The Daily - Trump’s Domination and the Battle for No. 2 in Iowa

Episode Date: January 16, 2024

At the Iowa Republican caucuses on Monday night, Donald J. Trump secured a runaway victory. The only real drama was the fight for second place.Reid Epstein, who covers politics for The Times, takes us... inside one of the caucuses, and Shane Goldmacher, a national political reporter, walks us through the final results.Guest: Reid J. Epstein, a politics correspondent for The New York Times, andShane Goldmacher, a national political reporter for The New York Times.Background reading: A letdown for Ron DeSantis: His campaign is running low on cash and faces tough tests ahead.Why coming in second can be a win in early-state contests.Here are five takeaways from Trump’s crushing victory.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro. This is The Daily. On Monday night, the 2024 presidential race officially began with the Iowa caucuses, where the real drama was the fight for second place. Today, Reid Epstein takes us inside one of the caucuses, and Shane Goldmacher walks us through the final results. It's Tuesday, January 16th.
Starting point is 00:00:36 Ladies and gentlemen, Reid Epstein. Hello, Michael. Nice to see you. Mr. Caucus himself. Is that what I'm being called? That's what I saw. That's what I saw on the internet. So, Reid, I want to set the scene for our listeners. It's 4.35 p.m. here in Des Moines, and in about two and a half hours,
Starting point is 00:01:00 Republicans across Iowa are going to caucus, and we are going to join them. But before we do that, we want you to describe what that's actually going to look like, because the last time we did this, and we did going to join them. But before we do that, we want you to describe what that's actually going to look like. Because the last time we did this, and we did it with you four years ago, we focused on the Democratic caucus because it was a competitive caucus. Donald Trump was the president at the time, so the Republican caucus wasn't really the source of much interest. That's reversed this time around. We are most interested in the Republican caucus. So tell us what the Republican caucus is actually going to look like. So four years ago, when we went to a Democratic caucus, we went to a high school gym,
Starting point is 00:01:33 and we watched as the supporters for each candidates grouped themselves in different parts of the gymnasium. And the candidates that didn't have enough people in their group, those people were released to go support someone else. And so there was a lot of jostling and persuasion and arm twisting. Physical wooing in that room. There was yelling and speeches from across the room. We're not going to see any of that kind of stuff tonight. The Republican caucus is much simpler.
Starting point is 00:02:04 They will come to these spaces. The one that we're going to go to is in a high school gym. And they will hear speeches from representatives of the different candidates. And then they'll mark on a piece of paper that they were handed when they came in which candidate they support. And those pieces of paper will go in a box. And then at the end of the evening, the people who are running the precinct will take all the paper and put them out on the table. And anybody who's there who wants to watch the counting, we can watch. So just in summary, the Republican caucus, it's less dramatic, it's less physical than the Democratic one. It's a little bit more resembling a traditional vote,
Starting point is 00:02:42 but still very unique with an Iowa twist, because it's not just you going into a private booth and voting. That's right. Okay. Talk to us before we head out about where the drama, where the suspense really is tonight, and where it is not. Well, where it is not is who's going to finish first. Everybody in Iowa, all the polls, have landed on the position that Donald Trump is going to win the Iowa caucuses tonight. And what everyone is looking for is who finishes second. Is it Nikki Haley, who has made a late charge in Iowa? Or will it be
Starting point is 00:03:16 Ron DeSantis, who for months has staked his entire campaign on doing well in Iowa? And Reid, we gave you the assignment to pick a caucus location for us to go to tonight. And I'm guessing that you picked a place that is central to the who comes into second place question. All right, we're going to go to a caucus at Van Meter High School in Van Meter, Iowa. It's a suburb about a half hour west of downtown Des Moines. And it's a place that's on the edge of rural Iowa, where Donald Trump has run very strong, but also is in commuting distance of Des Moines and should have a lot of professional class voters who are the type of people that Ron DeSantis and Nikki Haley have been targeting. So Van Meter is the kind of suburb where voters are interested, we think, in a Trump alternative,
Starting point is 00:04:04 therefore a good place to assess this question of Haley versus DeSantis. If they're not interested in a Trump alternative in a place like this, then those two are in real big trouble. Okay, so we should head off to Van Meter. Are you going to drive? I'm going to drive.
