Political Journalists Ring in 2008 in Iowa

Iowa is the place to be on New Year's Eve for politicians and journalists.

ByABC News
December 28, 2007, 4:05 PM

Dec. 31, 2007 — -- Political journalists more accustomed to spending New Year's Eve at an inside-the-beltway Washington, D.C., soiree, or a trendy New York bar, are flocking to the new place to ring in 2008 Iowa.

Due to an earlier-than-ever caucus date of Jan. 3, presidential contenders and the political journalists who trail them will be clinking champagne glasses at midnight this New Year's Eve in Iowa.

That's made the Midwestern state the place to be and to be seen today for an estimated 2,000 journalists, including 100 foreign journalists from more than 25 different countries.

Anne Dickerson, a television producer and wife of Slate's chief political correspondent, John Dickerson, left her two small children with their grandparents, so she could spend New Year's Eve with her husband in Iowa's capital city, Des Moines.

"We've been joking this is like a second honeymoon," she said.

But the couple soon found out that getting a table in Des Moines this New Year's Eve rivals getting a reservation at a New York City hot spot.

"I called three weeks ago for reservations," she said. "All of the top restaurants are completely booked."

The Dickersons finally snagged a 7 p.m. dinner-for-two reservation at 801 Steak and Chophouse, an upscale Iowa steak restaurant in downtown Des Moines.

Other journalists made their New Year's Eve Iowa party plans much earlier.

The day the caucus date was finalized, Mark Barabak, political reporter for the Los Angeles Times, reserved a table for friends at Lucca, an Italian restaurant in Des Moines' new trendy East Village neighborhood.

"We started out with a party of eight, and upped it to 20 when they cut me off for space considerations," he said.

More than 450 journalists have RSVPed to attend the Raucous Before the Caucus media party at the Temple for Performing Arts in downtown Des Moines it's hosted by Carrie Giddins and Mary Tiffany, the communications directors of the Iowa Democratic Party and the Republican Party of Iowa, respectively.