Iowa caucuses 2024: Trump projected to win, DeSantis 2nd
Haley finishes 3rd, Ramaswamy drops out after finishing 4th.
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:
Answer: Trump’s win should be the headline
Tia, I think it will, rightly, still matter to DeSantis or Haley whether they finish second tonight. But I think the main takeaway from tonight should definitely be Trump’s win, with second place relegated to a subheadline or something. Polling indicates that many Americans still aren’t aware (or are in denial, haha) of the fact that the 2024 general election will very likely be Trump versus Biden, and so we in the media need to make it clear how strong Trump is doing in the primary.
—Nathaniel Rakich, 538
In Iowa entrance polls, a warning for Nikki Haley
By this point it should be dawning on readers that Trump is very, very likely to win the GOP nomination. Not only is he up big in the polls — by about 50 points, according to our average — but he has a very clear path to winning a majority of delegates to the Republican National Convention in July.
What we can now add some hard data to is the question of why. Preliminary entrance poll data from ABC News show that 66 percent of Iowa caucusgoers think Biden did not legitimately win the 2020 presidential election — the de-facto top issue of Trump's campaign. And 63 percent said that Trump is qualified to be president even if he's convicted of a crime (vs. 32 percent who said no). Given the significance of this issue to Trump and his voters, the split leaves little path to a majority for Haley — at least if this holds.
What's more, Haley's electability pitch — she keeps saying she's up 17 points on Biden in the general, which is not quite right — seems to have fallen flat. According to the preliminary entrance polls, just 12 percent of caucusgoers said that it was most important to them that a candidate "can defeat Joe Biden." By comparison, 74 percent said they wanted a candidate who "shares my values" or "fights for people like me." Trump is running, for all intents and purposes, as an incumbent president and presumptive nominee. No other candidate is going to beat him at the "candidate like me" game.
—G. Elliott Morris, 538
Question: Is a momentum win still possible for Haley or DeSantis?
We've said from the start that the race to watch in Iowa was the race for second place, but does Trump's victory being projected only 30 minutes into the caucuses change the game? Does the speed of this projection cement Trump's inevitability as the night's main takeaway? Or could Haley or DeSantis still craft a winning narrative out of a strong second-place showing?
—Tia Yang, 538
Trump likely headed for a historic win in Iowa
Trump's polling lead in Iowa was more than 30 points, and preliminary entrance poll data suggested he has a large enough edge that ABC News projected he will win the caucuses. This suggests that Trump is on his way to setting a record: Prior to this year, the largest margin of victory in Iowa when the GOP didn't have an incumbent president was about 13 points: In 1988, when Bob Dole won the state and Vice President George H.W. Bush actually finished third (Bush recovered and went on to win the GOP nomination and the presidency). Trump looks likely to surpass that mark tonight.
Just one other race, the 2000 caucuses, had a winning margin of 10 or more points since the GOP started recording the statewide vote in 1980. Otherwise, it's always been a single-digit race. However, it's worth remembering that Trump's quasi-incumbency as a former president seeking his old job is unprecedented in the modern presidential primary era, which dates back to the 1970s. In light of that, it's less of a surprise that he's in line to set this record.
— Geoffrey Skelley, 538