Starting point is 00:04:19 Yeah, you don't even, do you have a rental car? I do, but I want you to drive. You're more practiced in the snow. Yeah, I'm very happy to drive. I'm very excited to have you be our guide. Let's go. I'm looking at my phone. It says minus two.
Starting point is 00:04:44 It says that it's minus two degrees out and that it feels like minus 21. I mean, a lot has been made of how cold it is and that it is all merited. I think the cold has not been underhyped. I think the thing they don't talk about enough is the mechanics of the cold. And the way I experience it is that basically the mucus in your nose freezes. I wanted to say that in the Times this week that it's so cold that the boogcus in your nose freezes. I wanted to say that in the Times this week that it's so cold that the boogers in your nose freeze, and I was told that standards would not approve,
Starting point is 00:05:09 so maybe we can get that on the daily. It's true. Here we go. Turn the heated seats up. Do you have the directions? Directions are in. Okay. You want me to turn some music on?
Starting point is 00:05:26 Do you remember four years ago we listened to One Day More from Les Mis and we had a big sing-along? But that was really about the accumulation of many, many months of covering the Iowa caucuses. One day more. I think this year a Mountain Goat song is probably a little more appropriate. Why isn't the right song for the moment? You'll hear it when you hear the lyrics. Why'd you turn it down? I didn't! That's what happens with the directions.
Starting point is 00:05:52 Well, turn the directions off then. I'm trying to hear the music. I'm gonna make it through this year if it kills me. That's right. Through this year if it kills me. Snow clap? I get it. I get it now. I am not making it through this year if it kills me.
Starting point is 00:06:13 Well done. I do prefer Taylor Swift. We can play her next. Good song. Really good song. We're pulling into the school. You park right here. Park right here. This one is icy! Alright, let's go. We're walking in. So we just described this gymnasium that we have now entered.
Starting point is 00:06:56 So it looks like, you know, a million other high school gymnasiums. On one end is the basketball scoreboard. On the other end is the track and field records for the high school. And in terms of the caucus, right, like this place has been a little bit remade for voting tonight. Right, there's a handful of tables set up. There's a table where the votes will be counted. They have some grocery bags to receive the votes in, to receive the ballots. One of them in black magic marker has the word ballots written on it. And people are trickling in.
Starting point is 00:07:25 Go ahead and sign right there for me, sir. Should we go talk to some voters? Sure. What is your caucus plan tonight? I really think that DeSantis can beat Joe Biden. I just, I like everything about him. I'm asking for people to consider my candidate tonight, former ambassador and future Madam President Nikki Haley. It would be hard for me to consider Nikki Haley or Rhonda Sanis when they're so low in the polls.
Starting point is 00:07:57 Who are you going to talk to? Probably Trump, because Trump's going to win anyway. I agree with President Trump, yeah. That's who I'm here for, too. Donald Trump. I'm real happy with how the country used to be, and I think he's the strongest guy. Not a Nicki fan.
Starting point is 00:08:14 I do like Ron DeSantis a lot. Just don't feel like he can win. Anybody but Trump. Sorry. I haven't made up my mind yet. All right, well, we're going to start caucusing apparently. Thank you. All right, I think we're ready to get started here. We'll call up our first candidate speaker. Looks like maybe Ron DeSantis. Hello, my name is Jackie Abram,
Starting point is 00:08:41 and I am caucusing for Ron DeSantis. Whether I like it or not, chaos follows Donald Trump. He will spend the next nine months in and out of court, and he will spend millions on legal fees. Ron can and will get the job done. I want a president who can bring people together, not tear them apart. I want someone that people will follow. I want someone that wants to fight for the job, shows up for the debates, right? Defends their record.
Starting point is 00:09:08 Nikki has done that time and time again. Thank you. My name is Joel Akers. I am here to caucus for you. Can you just explain what just happened? So while the Speaker was urging caucus goers here to back Nikki Haley, the AP called the race for Donald Trump the earliest it's ever called an Iowa caucus race, meaning the race is over in this room before it's even begun. Trump winning was really not a surprise.
