Well, The Donald has done it. As everyone said he would. Amid the blizzards of Iowa, with a windchill factor taking the temperature down to -40 degrees (the point where Celsius and Fahrenheit meet), the quintessential American has scored more than 50% of the vote in the Iowa caucus, the very wobbly first contest in the presidential campaign. Trump’s pure majority — he took just over 50% — not only dwarfs that of the other contenders, with Ron DeSantis just above 20%, narrowly pipping out Nikki Haley just under it, but it also blows the whole contest itself out of the water. It demonstrates the degree to which American society is changing beneath its political institutions, and the way in which that is changing politics substantially.
Trump won his stonking victory without ever visiting Iowa, save for a couple of rallies at the end. This is not merely unprecedented, it is the very antithesis of what the caucuses are meant to be about. Indeed, at their core, caucus-based primaries — they have largely disappeared now — aren’t meant to be about personalities at all. Back in the day, decades ago, they didn’t even select candidates; they were simply a guide to regional conventions as to which delegates they preferred to send to the state party convention to choose a party presidential candidate. But in 1972, the caucuses moved to the start of the electoral calendar, and in 1976, Jimmy Carter and his team used them as an ambush of the New Hampshire primary a couple of weeks after. Team Carter reasoned that a midwest farm state would have more sympathy for a Southern peanut farmer than “North Massachusetts”, and that the small scale would advantage the post-60s, post-Watergate personal politics of authenticity he was developing. When he aced a win that year, it was the first many Iowans — the state is pronounced without consonant sounds, basically Owwww — had heard of the thing.
Carter’s victory set off a half-century of bizarre politicking, in which a man or woman who might, in a year’s time, have access to a species-annihilating arsenal and the legal authority to use it, would do rounds of high school gyms, diners, church halls and living rooms to try and convince Duane and Jeannette that action on a bypass for Route 80 outside of Davenport was essential, and Iran would be nuked if necessary. Oh, and rapeseed subsidies, for ethanol production. The Iowa caucus has had such a distorting effect on US agricultural policy that I presume someone must have done a study of it. Billions must have been spent on the wrong crops, overproduction of crops, stymying of modernisation, and the like, all to keep the amber grain waving.
Trump showed that that’s all over — or at least unnecessary for a candidate like him. The Republican Party of Iowa is one of the most right-wing in the nation — freedom-loving in everything but ethanol subsidies, for which they’re Communists. At the conservative CPAC conference, I once saw a banner of the Iowa party affirming “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness (right to property)”, just helping Thomas Jefferson along with the final wording.
But their folksy pretence that this supercharged military financial behemoth of a nation is really a bunch of homesteaders usually has them hold back endorsement until candidates have done the living room rounds, consuming dozens of the flavourless casseroles known simply as “hot dish”. A favourite schtick, which DeSantis took on this time, is to visit all 99 counties in this small square state. Since the counties are all smaller, evenly spaced squares themselves, some of them consist of nothing more than a roadhouse, or a chain store downhome restaurant: Cracker Barrel, Country Kitchen, Beelzebub’s Corn-Poppin’ Spogies, etc. Glad-hand three good ol’ boys, tickle a dog’s neck, affirm the need for ethanol subsidies and get back on the road, you can do four in a day. It “worked” for DeSantis. Widely seen as on the way out, and openly implored by many to withdraw so that anti-Trump forces can consolidate behind Nikki Haley, his 2% margin over her might have been gained in those empty surveyances of land. Keeping him in the race, to be a hapless fall guy against Trump for a few more contests.
That Trump has now stormed Iowa suggests both that a whole tranche of Republicans who cared about this process have now departed — and one’s cynicism is dispelled by attending such; like New England town hall meetings, it is, or was, a survival of a more genuine democratic spirit than Australia was gifted with — and that the wider culture and society is simply moving on from the centrality of community and face-to-face meetings altogether.
It would be unwise to overstate that the Iowa victory generalises to the wider population. The Republican Party is now a cult. Any structural symmetry between itself and the Democratic Party — a sprawling organisation encompassing what would be six parties anywhere else — has gone. But that shift itself hides an asymmetry, as many of the ranks of the group polling calls “independents” are really Republicans no longer registered as such (in that bizarre US process, where you register your party affiliation with the government). Those, and genuine swinging voter independents are really two groups. Many Republican independents will be persuaded to get their ass to the polls and vote for The Donald, come November.
