Matt Towery's Inside
The Numbers:
Iowa Caucus: The Orange Bowl Effect
By Matthew Towery
(11/15/07) It's a pollster's worst nightmare. This year's Republican
and Democratic Iowa caucuses have been forced to take place so early
that not only will the Jan. 3 caucuses conclude the Christmas/New
Year's holiday season, but they will also happen on the same day
that one of the top Bowl Championship Series college football games
airs on national TV.
Instead of the usual screening question of, "Are you likely
to vote?" pollsters and politicians may be asking, "Are
you likely to be in town?" or, "Given the choice, do you
plan to go out in the freezing cold to the local community center
and choose between candidates, or would you rather stay inside your
warm house and watch the Orange Bowl on TV?"
Wow, what a mess.
This is why the polling of the Iowa caucuses is of little importance
so far. Although it's still relevant for serious discussion, even
hardcore political observers like Iowa talk-radio pundit Republican
Jamie Johnson see their state's two caucuses as more of "a
winnowing out" of weaker candidates than a crowning of a sure-thing
nominee.
Of course, Iowa hasn't always been the dead-on indicator of eventual
presidential nominees anyway. In fact, until the years of the Bush-Clinton
dynasties, Iowa often proved to be a poor predictor.
Many forget that Iowa rejected Ronald Reagan in 1980, and instead
chose George H.W. Bush. In 1988, the state GOP chose Bob Dole over
the very same Bush who went on the win the presidency. And in 1996,
eventual nominee Bob Dole came close to being knocked off in Iowa
by Pat Buchanan.
It hasn't been much easier for past Democratic nominees in Iowa.
Consider that Bill Clinton got just 3 percent of the vote in the
1992 Iowa caucus before going on to win the presidential election
later that year. Four years before that, the Democrat's eventual
nominee, Mike Dukakis, came in third place in Iowa.
Much of the national media are trying to convince us that the Iowa
caucuses, because they're being held even earlier than usual this
year, will be more important than ever in determining the nominees
of the respective parties. That's probably the exact reverse of
the real situation.
Iowa has been marginalized by being forced into the position of
being neither a make nor a break, but more likely a bit of a potential
flake. Florida's decision to move its huge primary up to Jan. 29
from March has inaugurated a march of other key states to move up
their own primaries, too.
As a result, if you look at politics not as a Beltway groupie, but
as just plain folks like us, this question suddenly looms: Who in
their right mind will be around in the middle of the week after
New Year's, and be willing to brave the elements, plus skip watching
on TV one of the nation's top sporting events, all in order to vote
in a caucus?
On the Republican side, conventional wisdom is that only the most
devoted Iowans will be able to resist the comforts of home and a
potentially great Bowl game. Among those devoted could be many "religious
right" voters, as they're commonly called; they might be the
most inclined to play politics instead of watching pigskin. If so,
Mike Huckabee, who is rising in the polls, could get enough of a
bump to be a dark-horse challenger to Iowa frontrunner Mitt Romney.
But I'm not convinced the conventional wisdom is truly wise here.
It could just as well be that the GOP's rank-and-file establishment
-- fiscal and foreign policy conservatives, let's say -- might be
the ones who just say no to the Orange Bowl.
The truth is that we just don't know because there's no exact precedent
to this year's situation.
On the Democratic side, things become even more complicated. Democratic
candidates must receive at least 15 percent of the vote at an individual
caucus to remain in contention. If they don't, their supporters
have to move physically to a different side of the room and then
choose from one of the remaining candidates.
Insiders tell us that among those currently polling at less than
15 percent, Bill Richardson's supporters are more likely to go to
Hillary Clinton, while Joe Biden's base leans more toward Barack
Obama. To complicate things further, former Sen. John Edwards' support
comes in great part from union members, a heavily male -- and football-loving
-- crowd.
In other words, thanks to the new timing of the Iowa caucuses and
their collision with the Orange Bowl, both parties' caucuses might
experience a political Fruit-Basket-Turnover. And that means that
some more populated states, especially South Carolina and Florida,
will likely play a greater role in determining who will be the Republican
and Democratic frontrunners heading into the closest thing America
has to a national presidential primary, Feb. 5's "Tsunami Tuesday."
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Matt Towery served as the chairman of former Speaker Newt Gingrich's
political organization from 1992 until Gingrich left Congress. He
is a former Georgia state representative, the author of several
books and currently heads the polling and political information
firm InsiderAdvantage. To find out more about Matthew Towery and
read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists,
visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2007 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
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