Starting point is 00:09:36 It's just extremely early, and the AP's got enough information to call it. Amazing. But many farmers have not agreed. that enough information for their land. Amazing. But many farmers have not agreed. Okay, so at this point, please go ahead and do your votes. It's 7.52. People are taking their ballots, folding them up. People are now placing their ballots in that paper bag, one by one by one by one. I'm not sure what it was. You didn't see them go like that? I thought I did.
Starting point is 00:10:06 No cucumbers or candles. Tell us what you're doing. We are sorting the ballots, and then we will count them. Scientifically dumped out the paper bag, and now we're sorting them by name. Once we get them sorted by name and make sure the ballots are correct, you know, not two names on them, then we'll count them up, then we'll double count them, and then we'll have the totals. So I'm saying, look, this is a DeSantis pile,
Starting point is 00:10:30 that's a Trump pile, that's a Haley pile, and that's the not-yet-counted pile. Right in the middle, yeah. Counting... Got it. Thank you. Just sit around DeSantis. DeSantis?
Starting point is 00:10:42 That was close. I'll take it. It's a strong pile. Coming in third place with 64 votes was Nikki Haley. Coming in second place with 79 votes was Ron DeSantis. Coming in first place with 85 votes was Donald Trump. So Donald Trump won the Van Meter spot or site caucus tonight. So thank you very much for everybody. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:23 So Trump won here, but not by that much. Trump won here. It looks like he got a little over a third of the vote. Which may mean something. We'll get a better sense of really how this fits into the rest of the Iowa results in a couple hours when we have numbers from across the state. Right. All right, so... Ready to go home?
Starting point is 00:11:49 I think we're ready to go back and see what happened across the state. Let's go back to the hotel. We'll be right back. Hey, Shane. Hello. Come on in. We have acquired a conference room for you. This is fantastic.
Starting point is 00:12:22 Our own private. Another windowless room to spend my time. Another windowless room. But this one to talk about results. Yeah. You ready? I'm ready. Okay, we should just establish where we are in the night. It is 11.15 p.m. local time, 12.15 a.m. back in New York.
Starting point is 00:12:40 And we now have all the results of the caucuses across the state. So talk us through the final numbers. First of all, I'm very pleased that it is only 11.15 local time. This is earlier than we expected a few hours ago. And I think the reason we are here so early relatively is just because the results are pretty clear,
Starting point is 00:13:02 which is that Donald Trump, he has 51% of the vote right now. Ron DeSantis is in a very distant second at 21%. And Nikki Haley is in third place at 19%. And in fact, since then I began the person in fourth, Vivek Ramaswamy, who was under 8% dropped out and immediately endorsed Donald Trump. I think that 50% almost undercounts the strength that Donald Trump is showing tonight. He's winning in virtually every county. There's one county at the moment that he's losing by a single vote. That means he's winning in cities. It means he's winning in suburbs. It means he's winning in rural areas.
Starting point is 00:13:41 There is no place in the state of Iowa where he lost eight years ago that he's losing tonight. And so this very much looks like the first step toward a potential re-nomination for Donald Trump. There's not a lot of bright spots here for any of the campaigns if they want to actually beat him. I want to for a second talk about the call that was made in this race for Trump. It wasn't a surprise. What was a surprise was when the call was made. The call was made startlingly early. All of us in this room from The Daily were at a caucus where the call came before a single ballot had been cast.
Starting point is 00:14:22 And I believe that was the case in many parts of Iowa. What should we make of that? You know, it's because this is a caucus and not a traditional election. I think the Associated Press made the decision to call it before all the ballots were cast. Now, normally in an election, they wait until the polls are closed. Now, very much the polls were not closed here in Iowa. And after that happened, one of the first messages I got was from Ron DeSantis' communications team, who said, election interference. And even in his speech later tonight, Ron DeSantis said,
Starting point is 00:14:54 you know, they're through the kitchen sink at us here, even calling this race before our voters had a chance to cast their ballots. What specifically was so upsetting to them about this? I think they were upset that this is the state where he's banked his entire candidacy, that they have rallied people to the polls, they've got them out in sub-freezing conditions to show up at these caucus sites. And again, this is not a regular election. You got to stay. You got to listen to speeches in some cases. And then you have to go and cast your ballot. So people could get discouraged, right? They might be there, but they said, hey, this has already been called by CNN or AP or the
Starting point is 00:15:31 New York Times. I don't want to sit here and wait and go through this process. I'm going to go home. And so I think there are real concerns about that. Right. And do the campaigns have a point here? I mean, I think that they do have a point that it's a concern. You know, I was certainly among those who were surprised, right?
