Clinton 714 55.56% 23 6 29
Bernie Sanders 571 44.44% 21 0 21
Uncommitted 1 1
Total 1,285 100% 44 7 51
Source: Iowa Democrats

Following a poor result in the caucuses, Martin O'Malley announced he was suspending his campaign.[65]

Controversy edit

 
Results of the Iowa Democratic caucus, 2016
  Clinton—70-80%
  Clinton—60-70%
  Clinton—50-60%
  Clinton—<50%
  Tie between Clinton and Sanders
  Sanders—<50%
  Sanders—50-60%
  Sanders—60-70%
  Sanders—70-80%

"Organizational issues around the caucus", including difficulty identifying volunteers to "oversee individual precinct caucuses," contributed to a "disorganized process that lent itself to chaos and conspiracy theories" according to The Guardian.[66]

Both the Sanders and Clinton campaigns have flagged a very small number of concerns for us, and we are looking at them all on a case-by-case basis.

— Sam Lau, Iowa Democratic Party

After initially refusing to review caucus results, Iowa Democratic Party officials did end up "making updates where discrepancies have been found."[67] With "doubts about which Democratic candidate actually won the Iowa caucuses," there have been "fresh calls for the party to mirror the simple, secret-ballot method" the Republicans use. Stated Norm Sterzenbach, former Iowa Democratic Party executive director who oversaw five election cycles: "It's worth discussing again, but it's not as simple as it sounds."[68] It is said that Clinton won by the thinnest margin in the history of Iowa caucuses.

Instances edit

Iowa Democrats reported "discrepancies in caucus results" and confusion over the math of the delegate-awarding system. In Grinnell Ward 1, 19 delegates were awarded to Sanders and seven to Clinton on caucus night. The Iowa Democratic party later shifted one delegate from Sanders to Clinton, but did not notify the precinct secretary, who "only discovered that this happened the next day, when checking the precinct results in other parts of the county."[66]

Other reported discrepancies included:

  • the lone caucusgoer in Woodbury County No. 43, who voted for Sanders—but "final results state" Clinton won one county delegate and Sanders zero.
  • in Knoxville No. 3, where the count was 58 for Sanders and 52 for Clinton—but official results showed Clinton with five county delegates and Sanders with four.
  • the four delegates in Cedar Rapids No. 9 precinct who split evenly between Sanders and Clinton—but only 131 people signed in at the beginning of the caucus with two separate head counts showing 136 people voted.

In Des Moines No. 42, "after everyone had formed initial groups for their preferred candidate," a Clinton supporter addressed O'Malley supporters and undecideds, telling them "they could stay and realign or leave." Some mistakenly believed that meant voting was finished and left early without being counted.[69] In the same precinct, votes were still missing the morning after the caucus. Democrats "from that neighborhood scrambled to find party officials" to report that Sanders won by a margin of two delegates over Clinton. This narrowed Clinton's "excruciatingly close lead" even further—bringing the tally for "delegate equivalents" at that point to Clinton 699.57, Sanders 697.77.[70]

Coin tosses edit

The Des Moines Register reported "an unknown number" of county delegates awarded "after the flip of a coin." Sam Lau, a spokesman for the Iowa Democratic Party, said seven coin flips were reported through "the party's smartphone app"—but officials who reported county delegate totals via the app "weren't required to signify if the win was the result of a coin toss." Lau said Bernie Sanders won six of these. The paper identified "six coin flips through social media and one in an interview with a caucus participant"—with Clinton the apparent winner of six of these seven. Any overlap, or its impact on results, between the coin flips identified by the Register and those the party confirmed was not known.[71]

An Iowa Democratic Party official told NPR there were "at least a dozen tiebreakers" decided by a coin toss— and that "Sen. Sanders won at least a handful."[72]

Gone unmentioned so far is that even if Clinton won that Miracle Six — and there were no other coin tosses — it would make little difference in the outcome. That is, in part, because of the complicated way Iowa Democrats allocate their delegates — and what was being reported on election night and what wasn't.[73]

— Domenico Montanaro, NPR

Review edit

Sanders' campaign "launched" a review of the results of the caucuses, citing as "complicating factors" the "razor-thin margin", the "arcane" caucusing rules, the reporting delays from some precincts, and the reporting technology used. The campaign is rechecking results precinct-by-precinct, reviewing "math sheets or other paperwork" precinct chairs used and were supposed to return to party officials—then comparing these with results entered into the party's Microsoft app. Rania Batrice, a Sanders spokeswoman, challenged: "Let's compare notes. Let's see if they match."[74]

In an editorial, The Des Moines Register called for an audit of the results, declaring "What happened Monday night at the Democratic caucuses was a debacle, period."[74] First noting that only two-tenths of a percent separated Sanders and Clinton and "much larger margins trigger automatic recounts in other states," they stated:

Too many accounts have arisen of inconsistent counts, untrained and overwhelmed volunteers, confused voters, cramped precinct locations, a lack of voter registration forms and other problems. Too many of us, including members of the Register editorial board who were observing caucuses, saw opportunities for error amid Monday night's chaos.[74]

In lieu of "official paper records" the party had "declined to provide the campaign"—which would show individual precinct vote tallies before they were entered into the party's app the night of the caucuses—the Sanders' campaign was contacting each of its own precinct captains to reconstruct caucus results.[75] Sanders' campaign manager Jeff Weaver said: "I think everybody has an interest in making it as accurate as possible", though "[a]s an empirical matter, we're not likely to ever know what the actual result was".[76]

Let's not blow this out of proportion. This is not the biggest deal in the world. We think, by the way, based on talking to our precinct captains, we may have at least two more delegates."[77]

— Bernie Sanders

Analysis edit

 
Iowa Caucus Winners – political cartoon by DonkeyHotey

Despite a late challenge from insurgent Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, whose populist economic message resonated with Iowa's progressive Democratic electorate,[according to whom?] Clinton eked out a 0.2-percentage-point victory in the first-in-the-nation caucus, edging out Sanders by only four state delegate equivalents. As The New York Times described, Sanders' near-tie with Clinton combined with Ted Cruz's Republican victory in the caucus demonstrated how the "2016 campaign has turned to easing the palpable frustrations of a large portion of white working-class Americans who believe that the country no longer works for them."[78]

