We hear the word over and
over in a presidential election year. We understand the funny
sounding term has something to do with winning a nomination for a
political party, but if you are like me, just what in the hell a
“caucus” involves remains about as clear as quantum physics.
I constantly hear about
the importance of the upcoming Iowa caucus and accept the
verification of the talking heads who tout its gravity without
question. I admit I am unsure of my own “caucus” understanding. I
and, I believe, many others, are confused.
Confused, that is, until
now. In this post, I will explore the reality of these political
meetings. Here is my version of the Dummy's Guide to understanding a
“caucus.”
“Iowa
has long been heralded as a bulwark against the money and media that
dominate the modern presidential race. Its caucus requires voters in
every precinct to actually gather in a room, at one time, and listen
to neighbors pitch their chosen candidates, before they are allowed
to vote.”
– Ari
Melber
What Is a Caucus?
The term “caucus”
apparently comes from an Algonquin word meaning "gathering of
tribal chiefs. (The actual Algonquian word “caucauasu”
means "counselor, elder, adviser" in the dialect of
Virginia.)
Further
word history in the Encyclopedia Britannica
reveals:
The word “caucus”
originated in Boston in the early part of the 18th century, when it
was used as the name of a political or drinking club, the Caucus or
Caucus Club. John Pickering (1816) wrote the word was a shortened and
corrupted form of the phrase “caulker’s
meetings” (Caulkers were men who worked in
the shipyards, water-proofing the hulls of ships).
The main crux of the
caucus system is indeed a series of meetings. Today, the word is
defined as “a meeting at which local members of a political party
register their preference among candidates running for office or
select delegates to attend a convention.”
Sounds simple enough,
doesn't it? Let me assure you, the system of caucusing is anything
but straightforward.
The convoluted caucus
system dates back to 1796, when American political parties emerged.
Most states eventually replaced this system because, as political
parties became more centralized and sophisticated in the early
twentieth century, party leaders or "bosses" were perceived
as exerting too much control over choosing a nominee.
Presidential election
primaries and caucuses are two very different methods of
accomplishing the same basic thing – both are a means for each
political party to let voters nationwide select their party's
presidential nominee. More specifically, primaries and caucuses are
means of selecting delegates (representatives of party members in
each state) to send to the party's national convention.
Caucuses, like the
upcoming one in Iowa, are party meetings by precinct, district, or
county, where registered party members gather to discuss the
candidates and to
select delegates to the
next round of party conventions. Caucuses have been called a “meeting
of neighbors.” Precinct caucuses are the lowest level of party
organization and activity, and happen at the local voting precinct
level. A typical meeting might be made up of a few dozen or a few
hundred activists who live in the immediate area.
At the end of the
meetings, an election is held whereby delegates to a county or state
convention who pledge to support the majority candidate are selected.
Delegates selected at a caucus might go on to a county or state
convention before attending the national convention in the summer.
Any voter registered with
a party can participate in a caucus. The process can take hours, as
voters will gather at a venue to hear out supporters of various
candidates, debate issues, and ultimately come to a conclusion about
which person will make the best presidential nominee.
When voters arrive at the
caucus venues, which can be anywhere from a high school gymnasium to
a restaurant, supporters of certain candidates will break off into
groups, including groups for undecided voters. Then voters, who are
typically activists and very politically engaged, will plead their
case to everyone about why their preferred candidate is the best
choice.
In Iowa’s case, caucuses
not only allow activists and voters to make a case for their
preferred candidate, but also to talk about issues that could be
incorporated into the state party platform, said Dennis Goldford, a
political science professor with Drake University in Iowa.
Caucusing requires passion
and a strong connection to a particular candidate, in contrast to the
simple and private act of marking a ballot in a primary. Goldford
says …
“(The Iowa caucuses)
make candidates and potential candidates talk to voters as real,
live, individual human beings. Candidates meet with voters in a more
personal way, he added, rather than using them as 'campaign props.'”
Especially in early caucus
states, a relatively small group of people wields a lot of power to
influence average voters around the country.
Iowa has the most famous
caucus, but nine states as well as three United States territories
conduct caucuses in lieu of a primary election. Caucuses also vary by
party as well. As an example, Kentucky has a Democratic primary but
Republican caucuses. In addition, several states have switched to
primaries for 2020, like Minnesota and Colorado.
A Brief History
There is no provision for
the role of political parties in the United States Constitution,
since the Founding Fathers did not originally intend for American
politics to be partisan. In Federalist Papers No. 9 and No. 10,
Alexander Hamilton and James Madison, respectively, wrote
specifically about the dangers of domestic political factions.