Starting point is 00:15:47 I was getting ready for a later in the evening call and the networks and AP in very quick succession called the race. Right, right. Well, we're not here to debate the media ethics of it, but I think we can both admit that it was strange. It might not have affected any of the outcome, any of the voting. There's no evidence, in fact, that it did, but it was strange. It might not have affected any of the outcome, any of the voting. There's no evidence, in fact, that it did, but it was unusual. So regardless of when this call was made, Trump, as you said, won authoritatively, won decisively, won very, very early here.
Starting point is 00:16:18 Pick your adverb. Pick your adverb. And we have talked a lot about how, because of his dominance in this race, this was really, in Iowa Iowa a battle for second place. But I think it's worth lingering on the nature of Trump's dominance and on the reality, Shane, that there was nothing inevitable about him winning so soundly here, right? I mean, or really winning at all. all. And you're thinking back four years to a candidate who lost the 2020 election, triggered a riot at the U.S. Capitol, was twice impeached, and was seen as one of the most damaged, maybe the most damaged figure in the history of American politics. So what does the scale of his victory here tell us? I mean, I really do think it's a pretty remarkable resurrection. And I really
Starting point is 00:17:04 think it's important to go back and think about where were we three years ago when January 6th happened and when he was impeached and not just by Democrats, but by the most people to ever cross party lines to impeach somebody. the Senate by Senate Republicans, and that allowed him to run again. And really, since then, he's been building power for this moment, acting like a party boss, even getting the Republican National Committee to change some of the rules. To make it easier for him to win these states, right? We've talked about this. To make it easier for him to win the coming states, to ultimately become the nominee. And even the fact that it's so cold right now was expected in a lot of ways to work against him. When we were talking to the campaigns in recent days, they thought, really cold, less people will turn out. And for months, the Trump people and others have said, the bigger the turnout, the better it is for Donald Trump. Right now, we're looking at something like 110,000 people are going to have voted.
Starting point is 00:17:59 A low turnout. A very low turnout. They were talking about 220, 215, 200,000. So you're talking about the electorate was what they thought was going to be unfavorable to him. And he's still winning running away. Right, because a low turnout Iowa caucus still turned out to be a landslide victory for Trump. It really raises the question, is there any kind of turnout right now that isn't a landslide for Donald Trump? Talk to us just for a little bit about not just the geography of his victory. You already mentioned that he won basically almost every county in the state, but about the demographics of it and what that reveals about him and his opponents in this race.
Starting point is 00:18:38 So the demographic data is a little bit less clear than just the vote totals. But what they show is a similar story, which is that Donald Trump was winning. He was winning among men. He was winning among women. He was winning among older people. He was doing well among middle-aged people. He was doing the strongest among voters who didn't attend college, which is not a surprise. Not a big surprise because we know that non-college-educated voters have long been a part of Trump's base. Yes. But he was winning a pretty big share of college-educated Republicans, too.
