Iowa caucuses 2024: Trump projected to win, DeSantis 2nd

Haley finishes 3rd, Ramaswamy drops out after finishing 4th.

By538 and ABC News via five thirty eight logo
Last Updated: January 15, 2024, 5:15 PM EST

The first election of the 2024 presidential primaries is in the books, and former President Donald Trump was the big winner. ABC News projects that Trump finished first in the Iowa caucuses, about 30 percentage points ahead of second-place finisher Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. Former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley is projected to finish third, while businessman Vivek Ramaswamy is projected to finish fourth. As a result, Ramaswamy has dropped out of the presidential race.

Throughout the night, 538 reporters broke down the results in Iowa in real time with live updates, analysis and commentary. Read our full live blog below.

Latest headlines:

Here's how the news is developing. All times Eastern.
Jan 15, 2024, 10:26 PM EST

Haley doing better in counties with larger Black populations

While Iowa has a relatively small Black population overall (less than 4 percent of the total population, according to the latest American Community Survey estimates), Haley is doing a bit better than she is statewide in each of the three counties where Black individuals make up the largest share of the population.

With an estimated 34 percent of the vote reporting statewide, Trump has 52 percent, DeSantis 20 percent, and Haley 19 percent. But in Black Hawk County, the county with the largest Black population share (just under 10 percent), Trump has 54 percent of the vote, Haley has 21 percent and DeSantis has 16 percent, with an estimated 58 percent reporting. In Johnson County (7 percent Black), Trump is leading with 37 percent of the vote, Haley has 34 percent, and DeSantis has 22 percent, with an estimated 7 percent reporting. In Polk County, home to Des Moines and the state’s third-largest Black population share (7 percent), Trump has 41 percent, Haley has 30 percent, and DeSantis has 20 percent, with an estimated 12 percent reporting.

Of course, it’s still fairly early, so these numbers could shift as more precincts report their results and analysts get an opportunity to examine precinct-level results by racial composition. There could also be an education variable at play here: both Johnson and Polk counties are in the top 3 counties for college graduation. A potential race gap in the GOP primary has thus far been difficult to track in polling, given how small a share of the Republican primary electorate identifies as Black. And a race gap may come into play after New Hampshire, when the campaigns shift their focus to South Carolina, where almost 26 percent of the population identifies as Black.

—Mary Radcliffe, 538

Monica Potts Image
Jan 15, 2024, 10:17 PM EST

Iowa Republicans do not care about the criminal charges against Trump

I wrote earlier that pre-caucus polling showed that Iowa Republicans didn't care about Trump's legal problems. ABC's Iowa entrance polls support that. Sixty-three percent of caucusgoers said Trump would be fit for office even if he were convicted. Seventy-one percent of that group voted for him. So to Julia's earlier question, I think part of the issue, as she noted, is that while there are some anti-Trump Republicans who want an alternative, a majority of Republicans left in the party don't think Trump did anything wrong, or that even if he did, he's not disqualified from future office.
—Monica Potts, 538

Nathaniel Rakich Image
Jan 15, 2024, 10:19 PM EST

Binkley or Burgum?

Tell that to North Dakota Gov. (and billionaire) Doug Burgum, Jacob …

—Nathaniel Rakich, 538

Jacob Rubashkin Image
Jan 15, 2024, 10:22 PM EST

Binkley’s millions

Nathaniel, Binkley spent good money for his 1 percent! Just over $3 million, according to AdImpact. I’m not sure what the cost per vote record is in Iowa, but I think he’s probably a contender. Maybe if he had spent $300 million he would have won in a landslide …
—Jacob Rubashkin, Inside Elections