According to entrance polls, Clinton won the white vote by a 49–46 margin against Sanders, with white voters comprising 91% of the Iowa electorate. She won non-white voters more resoundingly, 58–34. Sanders won among men, 50–44, but Clinton won women, 53-42. Sanders proved his immense strength with millennials by winning 17–29-year-olds 84-14, with Clinton winning senior citizens, 69–26. Clinton won among voters who had a high school diploma or less, and among those who had a postgraduate degree, while Sanders won voters with only a college degree. Sanders won 53-44 among voters who made an income of less than $50k per year, Clinton won more affluent voters 52-42. In terms of political party affiliation, Clinton won Democrats 56-39 but lost Independents to Bernie Sanders, 69–29.[79]

Upon learning she had been awarded the state of Iowa after 1 P.M. the following day, Clinton told CNN's Wolf Blitzer, "My luck was not that good last time around, and it was wonderful to win the caucus, to have that experience."[80]

See also edit

References edit

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2016, iowa, democratic, presidential, caucuses, were, held, monday, february, iowa, usual, marking, democratic, party, first, nominating, contest, their, series, presidential, primaries, ahead, 2016, presidential, election, 2012, february, 2016, 2016, 2020, de. The 2016 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses were held on Monday February 1 in Iowa as usual marking the Democratic Party s first nominating contest in their series of presidential primaries ahead of the 2016 presidential election 2016 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses 2012 February 1 2016 2016 02 01 2020 NH 51 Democratic National Convention delegates 44 pledged 7 unpledged Candidate Hillary Clinton Bernie SandersHome state New York VermontDelegate count 23 21SDEs 700 47 696 92Percentage of SDEs 49 84 49 59 Iowa results by county state delegate equivalents Hillary Clinton Bernie Sanders TieThe Republican Party held its own Iowa caucuses on the same day Despite a close challenge Hillary Clinton was able to defeat Bernie Sanders in the first in the nation Iowa Caucus by the closest margin in the history of the contest 49 8 to 49 6 Clinton collected 700 47 state delegate equivalents to Sanders 696 92 a difference of one quarter of a percentage point 1 The victory which was projected to award her 23 pledged national convention delegates two more than Sanders made Clinton the first woman to win the Caucus and marked a clear difference from 2008 where she finished in third place behind Obama and John Edwards 2 3 4 5 Martin O Malley suspended his campaign after a disappointing third place finish with only 0 5 of the state delegate equivalents awarded leaving Clinton and Sanders the only two major candidates in the race 6 171 517 people participated in the 2016 Iowa Democratic caucuses 7 Hillary Clinton launched her campaign in Iowa April 2015Bernie Sanders campaigns in Iowa in January 2016Sanders supporters in Iowa January 31 2016Contents 1 Procedure 2 Debates and forums 2 1 November 2015 debate in Des Moines 2 2 January 2016 forum in Des Moines 3 Opinion polling 4 Results 5 Controversy 5 1 Instances 5 2 Coin tosses 5 3 Review 6 Analysis 7 See also 8 ReferencesProcedure editFurther information Walking subcaucus There was no ballot instead a unique form of debate and groupings chose delegates to county conventions supporting Hillary Clinton Martin O Malley and Bernie Sanders The Iowa Democratic Party did not release vote counts or the numbers of these delegates Instead they released the estimated amount of state delegates supporting each candidate 8 The county conventions selected delegates to district and state conventions which in turn selected the delegates to the Democratic National Convention The delegates at the county district and state conventions were not pledged and were allowed to change their preference meaning that the final result of the state delegates could have been different from what was estimated at the Iowa precinct caucuses Delegates to the 2016 Democratic National Convention were selected at district and state conventions The First and Second congressional districts received 8 district delegates the Third received 7 and the Fourth received 6 These district delegates were elected at the District Conventions based on the result in each Congressional District 9 At the State Convention the 15 statewide pledged delegates were elected based on the statewide results 9 of these delegates were At Large and 6 were Party Leaders and Elected Officials PLEO who were pledged based on the proportion of At Large delegates supporting candidates The Iowa delegation also included 8 superdelegates who were not pledged based on the result of the caucus process which included 1 U S Representative and 7 Democratic National Committee members 9 Debates and forums editNovember 2015 debate in Des Moines edit Main article Second Democratic Party presidential debate November 2015 in Des Moines Iowa On November 14 2015 the Democratic Party held a second presidential debate at the Sheslow Auditorium at Drake University in Des Moines Iowa Hosted by CBS News Political Director John Dickerson it aired on CBS News and was also broadcast by KCCI and The Des Moines Register With the remaining candidates Hillary Clinton Bernie Sanders and Martin O Malley participating it was the first debate to be broadcast over nationwide network television the previous debate having gone over cable 10 As the day before the debate November 13 