Starting with the 1796
election, Congressional party or a state legislature party caucus
selected the party's presidential candidates. Before 1820,
Democratic-Republican members of Congress would nominate a single
candidate from their party. That system collapsed in 1824, and since
1832 the preferred mechanism for nomination has been a national
convention.
(James S.
Chase. Emergence of the Presidential
Nominating
Convention, 1789–1832. 1973)
Caucuses have had a role
in the nominating process going back to the early nineteenth century.
In the early days, however, party caucuses were meetings of party
leaders closed to the general public.
Even after the advent of
the modern political convention in the 1830s, caucuses used to be
“pretty much limited to people who were members of party
organizations, insiders who were usually the only ones who even knew
about them,” says Alan I. Abramowitz, political science professor
at Emory University.
But democratizing
pressures reemerged after World War II, aided by developments in
communications technology. The advent of television provided a
medium through which people could now see and hear the political
campaigns in their own living rooms. Candidates could use television
exposure to demonstrate their charismatic popularity and potential
electability.
Since 1972, the Iowa
Caucus has been the first – and many argue most important –
electoral test on the road to each party’s presidential nomination.
It's the first opportunity for the rest of the country to see how
much support candidates have.
Also, Iowa caucuses have historically done the job of winnowing out
large presidential fields
Caucuses are held in more
than 2000 precincts across the state of Iowa to choose more than
1,500 delegates to 99 county conventions. Iowa eventually awards 49
delegates to the national convention, of which 41 are pledged
delegates allocated on the basis of the results of the caucuses
It all started with the
1968 Democratic Convention.
The Vietnam War was in its
14th year, both Martin Luther King, Jr. and presidential candidate
Robert Kennedy were assassinated that spring and President Lyndon B.
Johnson had withdrawn from the race in March, deciding against
seeking another term. That April, Hubert Humphrey – Johnson’s
vice president-- jumped into the race. Humphrey’s public support of
Johnson, specifically regarding the Vietnam War, upset many anti-war
protestors.
While Democratic political
leaders filed into the National Convention hall, protestors brutally
clashed with police right outside its doors, with television
broadcasting the political divide to the nation. Hubert Humphrey
would go on to win the Democratic nomination (over George McGovern
and Eugene McCarthy) despite not winning a single primary,
highlighting for many the disparity between public opinion and the
political process.
(Brynn
Holland. “Why Is Iowa the First State to Vote?”
History.
January 6, 2020.)
Eager to repair the damage
from the 1968 primary campaign, Democratic party leaders formed the
McGovern-Fraser Commission to improve the nomination process so
voters would have a direct say as to who would be their nominee for
president, ensuring that party leaders would no longer work behind
closed doors to manipulate the process. State party leaders had to
give 30 days notice before hosting primaries or caucuses, encouraging
full participation.
Part of that meant
spreading the presidential nominating schedule out in each state.
Because Iowa has one of the more complex processes – precinct
caucuses, county conventions, district conventions, followed by a
state convention – it had to start really early. (The Democratic
Party held Iowa caucuses first in the nation in 1972; the GOP
followed suit in 1976.)
“And
once a peanut farmer named Jimmy Carter rode an Iowa caucus win all
the way to the White House, Iowa suddenly became a thing.”
– Sam
Sanders, correspondent and host of “It's Been a Minute
with Sam
Sanders” at NPR
Ever since then, Iowa has
remained a crucial proving ground for nearly every presidential
candidate.
The Iowa Caucuses bring a
sense of excitement to the state. And something more – “Caucus is
a major boon to the state of Iowa,” Karen Kedrowski, director of
Carrie Chapman Catt Center for Women and Politics said. “During the
presidential cycle, the amount of party activity creates great jobs,
attracts a wealth of out-of-state talent who invest in the state. It
becomes this defining feature in the state.”
Actual Processes In
Iowa
I'll leave it to a better
political pundit than I to explain all of the procedures of “delegate
selections” and “proportional allocations” and “chains of
attendance at the congressional district state convention.”
In fact, Democrats have a
complex system – one of the most complex pieces of the entire
presidential election. Suffice it to say there are rules that involve
“percentages of all the caucus participants.” And, there are
“discussions of support” and “percentage cut-offs” – stats
like “25% viability” and “one-sixth participation.”
This language arts major's
head is spinning in caucus confusion. All I know is it eventually
comes down to a formula something like the following:
“Number of people in the
group * number of delegates)/ number of caucus participants.”
Jack Reardon, an organizer
with Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement (2020) said of the Iowa
caucuses …
“We’re not
interested in candidates’ stump speeches. We’ve heard enough of
those. Those speeches get a lot of media coverage, but it’s not
reflective of how a majority of people across this state, across this
country, are feeling about politics. People aren’t interested in a
particular candidate. They’re interested in something that can
change their lives.”
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