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Tuesday, 02/04/2020 8:12:46 PM

Tuesday, February 04, 2020 8:12:46 PM

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How the Iowa caucus results will actually work — and why 2020’s could be more confusing than ever

Whoever thought this system up has given Trump one helluva talking point.

There won’t be one set of results but three.

By Andrew Prokopandrew@vox.com Updated Feb 3, 2020, 10:26am EST


Caucus attendees look on during a Democratic Party caucus at Jackson Township Fire Station on February 1, 2016, in Keokuk, Iowa. Michael B. Thomas/AFP via Getty Images

The political world is waiting with bated breath to see who will win the Iowa Democratic caucuses. But there’s another surprisingly murky question: How will we even decide who wins?

The problem is that there will be three results coming in after Iowa voters gather on the evening of Monday, February 3.

One will be for something called “state delegate equivalents” — this is the number previously used to determine the winner of the Iowa Democratic caucuses, something I’ll explain more in a bit. But the Iowa Democratic Party will also be tallying and reporting two other sets of numbers: how many actual people voted for each candidate in a given caucus — first an initial tally, then a final tally taken after lower-performing candidates are eliminated.

At the very least, this could be confusing. What if, for example, Sen. Bernie Sanders wins more votes but former Vice President Joe Biden wins more state delegate equivalents? It could make determining who “won” quite difficult.

In brief, the numbers that Iowa Democrats will report on caucus night are:

1) The pre-realignment vote total: This is the initial tally of how many people prefer each candidate at each of the more than 1,600 individual caucus sites (added together for a statewide total). Basically, it’s who got the most votes the first time around.

2) The final vote total: After the first tally, any supporters of a candidate who got less than a certain threshold of the vote (15 percent in most precincts) can shift their support to another candidate. Candidates who are below the viability threshold are eliminated as “nonviable,” and a new and final tally is taken. So this is who got the most votes after a reshuffling.

3) State delegate equivalents: The final vote total at each caucus site will then be used to assign each viable candidate a certain number of county delegates. Then those county delegate numbers will be weighted to estimate their “state delegate equivalents” (how many delegates each candidate will get at the Iowa state convention).

Announcing these three different results is a change for Iowa Democrats. In previous years, only the state delegate equivalents were recorded or reported. So when Hillary Clinton “beat” Sanders 49.84 percent to 49.59 percent in the 2016 caucuses, those percentages were of state delegate equivalents, not votes. We don’t know how many actual votes each candidate got that year.

This year, for the first time, we’ll get vote results too. That will provide more transparency — but could result in a muddle.

The traditional metric for determining who wins is the state delegate equivalents, since, after all, the Democratic nomination contest is a competition to win delegates. Yet the actual vote totals may seem more intuitively useful than something based on a complex formula. And Iowa’s importance has never really been about delegates anyway — it’s about setting the narrative for the media and political world. So how will this narrative be set?

How the Iowa caucuses got to this strange place

[...]

To get a sense of how results at all these individual caucus sites become statewide numbers, let’s walk through one hypothetical precinct.

The first step (after some speeches and discussion) is for attendees in the room to divide up, moving to sit or stand with others who support the same candidate. So let’s say there are 100 attendees at this precinct caucus, and they split up the following ways:

Bernie Sanders: 26 people
Joe Biden: 23 people
Elizabeth Warren: 21 people
Pete Buttigieg: 16 people
Amy Klobuchar: 14 people

This would be the pre-realignment vote total for this precinct, and this result would be recorded and reported on the preference cards. (There is no secret ballot.)

The number that matters next is the viability threshold — which is 15 percent in most precincts (but is higher in some precincts that have three or fewer delegates at stake). Let’s say it’s 15 percent in our sample precinct, though.

The way things work this year, a 15 percent threshold means supporters for candidates with 15 percent or above would be locked in — they can’t change their votes now. So here, those initial Sanders, Biden, Warren, and Buttigieg supporters are all locked in.

However, Klobuchar has fallen short, with only 14 out of 100 supporters. So her supporters are now free to switch to support any of the viable candidates (or none of them, if they prefer). They’d join another candidate group and record their new vote on a preference card.

