Iowa 2024 Democratic caucus results: Biden projected to win
For the first time in years, the contest didn't lead off the party calendar.
ABC News projects that President Joe Biden will win the Iowa Democratic caucuses, based on analysis of the vote.
Though Republicans stuck with the traditional first-in-the-nation Iowa caucuses earlier this year, Democrats went a different route.
Rather than an in-person presidential preference contest, the party opted instead for mail-in ballots to determine which candidate will win the state's 40 delegates, with voting ending on Tuesday.
The ballot listed Biden, the incumbent front-runner, as well as long-shot challengers Minnesota Rep. Dean Phillips and Marianne Williamson and an option for "uncommitted."
With 64% of the expected vote recorded as of 5 p.m. local time, Biden had91% of the vote while the "uncommitted' option had 4%. Phillips had 3% and Williamson had 2%.
The party started accepting requests for the cards via a Google form on the party's website and by mail on Nov. 1.
State significance
Iowa was long a hotly contested presidential battleground and influenced the course of the primaries because it held its caucuses before any other state voted.
But national Democrats have pushed to change that since 2020, in part because of logistic problems with that year's caucuses and in part because of the view that Iowa's electorate doesn't represent the rest of the country or the Democratic base.
The state has also shifted more Republican in the last decade.
Former President Donald Trump won the 2024 GOP caucuses in January, with 51% of the vote. Biden was likewise expected to win, as he has every other nominating race so far.