Pete Buttigieg takes lead in first Iowa results after presidential caucus chaos

Pete Buttigieg seized a shock lead Tuesday in Iowa's debut US presidential nomination vote, according to partial Democratic Party results that placed Bernie Sanders second and national frontrunner Joe Biden a distant fourth.

Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg at a caucus night campaign rally, Monday, 3 February, 2020, in Des Moines, Iowa.

Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg at a caucus night campaign rally, Monday, 3 February, 2020, in Des Moines, Iowa. Source: AAP

Pete Buttigieg took the lead in the first batch of long-delayed results from the chaotic Iowa Democratic Party caucuses on Tuesday, and former Vice President Joe Biden trailed badly in fourth place with about 62 per cent of precincts reporting.

US Senator Bernie Sanders was in second place and US Senator Elizabeth Warren in third in the first results, released nearly 21 hours after Iowans poured into more than 1,600 public locations to begin the five-month process of picking a challenger to Republican President Donald Trump.
Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., speaks to supporters at a caucus night campaign rally, Monday, Feb. 3, 2020, in Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)
Democratic presidential candidate Senator Elizabeth Warren. Source: AAP
In Tuesday’s first results of state delegate equivalents, the data traditionally reported to determine the winner, Mr Buttigieg, the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, had 26.9 per cent, Mr Sanders had 25.1 per cent, Ms Warren 18.3 per cent and Mr Biden 15.6 per cent. Senator Amy Klobuchar was fifth at 12.6 per cent.

Mr Sanders was ahead in the popular vote, which is not used to determine the delegates who will cast ballots at the Democratic National Convention in July.
It was a clumsy start to 2020 voting, after a bad-tempered presidential campaign four years ago was hit by accusations of hacking and disinformation that led to a two-year federal investigation into election meddling by Russia.

Officials blamed inconsistencies related to a new mobile app used for vote counting for the unusual delay in Iowa, the state that traditionally kicks off a US presidential election campaign that culminates this year on 3 November.

The uncertainty enraged Democrats worried it would only strengthen Mr Trump’s bid for re-election and prompted some Democratic candidates’ campaigns to question whether the results would be legitimate.

“As leader of the party I apologise deeply for this,” Iowa State Party Chairman Troy Price told reporters.

“We’ve been working day and night to make sure these results are accurate.”

Republicans asked how Democrats could run the country if they could not conduct a caucus, while Mr Trump mocked the Democrats on Twitter, calling the delay an “unmitigated disaster.”

Before the results were released, campaign aides for Mr Biden cited gross failures in the caucuses.

“What we’re saying is there are some inconsistencies, that the process, the integrity, is at stake. And the Iowa Democratic Party needs to check that data, check it again, check it a third time, check it a fourth time, because it’s important to get it right,” Mr Biden's campaign senior adviser Symone Sanders told reporters.

“It looks like a disorganised mess,” said Jessica Leonard, 41, who runs a food truck in Winterset, Iowa, and normally votes Democratic.


Share
3 min read
Published 5 February 2020 9:28am
Updated 5 February 2020 11:25am
Source: Reuters, SBS


Share this with family and friends