was the day of the November 2015 Paris attacks CBS announced that the debate would focus on foreign policy and terrorism 11 In addition a moment of silence was held at the beginning of the debate in memory of the victims January 2016 forum in Des Moines edit See also 2016 Democratic Party presidential debates On January 11 2016 the Black and Brown forum was held at Drake University in Des Moines Iowa Focusing on minority issues it aired on Fusion 12 Opinion polling editSee also Statewide opinion polling for the 2016 Democratic Party presidential primaries Poll source Date 1st 2nd OtherCaucus results February 1 2016 Hillary Clinton 49 9 Bernie Sanders 49 6 Martin O Malley 0 6 Emerson College 13 Margin of error 5 6 Sample size 300 January 29 31 2016 Hillary Clinton 51 Bernie Sanders 43 Martin O Malley 4 Undecided 2 Quinnipiac University 14 Margin of error 3 2 Sample size 919 January 25 31 2016 Bernie Sanders 49 Hillary Clinton 46 Martin O Malley 3 Undecided 2 Des Moines Register Bloomberg Selzer 15 Margin of error 4 Sample size 602 January 26 29 2016 Hillary Clinton 45 Bernie Sanders 42 Martin O Malley 3 Undecided or Not Committed 9 Public Policy Polling 16 Margin of error 3 4 Sample size 851 January 26 27 2016 Hillary Clinton 48 Bernie Sanders 40 Martin O Malley 7 No preference 5 Gravis Marketing 17 Margin of error 3 Sample size 810 January 26 27 2016 Hillary Clinton 53 Bernie Sanders 42 Martin O Malley 5 No preference 0 Monmouth University 18 Margin of error 4 4 Sample size 504 January 23 26 2016 Hillary Clinton 47 Bernie Sanders 42 Martin O Malley 6 Undecided 5 American Research Group 19 Margin of error 5 0 Sample size 400 January 21 24 2016 Bernie Sanders 48 Hillary Clinton 45 Martin O Malley 3 No preference 4 Quinnipiac University 20 Margin of error 4 Sample size 606 January 18 24 2016 Bernie Sanders 49 Hillary Clinton 45 Martin O Malley 4 Undecided 2 ISU WHO HD 21 Margin of error Sample size 356 January 5 22 2016 Hillary Clinton 47 Bernie Sanders 45 Martin O Malley lt 1 Undecided 7 Fox News 22 Margin of error 4 5 Sample size 432 January 18 21 2016 Hillary Clinton 48 Bernie Sanders 42 Martin O Malley 3 No preference 7 YouGov CBS News 23 Margin of error 8 9 Sample size 906 January 17 21 2016 Bernie Sanders 47 Hillary Clinton 46 Martin O Malley 5 No preference 2 Emerson College Polling Society 24 Margin of error 5 9 Sample size 271 January 18 20 2016 Hillary Clinton 52 Bernie Sanders 43 Martin O Malley 3 Undecided 2 CNN ORC 25 Margin of error 6 Sample size 280 January 15 20 2016 Bernie Sanders 51 Hillary Clinton 43 Martin O Malley 4 Undecided 2 Monmouth College KBUR 26 Margin of error 4 1 Sample size 500 January 18 19 2016 Hillary Clinton 47 7 Bernie Sanders 39 3 Martin O Malley 7 4 Undecided 5 Loras College 27 Margin of error 4 4 Sample size 580 January 8 10 2016 Hillary Clinton 46 Bernie Sanders 40 Martin O Malley 8 Undecided 5 Public Policy Polling 28 Margin of error 4 1 Sample size 580 January 8 10 2016 Hillary Clinton 46 Bernie Sanders 40 Martin O Malley 8 Undecided 5 Bloomberg DMR 29 Margin of error 4 4 Sample size 503 January 7 10 2016 Hillary Clinton 42 Bernie Sanders 40 Martin O Malley 4 Other Undecided 14 American Research Group 30 Margin of error 4 0 Sample size 600 January 6 10 2016 Bernie Sanders 47 Hillary Clinton 44 Martin O Malley 3 Undecided 5 Quinnipiac University 31 Margin of error 4 4 Sample size 492 January 5 10 2016 Bernie Sanders 49 Hillary Clinton 44 Martin O Malley 4 Undecided 3 Mason Dixon AARP 32 Margin of error Sample size 503 January 4 8 2016 Hillary Clinton 49 Bernie Sanders 42 Martin O Malley 5 Not Reported 4 NBC News WSJ Marist 33 Margin of error 4 8 Sample size 422 January 2 7 2016 Hillary Clinton 48 Bernie Sanders 45 Martin O Malley 5 Undecided 3 Polls in 2015Poll source Date 1st 2nd OtherGravis Marketing 34 Margin of error 5 Sample Size 418 December 18 21 2015 Hillary Clinton 49 Bernie Sanders 31 Martin O Malley 10 Unsure 10 YouGov CBS News 35 Margin of error 5 3 Sample Size 1252 December 14 17 2015 Hillary Clinton 50 Bernie Sanders 45 Martin O Malley 4 No preference 1 Public Policy Polling 36 Margin of error 4 3 Sample Size 526 December 10 13 2015 Hillary Clinton 52 Bernie Sanders 34 Martin O Malley 7 Undecided 6 Quinnipiac University 37 Margin of error 3 6 Sample Size 727 December 4 13 2015 Hillary Clinton 51 Bernie Sanders 40 Martin O Malley 6 Undecided 3 Fox News 38 Margin of error 5 0 Sample Size 357 December 7 10 2015 Hillary Clinton 50 Bernie Sanders 36 Martin O Malley 5 Other 4 Undecided 10 Loras College 39 Margin of error 4 4 Sample Size 501 December 7 10 2015 Hillary Clinton 59 Bernie Sanders 27 Martin O Malley 4 Undecided 10 Des Moines Register Bloomberg Selzer 40 Margin of error 4 9 Sample Size 404 December 7 10 2015 Hillary Clinton 48 Bernie Sanders 39 Martin O Malley 4 Undeicded 8 Monmouth 41 Margin of error 4 9 Sample Size 405 December 3 6 2015 Hillary Clinton 55 Bernie Sanders 33 Martin O Malley 6 CNN ORC 41 Margin of error 4 5 Sample Size 442 November 28 December 6 2015 Hillary Clinton 54 Bernie Sanders 36 Martin O Malley 4 Quinnipiac University 42 Margin of error 4 2 Sample Size 543 November 16 22 2015 Hillary Clinton 51 Bernie Sanders 42 Martin O Malley 4 Undecided 3 YouGov CBS News 43 Margin of error 7 6 Sample Size 602 November 15 19 2015 Hillary Clinton 50 Bernie Sanders 44 Martin O Malley 5 Undecided 1 CNN ORC 44 Margin of error 4 5 Sample Size 498 October 29 November 4 2015 Hillary Clinton 55 Bernie Sanders 37 Martin O Malley 3 None 1 No Opinion 3 Gravis Marketing One America News Network 45 Margin of error 3 0 Sample Size 272 October 