The race is on...For second place
Toronto Star|January 15, 2024
The Iowa caucuses that mark the start of the road to the White House are expected to play out as a coronation for GOP front-runner Donald Trump
By Richard Warnica
The race is on...For second place

INDIANOLA, IOWA Politics is nothing if not an exercise in ignoring the obvious. And, if you were willing to ignore perhaps the most obvious politician in history this week, you could pretend at times that Iowa - frozen over, battered by snow and beset by more political reporters per capita than any other place on this earth - was hosting something close to a normal political campaign.

In the final days before Monday's Iowa caucuses, the first official event of the 2024 U.S. presidential election, former UN ambassador Nikki Haley and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis careened through the state, addressing occasionally tiny crowds in coffee shops, banquet halls and pizza parlours.

It's part of a political tradition in this Midwestern state, which has for decades served as the first contest in the Democratic and Republican nominating campaigns. (The Democrats moved their first primary to South Carolina this year.)

DeSantis and Haley have spent months meeting voters, shaking hands and trading barbs in towns from Sioux City to Davenport. Even as Iowa faced near-record snows and deadly winds last week, the campaigns continued almost uninterrupted.

If you squinted hard enough, on the ground, in towns such as Cedar Rapids, Atlantic and West Des Moines, DeSantis and Haley could look and sound almost like actual front-runners for the Republican nomination.

One, DeSantis, is a doctrinaire, Ivy League conservative (hampered though he may be by a strangely rubbery affect). The other, Haley, hews close to Republican orthodoxy on key issues such as border control and taxes, while at the same time projecting something like moderation and the promise of change.

But the only thing DeSantis and Haley are front-runners for in Iowa is second place. As an influential Des Moines Register poll released Saturday made clear, the battle for first isn't just over in Iowa, it was never really on.

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Toronto Star

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Toronto Star

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Toronto Star

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Toronto Star

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Toronto Star

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Toronto Star

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Toronto Star

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