Worryingly for the Democrats, so too may many genuine independents. Those who voted for Trump in 2016, and not in 2020, may choose him again, like a sick patient repeatedly turning a pillow to get the cool side. Team Biden has got a lot of the politics of the last four years wrong, and the stuff they’ve got right has been arch cynicism. They’ve failed to sell the stimulus-creating programmes they passed through (something Team Albo is failing at too), thinking these largely hidden processes would sell themselves. They should have been at every shovel-ready event, development lots plastered with vast hoardings of Joe Biden etc. They should have talked a lot less about renewables, which the progressives love, but which make the non-college educated feel alienated and superseded. They should have been less “tough for Israel” and a lot tougher, from the left, on illegal immigration. The numbers coming across the Mexican-US border — really the border of the global North and South — are now vast. Trump lost votes in ’20 because he never really built that wall, merely talked about it. He may win them back in ’24 because he at least talks about it.
Well, it’s on to New Hampshire next week, where Trump’s lead is slightly less commanding than in Iowa, but still solid. Various Republican machine mainstreamers are talking up Haley’s chance of running him to a draw and then overcoming him in the next primary in her home state of South Carolina. She would have to do that and then carry it through for months. It seems impossible, but never say never in American politics. Like all the candidates hanging in, they are really working on Plan B: that Trump will die in the next six months, his constitution undermined by a lifelong diet of fast food and Diet Coke. Would that indicate that providence is still at work in the doings of the Republic? Whatever, it would be, as the next chapter in this amazing story, quintessentially American. Owwwwww.
Will The Donald face any true opposition in securing the Republican presidential candidacy? Or will it be Trump all the way in 2024? Let us know your thoughts by writing to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name to be considered for publication. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity.
How is it possible for anyone to seriously consider Trump an actual human being, let alone a viable candidate for leadership of anything? He has destroyed pretty much everything he gets his paws on and his only interest in his lousy little life is himself. How can that not be obvious to anyone with even one functioning brain cell?
The US is doomed.
Unlike Killary and the ragged, tattered sockpuppet Biden, the Drumpfster started no new wars and arranged the end of the Afghan fiasco.
Ah no Trump didn’t arrange the end of the Afghan fiasco, that was the Afghans themselves. Trump was in power for four years and did nothing to end the war. He did however increase the national debt of the federal government by giving corporations a tax break. Did nothing about fair wages and couldn’t even build “the wall”. Did create Operation Warp Speed to produce the Covid 19 vaccine, ‘though the successful producers Pfizer and BioNTech didn’t need the money and produced their vaccine without any government support. So like Ronald Reagan before him he left America with an increasing debt.
Hillary started a war? How did she do that when she was never president?
Killary, with her pal Victoria Nuland (husband, the certifiably crazy Robert Kagan), was instrumental in the Maidan coup in preparation for the Ukraine to be the US proxy in a war against Russia.
As NY Senator she was a strident supporter of the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003 and subsequent occupation and counter-insurgency war.
From Afghanistan to Western Sahara, she has advocated for military solutions to complex political problems, backed authoritarian allies and occupying armies, dismissed war crimes, and opposed political involvement by the United Nations and its agencies.
She was the only Democratic U.S. senator who made the false claim that Saddam Hussein had “given aid, comfort, and sanctuary” to Al-Qaeda, an accusation that even many fervent supporters of the invasion recognized as ludicrous.
As Obama’s Secretary of State she promised to turn Iran into an ashtray over its non existent nuclear program and backed a bold escalation of the Afghanistan war.
She pressed Obama to arm the Syrian rebels, and later endorsed airstrikes against the Assad regime, backed intervention in Libya – who can forget her cackling “We cam, we saw, he died” over Gaddafi, and Obama’s expansion of lethal drone strikes.
She oversaw the civil war and regional proxy war in Syria, fanning conflict’s massive refugee crisis; endorsed & supported Saudi attacks in Yemen and worsening the political fragility in Iraq, Afghanistan and the Israel-Palestine conflict.
After stepping down as State Department in early 2013 to prepare her Presidential campaign, she argued Obama’s Middle East policies had not been aggressive enough despite the bombing of no less than seven countries in the greater region.
IOW, a real pacifist sweetie pie.
She was Secretary of State when Libya was rendered dysfunctional. She supported the narcotraficante coup regime in Honduras after Mel Zelaya was ‘taken out’ (in his pyjamas), she encouraged Israel in the behaviours that have led to the current international crisis. What more can one say? Even her own people labelled her a ‘hawk’.
More vulture than hawk.
Not just the US. Countries in Europe voting for facist parties, the fact that Australia voted for the Morrison government in his first term. Many voters don’t necessarily understand which poligical party is in their best interests (I suspect if they did there would be more votes for the Greens); they like hate and slogans.
About 74 million people voted for Trump in 2020. He says bigly more, obviously. That’s near enough three times the population of Aus. Understanding then defeating what’s going on really needs more than bafflement and insult.
What’s going on is privilege.
This is the push back against 40 years of social progress and economic decline.
What that means is we need to perhaps hold off on the social progress until we get the economics back on line.
That means less culture wars and more jobs.