30 November 2 2015 Hillary Clinton 57 1 Bernie Sanders 24 8 Martin O Malley 2 9 Not Sure 15 2 Public Policy Polling 46 Margin of error 3 9 Sample Size 615 October 30 November 1 2015 Hillary Clinton 57 Bernie Sanders 25 Martin O Malley 7 Lawrence Lessig 1 Not Sure 9 KBUR Monmouth 47 Margin of error 3 76 Sample size 681 October 29 31 2015 Hillary Clinton 45 8 Bernie Sanders 31 7 Martin O Malley 5 4 Undecided 17 0 Monmouth University 48 Margin of error 3 76 Sample size 681 October 29 31 2015 Hillary Clinton 45 8 Bernie Sanders 31 7 Martin O Malley 5 4 Undecided 17 Monmouth University 49 Margin of error 4 9 Sample size 400 October 22 25 2015 Hillary Clinton 65 Bernie Sanders 24 Martin O Malley 5 Lawrence Lessig 1 Undecided 5 YouGov CBS News 50 Margin of error 6 9 Sample size 555 October 15 22 2015 Hillary Clinton 46 Bernie Sanders 43 Martin O Malley 3 Lincoln Chafee 1 Lawrence Lessig 0 No preference 7 Des Moines Register Bloomberg Politics 51 Margin of error 4 9 Sample size 402 October 16 19 2015 Hillary Clinton 48 Bernie Sanders 41 Martin O Malley 2 Jim Webb 1 Lincoln Chafee 1 Uncommited 3 Not Sure 4 NBC News WSJ Marist 52 Margin of error 5 3 Sample size 348 September 23 30 2015 Hillary Clinton 33 Bernie Sanders 28 Joe Biden 22 Martin O Malley 3 Jim Webb 1 Lincoln Chafee lt 1 Undecided 12 Hillary Clinton 47 Bernie Sanders 36 Martin O Malley 4 Jim Webb 1 Lincoln Chafee lt 1 Undecided 13 Public Policy Polling 53 Margin of error 4 4 Sample size 494 September 18 20 2015 Hillary Clinton 43 Bernie Sanders 22 Joe Biden 17 Martin O Malley 3 Jim Webb 3 Lincoln Chafee 2 Lawrence Lessig 0 Undecided 9 YouGov CBS News 54 Margin of error 6 6 Sample size 646 September 3 10 2015 Bernie Sanders 43 Hillary Clinton 33 Joe Biden 10 No preference 7 Martin O Malley 5 Lincoln Chafee 1 Jim Webb 1 Quinnipiac University 55 Margin of error 3 4 Sample size 832 Posted September 10 2015 Bernie Sanders 41 Hillary Clinton 40 Joe Biden 12 Martin O Malley 3 NBC News Marist Poll 56 Margin of error 5 3 Sample size 345 Published September 6 2015 Hillary Clinton 38 Bernie Sanders 27 Joe Biden 20 Martin O Malley 4 Jim Webb 2 Lincoln Chafee 1 Undecided 8 Hillary Clinton 48 Bernie Sanders 37 Martin O Malley 4 Jim Webb 2 Lincoln Chafee 1 Undecided 8 Loras College 57 Margin of error 4 37 Sample size 502 August 24 27 2015 Hillary Clinton 48 2 Bernie Sanders 22 9 Joe Biden 16 3 Martin O Malley 4 Lincoln Chafee 0 6 Jim Webb 0 4 Undecided 6 4 Selzer amp Co of Des Moines 58 Margin of error 4 9 Sample size 404 August 23 26 2015 Hillary Clinton 43 Bernie Sanders 35 Martin O Malley 5 Jim Webb 2 Lincoln Chafee 1 Not sure 8 Uncommitted 6 Hillary Clinton 37 Bernie Sanders 30 Joe Biden 14 Martin O Malley 3 Jim Webb 2 Lincoln Chafee 1 Not sure 8 Uncommitted 6 Suffolk University 59 Margin of error 4 4 Sample size 500 August 20 24 2015 Hillary Clinton 54 Bernie Sanders 20 Joe Biden 11 Martin O Malley 4 Jim Webb 1 Lincoln Chafee 0 Undecided 9 CNN ORC 60 Margin of error 4 5 Sample size 429 August 7 11 2015 Hillary Clinton 50 Bernie Sanders 31 Joe Biden 12 Martin O Malley 1 Jim Webb 1 Lincoln Chafee 0 Not sure 11 Public Policy Polling 61 Margin of error 4 1 Sample size 567 August 7 9 2015 Hillary Clinton 52 Bernie Sanders 25 Martin O Malley 7 Jim Webb 3 Lincoln Chafee 1 Not sure 11 NBC News Marist 62 Margin of error 5 5 Sample size 320 July 14 21 2015 Hillary Clinton 49 Bernie Sanders 25 Joe Biden 10 Martin O Malley 3 Jim Webb 1 Lincoln Chafee lt 1 Undecided 11 We Ask America 63 Margin of error 3 07 Sample size 1 022 June 27 29 2015 Hillary Clinton 63 Bernie Sanders 20 Martin O Malley 5 Jim Webb 3 Lincoln Chafee 1 Undecided 8 Quinnipiac University 64 Margin of error 3 6 Sample size 761 June 20 29 2015 Hillary Clinton 52 Bernie Sanders 33 Joe Biden 7 Martin O Malley 3 Jim Webb 1 Lincoln Chafee 0 Undecided 5 Bloomberg Margin of error 4 9 Sample size 401 June 19 22 2015 Hillary Clinton 50 Bernie Sanders 24 Martin O Malley 2 Lincoln Chafee 0 Undecided 23 Morning Consult Margin of error Sample size 322 May 31 June 8 2015 Hillary Clinton 54 Bernie Sanders 12 Joe Biden 9 Martin O Malley 1 Jim Webb 1 Lincoln Chafee 0 Other 3 Undecided 20 Gravis Marketing Margin of error 5 0 Sample size 434 May 28 29 2015 Hillary Clinton 59 Bernie Sanders 15 Martin O Malley 3 Jim Webb 2 Bill DeBlasio 2 Lincoln Chafee 1 Unsure 17 Bloomberg Des Moines Margin of error 4 7 Sample size 437 May 25 29 2015 Hillary Clinton 57 Bernie Sanders 16 Joe Biden 8 Martin O Malley 2 Jim Webb 2 Uncommitted 6 Not sure 8 Quinnipiac University Margin of error 3 7 Sample size 692 April 25 May 4 2015 Hillary Clinton 60 Bernie Sanders 15 Joe Biden 11 Martin O Malley 3 Jim Webb 3 Lincoln Chafee 0 Undecided 7 Public Policy Polling Margin of error 4 5 Sample size 466 April 23 26 2015 Hillary Clinton 62 Bernie Sanders 14 Martin O Malley 6 Jim Webb 3 Lincoln Chafee 2 Undecided 13 Loras College Margin of error 4 4 Sample size 491 April 21 23 2015 Hillary Clinton 57 Elizabeth Warren 14 7 Joe Biden 5 9 Martin O Malley 2 4 Bernie Sanders 2 Jim Webb 1 2 Lincoln Chafee 0 Undecided 16 7 Quinnipiac Margin of error 3 9 Sample size 619 February 16 23 2015 Hillary Clinton 61 Elizabeth Warren 19 Joe Biden 7 Bernie Sanders 5 Jim Webb 2 Martin O Malley 0 Undecided 6 NBC News Marist Margin of error 5 5 Sample size 321 February 3 10 2015 Hillary Clinton 68 Joe Biden 12 Bernie Sanders 7 Jim Webb 1 Martin O Malley lt 1 Undecided 12 Selzer amp Co Margin of error 4 9 Sample size 401 January 26 29 2015 Hillary Clinton 56 Elizabeth Warren 16 Joe Biden 9 Bernie Sanders 5 Jim Webb 3 Martin O Malley 1 Uncommitted 4 Not sure 6 Loras College