[Before we get started, check out this historical overview from the LA Times' Mark Z. Barabak.]
There was a point decades ago when the Iowa caucus and the New Hampshire
primary actually served a useful purpose as search committees, allowing
candidates with little name recognition and limited budgets to make
their case to a small politically engaged state. This is what happened
with Jimmy Carter. To a degree, it also happened to Barack Obama though
he was hardly as obscure as Carter. I don't remember if the following was
something I said or if it was said to me but after his speech at the
democratic national convention in 2004, one of us told the other that we
had just seen the man who would be the first black president of the
United States.
That one scenario where someone most people have
never heard of manages to come in first or second is the only time that
the results from Iowa are important or newsworthy or even interesting.
That is the entire case for Iowa and to a degree in New Hampshire going
first and it has largely evaporated in the age of mega budgets and the
long campaign.
Take take it away and Iowa becomes the Golden Globes
of American politics, everyone knows it's absolutely meaningless but
does come first and all the journalists covering the real story are
starved for something to talk about.
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