So let’s say Biden gets nine of these Klobuchar supporters, Sanders two, Warren three, and Buttigieg zero. The new vote total would be:

Biden: 32
Sanders: 28
Warren: 24
Buttigieg: 16

And that’s the final vote total. This would also be recorded and reported. As you can see, it moved Biden from second place to first. Realignment can be important when there’s a split field and no one candidate is running away with a victory. And this realignment process will play out individually in each precinct (meaning it won’t always be the same candidates who are viable).

So to get the statewide totals for both the pre-alignment vote and the final vote, you just add up those numbers from each individual caucus site.

How the Iowa caucuses actually work: Delegate-counting edition

Now, when delegates come in is when it gets really confusing. So let’s go through it in excruciating detail.

It will be familiar to you from previous primaries that the overall vote result in a state contest can differ somewhat from its delegate results. That’s because Democrats have preset formulas for how their national delegates are allotted (some from statewide results, some from congressional district results, and proportionally to candidates clearing 15 percent of the vote).

But the Iowa caucuses complicate things further because there are three different sets of delegates involved.

* Each individual precinct caucus will elect a certain preset number .. https://datastudio.google.com/u/0/reporting/19QRje8XoOcxo0QMj0PUQGVKc_zUZCPPu/page/MLVAB .. of county convention delegates to go to one of the 99 county conventions in Iowa. Each county gets to determine the size of its convention. (So, for example, Story County and Pottawattamie County have similarly sized populations, but the former will have 200 county convention delegates and the latter will have 400.) There will be 11,402 county delegates overall.

* Each county also has a preset number .. https://datastudio.google.com/u/0/reporting/19QRje8XoOcxo0QMj0PUQGVKc_zUZCPPu/page/MLVAB .. of state delegates it will be able to send to the Iowa Democratic convention. And the number of state delegates a county gets depends on how many votes its attendees cast for the Democratic nominees in the most recent gubernatorial and presidential race, averaged. (So, for example, Story and Pottawattamie counties have similarly sized populations, but Story had more Democratic voters, so it gets 83 state delegates and Pottawattamie gets 48.) There will be 2,107 state delegates overall.

* And all of that is entirely different from the national delegates we’re accustomed to seeing in presidential primary results. These are the delegates Iowa will send to the Democratic National Convention. This year, it will send 41 pledged delegates (who are bound to support to specific candidates based on the caucus results).

So, backing up: Remember that the key metric on caucus night that Iowa Democrats have tracked in years past is called state delegate equivalents.

In practice, this is a transformation of the precinct caucus night results — how many county convention delegates each candidate gets — to an estimate of how many state convention delegates that corresponds to.

Let’s return, then, to our final vote total above: Biden 32, Sanders 28, Warren 24, and Buttigieg 16. And let’s say this result came in the Fourth Precinct in Adair County. How does that translate to delegate results?

Well, party officials consult a master delegate apportionment list .. https://datastudio.google.com/u/0/reporting/19QRje8XoOcxo0QMj0PUQGVKc_zUZCPPu/page/MLVAB .. from Iowa Democrats to calculate. Here’s the relevant bit:

* First off, this particular precinct will choose 10 county convention delegates.

* To get the county convention delegate result, then, you apply the final vote total proportionally and round where necessary.

* Here, Biden’s 32 supporters get him three delegates, Sanders’s 28 get him three delegates, Warren’s 24 get her two delegates, and Buttigieg’s 16 also get him two delegates.

* But then we have to change those county delegates to state delegate equivalents.

* And it turns out that this precinct’s 10 county delegates would be worth, together, 0.78 of a state delegate.

* So Biden and Sanders each get three-tenths of that (0.234 state delegate equivalents), Warren and Buttigieg would get two-tenths each (0.156 state delegate equivalents),

Those, then, are the state delegate equivalent results for this precinct.

So yes, the caucus-goers at this individual site will be fighting for tiny pieces of a fraction of a state delegate. And then we repeat this for 1,677 other precincts in Iowa and the satellite caucus sites, add up all those tiny pieces, and we’ll have our results by state delegate equivalents. Simple, right?

Iowa Democrats want to be fair to candidates but also have a clear winner. The result is a mess.

More - https://www.vox.com/2020/1/30/21083701/iowa-caucuses-results-delegates-math

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