Margin of error 6 06 Sample size 261 January 21 26 2015 Hillary Clinton 48 3 Elizabeth Warren 16 5 Joe Biden 12 6 Bernie Sanders 3 8 Jim Webb 2 3 Martin O Malley 0 4 Undecided 16 1 Polls in 2014Poll source Date 1st 2nd OtherFox News Margin of error 5 Sample size 352 October 28 30 2014 Hillary Clinton 62 Elizabeth Warren 14 Joe Biden 10 Andrew Cuomo 2 Martin O Malley 2 Other 1 None of the above 2 Don t know 6 Reuters Ipsos Margin of error Sample size 552 October 23 29 2014 Hillary Clinton 60 Elizabeth Warren 17 Joe Biden 4 Andrew Cuomo 3 Bernie Sanders 2 Kirsten Gillibrand 1 Martin O Malley 1 Wouldn t vote 12 Selzer amp Co Margin of error 4 8 Sample size 426 October 1 7 2014 Hillary Clinton 53 Elizabeth Warren 10 Joe Biden 9 John Kerry 7 Bernie Sanders 3 Andrew Cuomo 1 Brian Schweitzer 1 Jim Webb 1 Martin O Malley 0 Uncommitted 3 Not sure 12 CNN ORC Margin of error 5 5 Sample size 309 September 8 10 2014 Hillary Clinton 53 Joe Biden 15 Elizabeth Warren 7 Bernie Sanders 5 Andrew Cuomo 3 Martin O Malley 2 Deval Patrick 1 Someone else 1 None No opinion 15 Suffolk Margin of error 7 09 Sample size 191 August 23 26 2014 Hillary Clinton 66 49 Elizabeth Warren 9 95 Joe Biden 7 85 Andrew Cuomo 4 19 Martin O Malley 2 09 Undecided 7 85 NBC News Marist Margin of error 4 2 Sample size 539 July 7 13 2014 Hillary Clinton 70 Joe Biden 20 Undecided 10 Vox Populi Polling Margin of error 6 6 Sample size 223 June 4 5 2014 Hillary Clinton 65 Joe Biden 18 Elizabeth Warren 12 Andrew Cuomo 3 Martin O Malley 2 Public Policy Polling Margin of error 5 2 Sample size 356 May 15 19 2014 Hillary Clinton 59 Joe Biden 12 Elizabeth Warren 11 Cory Booker 3 Andrew Cuomo 3 Mark Warner 2 Kirsten Gillibrand 1 Martin O Malley 1 Brian Schweitzer 1 Someone else Not sure 8 Joe Biden 34 Elizabeth Warren 22 Andrew Cuomo 7 Cory Booker 4 Kirsten Gillibrand 3 Martin O Malley 2 Brian Schweitzer 1 Mark Warner 1 Someone else Not sure 26 Elizabeth Warren 31 Andrew Cuomo 14 Cory Booker 9 Kirsten Gillibrand 5 Martin O Malley 2 Mark Warner 2 Brian Schweitzer 1 Someone else Not sure 36 Suffolk Margin of error 8 4 Sample size 135 April 3 8 2014 Hillary Clinton 62 96 Elizabeth Warren 11 85 Joe Biden 9 63 Mark Warner 1 48 Andrew Cuomo 0 74 Deval Patrick 0 74 Cory Booker 0 Undecided 11 85 Public Policy Polling Margin of error 5 4 Sample size 335 February 20 23 2014 Hillary Clinton 67 Joe Biden 12 Elizabeth Warren 5 Mark Warner 3 Andrew Cuomo 2 Cory Booker 1 Kirsten Gillibrand 0 Martin O Malley 0 Brian Schweitzer 0 Someone Else Undecided 10 Joe Biden 40 Elizabeth Warren 13 Andrew Cuomo 8 Martin O Malley 5 Cory Booker 2 Kirsten Gillibrand 2 Mark Warner 2 Brian Schweitzer 1 Someone Else Undecided 28 Elizabeth Warren 21 Andrew Cuomo 11 Cory Booker 8 Martin O Malley 6 Kirsten Gillibrand 3 Brian Schweitzer 2 Mark Warner 2 Someone Else Undecided 47 Polls in 2013Poll source Date 1st 2nd OtherCygnal Margin of error 2 1 Sample size 2 175 July 10 12 2013 Hillary Clinton 55 6 Joe Biden 7 8 Elizabeth Warren 5 Andrew Cuomo 1 1 Kirsten Gillibrand 0 5 Martin O Malley 0 2 Unsure 29 7 Public Policy Polling Margin of error 6 1 Sample size 260 July 5 7 2013 Hillary Clinton 71 Joe Biden 12 Elizabeth Warren 5 Kirsten Gillibrand 2 Mark Warner 2 Cory Booker 1 Andrew Cuomo 1 Martin O Malley 1 Brian Schweitzer 0 Someone Else Undecided 5 Joe Biden 51 Elizabeth Warren 16 Andrew Cuomo 9 Cory Booker 6 Kirsten Gillibrand 2 Martin O Malley 2 Mark Warner 1 Brian Schweitzer 0 Someone Else Undecided 13 Elizabeth Warren 20 Andrew Cuomo 18 Cory Booker 12 Kirsten Gillibrand 7 Martin O Malley 4 Brian Schweitzer 3 Mark Warner 2 Someone Else Undecided 33 Public Policy Polling Margin of error 5 5 Sample size 313 February 1 3 2013 Hillary Clinton 68 Joe Biden 21 Andrew Cuomo 2 Mark Warner 2 Elizabeth Warren 2 Deval Patrick 1 Kirsten Gillibrand 0 Martin O Malley 0 Brian Schweitzer 0 Someone Else Undecided 3 Joe Biden 58 Andrew Cuomo 13 Elizabeth Warren 7 Kirsten Gillibrand 6 Deval Patrick 3 Mark Warner 2 Brian Schweitzer 1 Martin O Malley 0 Someone Else Undecided 11 Andrew Cuomo 26 Elizabeth Warren 17 Martin O Malley 8 Kirsten Gillibrand 5 Deval Patrick 3 Brian Schweitzer 2 Mark Warner 2 Someone Else Undecided 37 Harper Polling Margin of error Sample size 183 January 29 2013 Hillary Clinton 65 38 Joe Biden 13 74 Andrew Cuomo 3 85 Undecided 17 03 Results edite d 2016 Democratic Party s presidential nominating process in Iowa Summary of results Candidate State delegate equivalents Estimated delegatesCount Percentage Pledged Unpledged Total nbsp Hillary Clinton 700 47 49 84 23 6 29Bernie Sanders 696 92 49 59 21 0 21Martin O Malley 7 63 0 54 0 0 0Uncommitted 0 46 0 03 0 1 1Total 1 405 48 100 44 7 51Source The Green Papers Iowa DemocratsIowa Democratic county conventions March 13 2016Candidate State delegates Estimated delegatesCount Percentage Pledged Unpledged TotalHillary Clinton 704 50 07 23 6 29Bernie Sanders 700 49 79 21 0 21Martin O Malley 1 0 07 0 0 0Uncommitted 1 0 07 0 1 1Total 1 406 100 44 7 51Source Iowa DemocratsIowa Democratic District conventions April 30 2016Candidate State delegates Estimated delegatesCount Percentage Pledged Unpledged TotalHillary Clinton 697 50 40 23 6 29Bernie Sanders 686 49 60 21 0 21Uncommitted 1 1Total 1 383 100 44 7 51Source Iowa DemocratsIowa State Democratic Convention June 18 2016Candidate State delegates Estimated delegatesCount Percentage Pledged Unpledged TotalHillary Clinton 714 55 56 23 6 29Bernie Sanders 571 44 44 21 0 21Uncommitted 1 1Total 1 285 100 44 7 51Source Iowa DemocratsFollowing a poor result in the caucuses Martin O Malley announced he was