The races for the Republican and Democratic presidential nominations are taking shaping now that Iowans have had their say.
- In some cases, the results confirmed conventional wisdom.
- In others, it totally reshaped it.
- Here are five things we learned after a remarkable evening in America's heartland.
1. Donald Trump isn't untouchable
For the past few months it seemed as though the New
York real estate mogul had become an unrivalled political savant. Every
move he made, no matter how questionable, only strengthened his standing
among conservative voters.
That bubble, however, has burst.
Despite leading in the Iowa polls for the past several weeks, rival Ted
Cruz posted a solid victory on caucus night. In the end Mr Trump's
much-heralded cadre of new voters didn't show up in the predicted
numbers and Mr Cruz's formidable ground game, backed by strong
evangelical support, carried the day.
This hardly means it's the
end for Mr Trump. He may well hold onto his large lead in New Hampshire,
a state where the conservative voters often embrace the renegade
outsider, and find success in the Southern primaries that follow. The
notion that the New Yorker could steamroll his way to the Republican
nomination, however, has now been firmly dispelled.
2. Marco Rubio has given the establishment hope
Florida Senator Marco Rubio's speech in Iowa on
Monday night sounded more like a victory celebration than the concession
speech of a third-place finisher. By finishing with 23% of the vote,
however - a hair's breadth from second-place Trump - Mr Rubio shattered
pre-caucus expectations.
Now he's well positioned to gain new
support in New Hampshire, as voters looking to stop outsider candidates
Cruz and Trump rally to his side.
This is the kind of Iowa result
that candidates like New Jersey's Chris Christie, former Florida
Governor Jeb Bush and Ohio Governor John Kasich were dreading. They have
placed all their hopes in New Hampshire, and now they'll have to face
off against a man who has the political wind at his back.
The
polls for Mr Rubio in the coming states haven't looked particularly
encouraging, but that could quickly change. And even if he suffers
setbacks in the Southern states that follow New Hampshire, he likely
will have the resources to wage a long fight for the nomination.
3. The Democrats are in a dogfight
At this point it comes as little surprise that
Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders and former Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton finished in a virtual tie in Iowa - polls had been indicating
such a result was likely.
Nevertheless, the outcome marks a
significant achievement for Mr Sanders, who was polling in single digits
in Iowa six months ago.
Mrs Clinton is simply not going to be
able to deliver the knockout punch to her rival the way she once had
hoped. Instead, she faces a likely defeat in New Hampshire - where the
Vermonter is strong - and then a protracted fight across the country
that could last at least through March.
She still has the greater
financial resources and a much more developed campaign infrastructure,
but she had those advantages in Iowa as well. The electorate will
change, however - becoming more moderate and more ethnically diverse.
There is more hospitable ground ahead for Mrs Clinton - but a nomination
victory, if it comes, will take time to realise.
4. Ted Cruz is built to last
If Mr Cruz had been defeated in Iowa it would have
been a devastating blow to his campaign. He had raised expectations of a
victory in the caucuses and heralded it as proof that he could build a
coalition of evangelical, grass-roots Tea Party and libertarian voters.
As
it turns out, that coalition exists - and it will likely re-emerge
after New Hampshire, as South Carolina and other Southern states hold
their primary contests.
Mr Cruz has nearly $20m in campaign cash
on hand and supporting political committees with even greater resources.
He's built a political machine that can operate through the entire
primary calendar and, if necessary, wage a two-front battle with Mr
Trump and an establishment-backed candidate like Mr Rubio.
In his
victory speech on Monday night, Mr Cruz credited his grass-roots
organisation - as he should - but he also gave Republicans a look at a
more moderate, general-election version of himself. He'll need to
convince his party that he is a candidate who can beat the Democrats in
November. This was his first step toward making that pitch.
5. The field is about to thin dramatically
Democrat Martin O'Malley is gone, as is Republican Mike Huckabee and - in all likelihood, Rick Santorum.
On
Monday night rumours abounded that Ben Carson was poised to exit.
Although his camp quickly denied this, the retired surgeon's 9%
performance in a state that once viewed him as a front-runner likely
means the end is near.
Carly Fiorina's bid is on life support, and
Rand Paul - at one point thought to be a contender for the nomination -
garnered less than 5%, a far cry from his father's 21% in Iowa just
four years ago.
New Hampshire will likely cull the herd even
further, threatening the future of candidates like Mr Bush, Mr Christie
and Mr Kasich if they can't slow Mr Rubio's momentum.
The
Republican race for the nomination isn't likely to end anytime soon, but
there are about to be a lot fewer candidates on the debate stage in the
coming weeks.
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