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.
Nathaniel Rakich Image
Jan 15, 2024, 11:21 PM EST

Ramaswamy will drop out of the race

Our colleagues at ABC News are reporting that Ramaswamy will drop out of the race momentarily. Bloomberg News's Jennifer Jacobs further reports that he is going to endorse Trump in his concession speech.

—Nathaniel Rakich, 538

Republican presidential candidate businessman Vivek Ramaswamy speaks during a campaign stop at the National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library on Jan. 11, 2024 in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Julia Azari Image
Jan 15, 2024, 11:15 PM EST

The end of retail politics?

In response to Jacob's point about whether we're seeing the decline of retail politics, I'm of two minds. The major story of retail politics in Iowa is still Jimmy Carter in 1976, so that's quite a while ago now, and a huge transformation in how much mass media can allow candidates to reach voters. Politics has also become a great deal more nationalized, which threatens some of what makes the Iowa caucuses distinct — less emphasis on ethanol, more emphasis on culture war. So in that sense, I can see that the more traditional retail-style politics has been a weird fit for our environment for a while now.

But it seems worthwhile to point out that a former president who was also a major media figure for several decades is a bad test case for this. Of course, it's an uphill climb for politicians without national reputations (or with fairly new ones) to compete with that, even by visiting lots of counties in Iowa. I think we should be cautious about drawing too many conclusions about retail politics with a figure like Trump in the race.

—Julia Azari, 538 contributor

Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. President Donald Trump reacts as he takes the stage at his caucus night watch party in Des Moines, Iowa, Jan. 15, 2024.
Brian Snyder/Reuters

Nathaniel Rakich Image
Jan 15, 2024, 11:10 PM EST

Trump’s weakest counties

As Jacob pointed out, Trump is currently winning every single county in Iowa. There are a few counties where he’s notably weaker, though. Johnson County, the home of Iowa City and the University of Iowa, is his worst county: He’s leading Haley only 36 percent to 35 percent there. He’s also leading Haley just 34 percent to 30 percent in Story County, home of Ames and Iowa State University. Sensing a pattern? Trump is doing the worst in Iowa’s most college-educated and bluest counties. These were also the counties that Sen. Marco Rubio did best in in the 2016 caucuses, back when he represented the last great hope of the GOP establishment to stop Trump.

—Nathaniel Rakich, 538

Geoffrey Skelley Image
Jan 15, 2024, 11:04 PM EST

Why DeSantis currently holds an edge over Haley

With 83 percent of the expected vote now reporting, DeSantis holds about a 2-point lead over Haley for second place, 21.3 percent to 19.0 percent. That could change, but it's not hard to see why DeSantis is in that position: He's got a narrow lead over Haley in the places where we'd expect Haley to perform best. In six populous and highly educated counties that form substantial parts of the Des Moines, Cedar Rapids, Iowa City and Davenport areas, DeSantis leads Haley by a little over 2 points, 26.8 percent to 24.6 percent. These are places that Haley needed to perform especially well in — polling has shown she tends to do better among college-educated voters — but instead she's running slightly behind DeSantis across all six. Haley actually has a slim lead over DeSantis in five of these places, but critically DeSantis is doing a little better than Haley in Polk County (home to Des Moines), which will have far and away the most votes of any place tonight.

Geoffrey Skelley, 538