suspending his campaign 65 Controversy edit nbsp Results of the Iowa Democratic caucus 2016 Clinton 70 80 Clinton 60 70 Clinton 50 60 Clinton lt 50 Tie between Clinton and Sanders Sanders lt 50 Sanders 50 60 Sanders 60 70 Sanders 70 80 Organizational issues around the caucus including difficulty identifying volunteers to oversee individual precinct caucuses contributed to a disorganized process that lent itself to chaos and conspiracy theories according to The Guardian 66 Both the Sanders and Clinton campaigns have flagged a very small number of concerns for us and we are looking at them all on a case by case basis Sam Lau Iowa Democratic Party After initially refusing to review caucus results Iowa Democratic Party officials did end up making updates where discrepancies have been found 67 With doubts about which Democratic candidate actually won the Iowa caucuses there have been fresh calls for the party to mirror the simple secret ballot method the Republicans use Stated Norm Sterzenbach former Iowa Democratic Party executive director who oversaw five election cycles It s worth discussing again but it s not as simple as it sounds 68 It is said that Clinton won by the thinnest margin in the history of Iowa caucuses Instances edit Iowa Democrats reported discrepancies in caucus results and confusion over the math of the delegate awarding system In Grinnell Ward 1 19 delegates were awarded to Sanders and seven to Clinton on caucus night The Iowa Democratic party later shifted one delegate from Sanders to Clinton but did not notify the precinct secretary who only discovered that this happened the next day when checking the precinct results in other parts of the county 66 Other reported discrepancies included the lone caucusgoer in Woodbury County No 43 who voted for Sanders but final results state Clinton won one county delegate and Sanders zero in Knoxville No 3 where the count was 58 for Sanders and 52 for Clinton but official results showed Clinton with five county delegates and Sanders with four the four delegates in Cedar Rapids No 9 precinct who split evenly between Sanders and Clinton but only 131 people signed in at the beginning of the caucus with two separate head counts showing 136 people voted In Des Moines No 42 after everyone had formed initial groups for their preferred candidate a Clinton supporter addressed O Malley supporters and undecideds telling them they could stay and realign or leave Some mistakenly believed that meant voting was finished and left early without being counted 69 In the same precinct votes were still missing the morning after the caucus Democrats from that neighborhood scrambled to find party officials to report that Sanders won by a margin of two delegates over Clinton This narrowed Clinton s excruciatingly close lead even further bringing the tally for delegate equivalents at that point to Clinton 699 57 Sanders 697 77 70 Coin tosses edit The Des Moines Register reported an unknown number of county delegates awarded after the flip of a coin Sam Lau a spokesman for the Iowa Democratic Party said seven coin flips were reported through the party s smartphone app but officials who reported county delegate totals via the app weren t required to signify if the win was the result of a coin toss Lau said Bernie Sanders won six of these The paper identified six coin flips through social media and one in an interview with a caucus participant with Clinton the apparent winner of six of these seven Any overlap or its impact on results between the coin flips identified by the Register and those the party confirmed was not known 71 An Iowa Democratic Party official told NPR there were at least a dozen tiebreakers decided by a coin toss and that Sen Sanders won at least a handful 72 Gone unmentioned so far is that even if Clinton won that Miracle Six and there were no other coin tosses it would make little difference in the outcome That is in part because of the complicated way Iowa Democrats allocate their delegates and what was being reported on election night and what wasn t 73 Domenico Montanaro NPR Review edit Sanders campaign launched a review of the results of the caucuses citing as complicating factors the razor thin margin the arcane caucusing rules the reporting delays from some precincts and the reporting technology used The campaign is rechecking results precinct by precinct reviewing math sheets or other paperwork precinct chairs used and were supposed to return to party officials then comparing these with results entered into the party s Microsoft app Rania Batrice a Sanders spokeswoman challenged Let s compare notes Let s see if they match 74 In an editorial The Des Moines Register called for an audit of the results declaring What happened Monday night at the Democratic caucuses was a debacle period 74 First noting that only two tenths of a percent separated Sanders and Clinton and much larger margins trigger automatic recounts in other states they stated Too many accounts have arisen of inconsistent counts untrained and overwhelmed volunteers confused voters cramped precinct locations a lack of voter registration forms and other problems Too many of us including members of the Register editorial board who were observing caucuses saw opportunities for error amid Monday night s chaos 74 In lieu of official paper records the party had declined to provide the campaign which would show individual precinct vote tallies before they were entered into the party s app the night of the caucuses the Sanders campaign was contacting each of its own precinct captains to