Posted on 02/02/2016 8:00:52 AM PST by SeekAndFind
While Ted Cruz won a five-point victory in what really turned into a three-way race in the GOP’s Iowa Caucus, the Democratic Party’s side of the caucus turned into a real nailbiter. Hillary Clinton clung to a lead of less than a percentage point by the end of the night, with both she and Bernie Sanders claiming victory at the end. At the moment, CNN’s election tracker still shows a 50/50 tie, although Hillary has 24 delegates assigned to Bernie’s 21, thanks to the arcane and opaque process by which Democrats operate their caucuses.
Speaking of which, Bernie may want a recount. NBC’s Kasie Hunt caught up with the challenger after he deplaned in New Hampshire, and while he’s looking forward, he might still want one careful look back too:
BERNIE SANDERS — is capable of running and winning any state of this country. We look forward to doing well here in New Hampshire. And after that, we’re off to Nevada and then South Carolina, where I think we’re going to surprise a whole lot of people, just as we did in Iowa.
KASIE HUNT: Do you anticipate contesting this vote count at all?
SANDERS: Honestly, we just got off the plane and I — we don’t know enough to say anything about it.
How does one recount a caucus? Even on the Republican side that would be difficult, as was discovered in 2012 in the razor-thin outcome between Rick Santorum and Mitt Romney. On the Democratic side, it would be all but impossible, thanks to the multiple-round system employed. In each precinct, voting takes place initially to figure out where the candidates stand; candidates are then eliminated if they cannot get to 15% and another round of voting takes place to see where those freed-up votes will go. Even though Martin O’Malley was in most precincts easily eliminated, the existence of multiple votes would still foul a recount process.
This, by the way, is one of the better arguments for eliminating caucuses and sticking to normal ballot procedures in primaries.
Politico’s Glenn Thrush and Annie Karni conclude that Hillary 2016 looks a lot like Hillary 2008:
Iowa wasn't just supposed to be a tentative first step in Clinton's inevitable march to the Democratic nomination, it was meant to be the cornerstone of a rebuilt political persona â and her national team was built from Iowa outward, with a foundational goal of winning here, and winning big.
But nothing is ever easy with Hillary Clinton â especially not here — and her inability to ride a first-class ground organization to triumph underscores the candidate's weakness and the lack of a message that resonates with primary voters. For months, the Republican side of the aisle has been filled with drama and uncertainty â yet in the end it was a 74-year-old, wild-haired Democratic socialist who has muddied a contest that was supposed to be predictable. …
In 2008, Clinton's ambivalence about Iowa resulted in a muddled strategy and a flawed field operation. This time she had the best operation money could buy and experience could muster: The 100-plus staffer operation was built by Clinton's 35-year-old campaign manager Robby Mook, Clinton's best field organizer eight years ago, and he devoted the bulk of the candidate's time and the campaign's resources to the first four voting states, with an extreme focus on Iowa over other states where the campaign's presence was bare-bones.
But Clinton suffered from the same structural disadvantage here that hurt her in 2008. Her appeal was limited, mostly, to older frequent caucus goers â with a goal of maximizing turnout and pulling from a poll of about 20,000 Democratic voters who never participate in the labor-intensive caucus process. Sanders, who attracted big crowds on college campuses and high schools, had a much larger reservoir of young people to draw from â and he apparently did just that on caucus night, according to initial estimates.
Yes, but in 2008 Hillary finished in third place, not tied for first. Sanders had begun to overtake her in some polls over the past month, so Bernie wasn’t entirely the underdog last night. Sanders probably needed a clear win to rattle Hillary’s supporters. A 50/50 split might not have been Hillary’s dream come true, but with a beating approaching in New Hampshire, it’s enough of a winning narrative to sustain her campaign until South Carolina. Sanders has to prove he can beat Hillary somewhere other than his backyard in New Hampshire and in the prairie-populist states in the Midwest. And he hasn’t quite proven the latter — yet, anyway.
Do it, Bernie!
Iowa cauci run by the parties. I don’t think there’s any provision for a recount
Give up Bernie ,Coin Toss Hillary beat you . Is a coin toss legal ?
Examine the coin.
>> I donât think thereâs any provision for a recount
All the more reason to start an internecine war! It’ll be costly, difficult, and unproductive!
GO FOR IT, BERNIE!
Hillary’s - well, the professional black voters and their professional black government in South Carolina (and those imported from VA, NC, and WV!) will probably be able to “steal” South Carolina from Bernie.
Unless he is determined, and unless he actually starts to fight her.
Hey Bernie, now that Martin O’Mally is gone you can pick up all of his supporters.
Six coin tosses and Hillary wins all six. They may want to look at those coins.
How do you recount a caucus like that? Look at some of the videos of how it was run.
That assumes there are no records of the votes for each round. A recount is simply rechecking that the counting and arithmetic are correct.
How come no RAW NUMBERS from that contest have been released?
If I were Bernie I would be asking for half of those coin flips. It’s all about fairness right?
Pay your fair share Hillary!
Yes. A few weeks ago, at an NFL playoff game, they had a coin toss, and the GB Packers contested the coin toss because the coin did not "flip". Also, I believe the coin is always shown, both sides, to each rep, so that they know it is a legit coin with heads and tails.
Anyway, the ref determined that the coin did not "flip", so the toss was redone.
I'd like someone in Vegas to give me the odds of the same party winning six separate coin tosses.
1998 NFL Thanksgiving Day Game: Pittsburgh Steelers vs. Detroit Lions: This controversial call changed the game of football forever or at least the coin toss. The Steelers and Lions were tied and the game was sent into overtime. The coin was flipped midfield and, according to Steelers RB Jerome Bettis, he called tails. The coin landed tails side up and the referee declared the Lions the winner of the toss.
Confusion erupted. Bettis screamed at officials that the referee had gotten the toss result wrong. Referee Phil Luckett, the official who declared the toss, later told reporters that Bettis had called ‘’heads-tails’’ and Luckett, according to NFL rules, went with the first thing he heard out of Bettis’ mouth. The Lions went on to win in overtime and Steelers fans have never forgotten.
No one will ever know if Bettis said heads or tails first, but the rules regarding the coin toss have been since changed to avoid any further controversy
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.