Starting point is 00:19:09 There's really not places where he's losing. Now, even his weakest parts demographically of the Republican Party, he's basically tied with his opponents where he's weakest. And so the challenge has been for Nikki Haley, yes, you have performed more strongly in highly educated suburban areas. And those areas, you're fighting Donald Trump to like a draw, right? And then you go out to the most rural areas, the places where maybe the most conservative parts of the state, the Northwest, and dominated by Donald Trump, right? Ron DeSantis, Nikki Haley, they're not close to him in those areas. And so if this is what the map looks like here, what's it going to
Starting point is 00:19:44 look like everywhere else? Well, Shane, to that point, let's turn to DeSantis and to this competition for second place. Because it's kind of hard to know what to make of a second place DeSantis finish that is so distant from Trump's finish. And that also is like second place by a hair, right? Two percentage points. So what do we make of it? I mean, I think the problem for him is that it really doesn't resolve the question of second place. You have to remember that this is a state that he predicted he could win in. Win outright. Win outright. Be Trump. He is the most organized campaign in Iowa. He spent
Starting point is 00:20:21 the most time here. And he's yet getting less than half the vote that Donald Trump has gotten. And so where does it leave his candidacy? It leaves him ahead of Nikki Haley, but so far behind Donald Trump that it is hard to see where he goes next. The next state in the calendar is New Hampshire, and it's been the early state he's polled most weekly in. And so I think a notable decision, he is flying tonight, not directly to New Hampshire, but directly to South Carolina, which is actually Nikki Haley's home state. Which is not voting until... A month from now, which is a long ways away. And then he's going to go up to New Hampshire. So,
Starting point is 00:20:57 he's not giving up on New Hampshire, but he's giving a pretty clear symbol that he's not planning on going anywhere. Right. And is stuck in a kind of muddled battle for second place with Nikki Haley, who came in a close third. And in a lot of ways, her experience, right, Shane, has been the exact opposite of DeSantis when we think about trajectory. He enters the race with huge expectations all the way back to a year ago. We've talked to you about this a lot. Somebody who would be, lots of people thought, the real
Starting point is 00:21:31 viable challenger to Trump, which hasn't really happened. Haley entered this race as somebody around which there were not a lot of expectations. She pulled in the single digits for months and months. So whereas DeSantis' experience culminating here is one of disappointment, is it right to see Haley's performance, even though it was a third place one, as something of a success? You know, I think it's a disappointment because of where she was recently, which is the last poll, the poll that people watch most closely. It's called the Iowa poll, and it showed her in second place. And so she didn't achieve that metric. And more importantly, by falling behind Ron DeSantis, she lost the argument that she wanted to make that he should get out of the race.
Starting point is 00:22:17 She's trying to frame this up as it's her versus Trump. And Ron DeSantis is like, you know, I finished ahead of you here. Like, you can't quite push me out of the race yet. And so is there any way in which she's correct knowing what's about to happen in the next couple of states? You know, I think the biggest winner here, you know, where we started, it's Trump, right? You continue to have this fight for second place. His goal is a divided Republican Party because if there's one weak spot for him in the results from Iowa, it's that while he won overwhelmingly compared to where his rivals were, he had about half the vote, which means about half the voters could conceivably have voted for somebody else if they all consolidated behind one person. Right. The math is really clear in this race, which is you just need one opponent.
Starting point is 00:23:10 That if you have two serious opponents running against him, there's virtually no chance of beating him for the nomination. And what the results tonight mean is that there's still going to be two. And that's why Nikki Haley's third place finish is a disappointment for her. She's close to Ron DeSantis. This is in some ways a decent showing for her. But she had a chance here, if she vaulted far ahead of him, to push him out of the race entirely. But right now, this split result is basically exactly what the Trump campaign would have hoped for in the last few days. Right. In that sense, it feels like this was a double victory in Iowa for Donald Trump. The first victory being 51% of the vote, a landslide.
Starting point is 00:23:46 The second victory being that he left his two main rivals with scraps. Yeah, and they're fighting over the scraps with each other, which is exactly what his team has been looking for throughout this race. And so when I think about this win in Iowa, I think it's not just a first step. It's a really big first step toward becoming the Republican nominee for the third consecutive election.
Starting point is 00:24:17 Well, Shane, thank you very much. Thank you, Michael. We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today. Over the weekend, Houthi militants attempted to strike a U.S. warship and damaged a U.S. commercial ship in the Red Sea in a significant ratcheting up of their attacks on a crucial global shipping route. The latest round of attacks suggests that the U.S. and its allies are so far powerless to stop the Houthis. Last week, an American-led coalition carried out dozens of airstrikes against the Houthis inside Yemen,
Starting point is 00:25:21 but those attacks appear to have only emboldened the group. The Houthis, who are backed by Iran, claim that they're targeting Western ships in protest of Israel's war against Hamas. Today's episode was produced by Mary Wilson, Claire Tennesgetter, and Muj Zaydi. It was edited by Rachel Quester, contains original music by Dan Powell, and was engineered by Chris Wood. Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landvork of Wonderly. That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.

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