reconstruct caucus results 75 Sanders campaign manager Jeff Weaver said I think everybody has an interest in making it as accurate as possible though a s an empirical matter we re not likely to ever know what the actual result was 76 Let s not blow this out of proportion This is not the biggest deal in the world We think by the way based on talking to our precinct captains we may have at least two more delegates 77 Bernie SandersAnalysis edit nbsp Iowa Caucus Winners political cartoon by DonkeyHoteyDespite a late challenge from insurgent Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont whose populist economic message resonated with Iowa s progressive Democratic electorate according to whom Clinton eked out a 0 2 percentage point victory in the first in the nation caucus edging out Sanders by only four state delegate equivalents As The New York Times described Sanders near tie with Clinton combined with Ted Cruz s Republican victory in the caucus demonstrated how the 2016 campaign has turned to easing the palpable frustrations of a large portion of white working class Americans who believe that the country no longer works for them 78 According to entrance polls Clinton won the white vote by a 49 46 margin against Sanders with white voters comprising 91 of the Iowa electorate She won non white voters more resoundingly 58 34 Sanders won among men 50 44 but Clinton won women 53 42 Sanders proved his immense strength with millennials by winning 17 29 year olds 84 14 with Clinton winning senior citizens 69 26 Clinton won among voters who had a high school diploma or less and among those who had a postgraduate degree while Sanders won voters with only a college degree Sanders won 53 44 among voters who made an income of less than 50k per year Clinton won more affluent voters 52 42 In terms of political party affiliation Clinton won Democrats 56 39 but lost Independents to Bernie Sanders 69 29 79 Upon learning she had been awarded the state of Iowa after 1 P M the following day Clinton told CNN s Wolf Blitzer My luck was not that good last time around and it was wonderful to win the caucus to have that experience 80 See also edit2016 Iowa Republican presidential caucusesReferences edit Election 2016 Iowa Democratic Presidential Caucus RealClearPolitics Retrieved March 28 2016 Hepker Aaron February 2 2016 All Precincts Reported Clinton Defeats Sanders By Historically Small Margin Des Moines Iowa WHO TV Ennis Dawn February 2 2016 And the Winner of the Iowa Caucus Is Hillary Clinton Barely The Advocate ISSN 0001 8996 Iowa Caucus Results The New York Times February 27 2016 Retrieved February 28 2016 Iowa Caucus 2016 Election Results NBC News February 2 2016 Taylor Jessica February 1 2016 Martin O Malley Ends Presidential Bid NPR Retrieved February 1 2016 Statement from IDP Chair on Tonight s Historically Close Caucus Results Iowa Democratic Party 2 February 2016 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on February 7 2016 Retrieved April 2 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b The Green Papers 2016 Presidential Primaries Caucuses and Conventions The Green Papers Weiland Noah November 12 2015 Everything you need to know about Saturday s Democratic debate Politico Retrieved November 13 2015 Steel Emily November 14 2015 CBS Shifts Emphasis of Democratic Debate to Reflect Paris Attacks New York Times Retrieved November 15 2015 Gold Hadas November 19 2015 Fusion to host Democratic presidential forum Politico Politico Retrieved January 11 2016 TRUMP BY A NOSE OVER CRUZ RUBIO GAINS MOMENTUM AND CLINTON MAINTAINS LEAD OVER SANDERS PDF Emerson College Polling Society February 1 2016 Retrieved February 5 2016 FIRST TIMERS PUT TRUMP AHEAD IN IOWA GOP CAUCUS QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY POLL FINDS SANDERS NEEDS FIRST TIMERS TO TIE CLINTON IN DEM CAUCUS PDF Quinnipiac University Poll February 1 2016 Retrieved February 5 2016 Eller Donnelle Jacobs Jennifer January 30 2016 Clinton keeps slim edge over Sanders in latest Iowa Poll The Des Moines Register Retrieved February 5 2016 NBC News WSJ Marist Poll PDF MSNBC January 28 2016 Retrieved February 5 2016 Iowa Polling Results OAN Retrieved February 5 2016 IOWA CLINTON CLINGS TO CAUCUS LEAD PDF Monmouth University Poll January 28 2016 Retrieved February 5 2016 Iowa American Research Group Inc Retrieved February 5 2016 Sanders Clinton Close Race Frozen In Iowa Quinnipiac University Poll Finds Men Very Liberals Young Voters Back Sanders Quinnipiac University Retrieved January 27 2016 Clinton Cruz Lead Among Iowa Caucusgoers in WHO HD Iowa State University Poll WHO TV January 25 2016 Retrieved February 5 2016 Fox News Poll Sanders narrows gap in Iowa Fox News Retrieved February 5 2016 Salvanto Anthony Backus Fred De Pinto Jennifer Dutton Sarah January 24 2016 Poll Sanders edges Clinton in Iowa leads big in New Hampshire CBS News Retrieved January 24 2016 Dinan Conor January 21 2016 Emerson Poll Clinton Ahead Of Sanders In Iowa By 9 Points Talking Points Memo Retrieved January 22 2016 Iowa CNN ORC poll Full results cnn com January 21 2016 Retrieved January 22 2016 Iowa Democratic Caucus Poll Prepared for Monmouth College and KBUR AM PDF Retrieved January 22 2016 Loras College 2016 Clinton Maintains Lead New Loras College Poll Finds Loras edu December 6 2014 Retrieved January 23 2016 Iowa Democratic Presidential Caucus PDF Public Policy Polling Retrieved January 12 2016 Sanders Clinton Going Down to the Wire Iowa Poll Shows Bloomberg Retrieved January 14 2016 Iowa Democratic Presidential Caucus PDF American Research Group