The economic benefits of social progress are constantly sabotaged by vested interests. It is that simple. One only has to look at the vested interests of oil that led to the development of a mass produced car that ran on petrol rather than electricity (they were around at the time). There are examples in the Hollywood movie industry where superior film and sound technologies were repressed (hence the window of opportunity in the European ‘new wave’ movies).
You need to be careful about associating voting for Trump with personal approval.
Most people would be voting for the Republicans, or against the Democrats.
Many would have voted for Trump despite detesting him because they saw the alternative (Democrats/Biden/Clinton) as worse.
This already happens in Australia despite preferences, and the electoral system of the US (ie: no preferences) all but requires it.
Because of what he represents.
He represents absolute privilege and people who vote for him think that they too will experience the same privilege.
And they will – if they’re already rich.
He represents authoritarianism, more than anything. And the US is chock full of authoritarian followers. You know, the kind who made the holocaust happen, by following that one crazy guy with the moustache.
Check it out: theauthoritarians.org
Will he divest himself of all his business interests and reveal his tax returns if he succeeds?
Hey Goatgirl, don’t know if you’ll bother coming back to see this, but the answer to your frustration and chagrin is in what might be termed American chuzpah. Americans (and I obviously mean the North American variety) have an extreme love of the self-confidence that they feel comes with wealth. The more wealth an individual has – or can successfully project she has – the more chutzpah, and the more many others accept and get carried along. It’s a confidence trick, aka con-man sort of mentality, writ large from New York to LA, from Chicago and Minneapolis in the north to Texas in the south. A large section of their population – evidently about a half of them – buy into this way of life. It’s a social, emotional and political reality which with the present globalised world, we all need to somehow come to terms with. Hey, I’m not being paternalistic there, simply calling a spade a spade. I am seeking reality and, to tell the truth, I am baffled and frustrated as you are, by turns. Still. Too, there are many in Amercian who don’t live for wealth and chutzpah. These are those who perhaps have a greater historical sense, and don’t get all-caught-up in immediacy and the emotional buzz which ones like Donald Trump customarily try to excite. IN the States there remains an intelligent, considered and what can be terms a certain platonic engagement with life. There is light amid the darkening Trump, his rallies and those herds of moo-ing supporters would otherwise have us believe.
The United States is the first great nation or empire in history to have become decadent without ever having achieved maturity.
Thing is, if you look at it from the evangelical MAGA Trump supporters’ point of view, Trump DID deliver during his term as president, at least on the two issues most important to them. First, he got them a conservative, theocratically-oriented majority in the Supreme Court, which will deliver to the fundamentalist agenda for decades to come. Second (and as a follow-on from the first) he got Roe vs Wade overturned. In other words, he did (from their perspective) God’s work. Or, perhaps more accurately and more worryingly, God used Trump as a tool to enact the Almighty’s righteousness. That’s why none of them are worried about Trump’s legal battles or any risk of incarceration, or any of his personal failings. They don’t care about Trump’s personality. That is irrelevant, because God is using Trump as His instrument to bring about His will. And, I suppose, the Almighty will keep Trump alive until He has finished using him, which means that even his age isn’t an issue.
None of the other candidates shine so brightly with God’s glory. Which means that they are all sunk. And that there’s a very, very real chance that Trump will be America’s next president. Even if he has to run the country from a jail cell.
Think about that, and tremble with fear.
Yeah, this is a huge factor. Much crazy
Which begs the question, what is lacking in a people who constantly seek a ‘higher power’ to make their decisions for them? an analogous situation (that I don’t agree with 100%) is what a Chinese emigrant remarked about Mao Tse Tung’s ‘cultural revolution’ “I don’t understand how one man got two billion people act like idiots”. It is not a correct analogy, but near enough. Trump only got 74 million to maintain an idiotic zone of cognitive dissonance. It results from a failure in the US education system.
“So, Donald Trump, who is basically running as an incumbent, got the votes of 51% of 108,000 people who voted in the Iowa Caucus, which is just 14.4% of the state’s 752,000 registered Republicans, and this is supposedly why he’ll easily win the general election?”
1. How many votes did 2nd place get? 2. Will the 49% stay home in November?
2nd place was Trump who got 56,000 votes. First place was “did not vote” which got 600,000.
Refer question 2 then.
Winners of Iowa caucus generally do not prevail in primaries either; this article like the US RW MSM, seems to be wishing or hoping for a Trump win to ‘own the libtards’?
I doubt that was Guy’s purpose in writing the article.
People hoping for a Haley win in the presidential race should be careful what they wish for. See the excellent piece in Jacobin on her record as Governor of South Carolina:
The Long, Disastrous Career of Nikki Haley (jacobin.com)
It makes sense for her to stay in the race from her point of view, as Trump could still be incapacitated or implode in some way between now and November.