Iowa’s political transformation
In the past decade or so, Iowa has gone from a competitive state in general elections to a reliable Republican stronghold. Trump won the state by eight percentage points in 2020, a wider margin than Barack Obama’s (six points) in 2012. Once represented by a split-party Senate delegation — Republican Chuck Grassley and one-time presidential hopeful Democrat Tom Harkin — Iowa has been represented by two Republicans, Grassley and Joni Ernst, since 2015. And as of last year, Republicans also control all four of the state’s House seats, representing Iowa’s first all-GOP congressional delegation since the 1950s. While no one really expects Biden to win there in 2024, Barack Obama won the state twice, and so did Bill Clinton. Iowa was even one of the few states won by Michael Dukakis in 1988!
There are many possible reasons for this transformation, but changes in Iowa appear to be part of a larger shift in rural parts of the upper Midwest — North and South Dakota, as well as northern Wisconsin and parts of Minnesota, have also become more Republican over the past decade. One piece of the story is the decline of rural Democrats who used to represent these places, often with a populist bent and a focus on agricultural issues, though that may be a chicken-and-egg conundrum — it’s not clear what’s causing what. The resonance of Trumpism with rural and Midwestern voters is also important. But here’s where Iowa politics has a twist: While Trump is the favorite to win the caucuses, his status among Iowa Republicans has been in question. Gov. Kim Reynolds has endorsed Ron DeSantis and so has prominent evangelical leader Bob Vander Plaats. Iowa’s turn to the right is a Trump-era development, but it appears to go beyond Trump.