Retrieved January 11 2016 Sander Surges In Iowa Democratic Caucus Quinnipiac University Retrieved January 12 2016 Brown S Kathi January 2016 Likely Iowa Caucus Voters Attitudes toward Social Security AARP Research Retrieved February 5 2016 NBC News WSJ Marist Poll January 2016 Iowa Questionnaire PDF msnbcmedia msn com Retrieved January 10 2015 Gravis Iowa Caucus Republican and Democrat Public Opinion Poll Gravis Marketing December 23 2015 Retrieved January 22 2016 CBS News 2016 Battleground Tracker Iowa PDF Trump Edges Cruz in Iowa His Supporters Think Japanese Internment Was Good Clinton Still Well Ahead of Sanders In State Public Policy Polling Retrieved December 23 2015 Iowa IA Poll QU Poll December 15 2015 Retrieved December 23 2015 Fox News Poll Cruz Clinton lead in Iowa Fox News Retrieved December 23 2015 Loras College 2015 Clinton Remains with Strong Lead New Loras College Poll Finds Loras edu December 15 2015 Retrieved December 27 2015 Bloomberg Politics Des Moines Register Iowa Poll Selzer amp Company December 2015 Retrieved January 22 2016 a b Iowa Democratic Presidential Caucus realclearpolitics com Retrieved December 9 2015 Iowa IA Poll November 25 2015 Clinton Leads Iowa Dem Caucus Quinnipiac University Connecticut Quinnipiac edu November 25 2015 Retrieved December 27 2015 Election 2016 Hillary Clinton extends Iowa lead maintains SC lead narrows gap in NH November 23 2015 Iowa PDF CNN ORC November 6 2015 Retrieved January 22 2016 RCP IA poll PDF November 2 2015 Cruz rising in Iowa Clinton back out to dominant lead PDF November 2 2015 KBUR Dem poll PDF Iowa Democratic Caucus Poll October 2015 PDF Douglas Fulmer and Associates October 2015 Retrieved January 22 2016 Iowa Clinton has Huge Caucus Lead PDF Monmouth University Poll October 27 2015 Retrieved January 22 2016 CBS News 2016 Battleground Tracker Iowa PDF YouGov Retrieved January 22 2016 Iowa Poll Clinton up by 7 but gap tightens Des Moines Register October 22 2015 NBC News WSJ Marist Poll October 2015 Iowa Questionnaire Retrieved October 4 2015 Trump Continues To Lead in Iowa Clinton in Good Shape PDF Public Policy Polling September 22 2015 Retrieved January 22 2016 CBS News 2016 Battleground Tracker Iowa PDF YouGov Retrieved January 22 2016 Bernie Sanders Iowa poll Retrieved September 10 2015 NBC News Marist Poll September 2015 Iowa Questionnaire Retrieved September 6 2015 Clinton Leads but Sanders Gains Loras College Poll Finds loras edu Retrieved September 4 2015 Iowa Poll Clinton leads but Sanders draws near Des Moines Register August 29 2015 Despite email flap Clinton up in Iowa in Suffolk poll USA Today Retrieved August 26 2015 CNN ORC Iowa Poll PDF CNN Retrieved August 12 2015 Trump Still Leads in Iowa Fiorina on Fire Paul Tanking PDF Public Policy Polling Retrieved August 10 2015 Iowa Results PDF NBC News Marist Retrieved July 26 2015 HuffPo Iowa Dem Caucus PDF huffingtonpost com Retrieved July 22 2015 Quinnipiac poll PDF quinnipiac edu Retrieved July 9 2015 Parker Ashley February 1 2016 Martin O Malley to Drop Out After Finish in Iowa Vote The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 21 2016 a b Jacobs Ben February 5 2016 Iowa Democratic party altered precinct s caucus results during chaotic night The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved February 6 2016 Jacobs Jennifer February 5 2016 Iowa margin between Clinton Sanders shifts as errors found Des Moines Register The USA Today Network Retrieved February 5 2016 Jacobs Jennifer February 6 2016 Uproar could lead to revamping Democratic caucuses Des Moines Register The USA Today Network Retrieved February 7 2016 Jacobs Jennifer February 7 2016 Iowans claim instances when Sanders was shorted delegates Des Moines Register The USA Today Network Retrieved February 7 2016 Missing precinct scrambles to report Sanders won Des Moines Register Retrieved February 4 2016 Clayworth Jason Noble Jason February 2 2016 Iowa caucus coin flip count unknown The Des Moines Register Des Moines Register Retrieved February 3 2016 Montanaro Domenico February 2 2016 Coin Toss Fact Check No Coin Flips Did Not Win Iowa For Hillary Clinton NPR Archived from the original on February 3 2016 Retrieved February 3 2016 Montanaro Domenico Coin Toss Fact Check No Coin Flips Did Not Win Iowa For Hillary Clinton NPR org Retrieved February 3 2016 a b c Editorial Something smells in the Democratic Party Des Moines Register Retrieved February 4 2016 Hamburger Tom February 4 2016 Sanders campaign says it was denied paper records of Iowa caucus vote The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved February 5 2016 Wagner John February 2 2016 Sanders campaign reviewing Iowa caucus totals says actual result may never be known The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved February 2 2016 Jacobs Ben February 5 2016 Iowa Democratic party altered precinct s caucus results during chaotic night The Guardian Retrieved February 6 2016 Barbaro Michael February 2 2016 Fury Shakes the Iowa Caucuses Boosting Ted Cruz While Slowing Hillary Clinton The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 2 2017 2016 Election Center Presidential Primaries and Caucuses 2016 Election Center CNNPolitics com CNN Retrieved February 2 2017 Luhby Tami Henderson Nia Malika February 3 2016 Hillary Clinton wins Iowa caucuses CNN Retrieved February 2 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2016 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses amp oldid 1167424160, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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