Iowa Caucuses: Trump Wins Big, DeSantis Trails, Ramaswamy Exits Race

Donald Trump secures significant victory in Iowa caucuses, positioning himself for a potential 2024 rematch with Joe Biden. Trump clinched 20 out of 40 delegates with a substantial lead of 32,840 votes, showcasing his enduring influence over the GOP. Notably, he extended congratulations to rivals Ron DeSantis and Nikki Haley while signaling a unified front. […]

Donald Trump secures significant victory in Iowa caucuses, positioning himself for a potential 2024 rematch with Joe Biden. Trump clinched 20 out of 40 delegates with a substantial lead of 32,840 votes, showcasing his enduring influence over the GOP. Notably, he extended congratulations to rivals Ron DeSantis and Nikki Haley while signaling a unified front. The Iowa results also marked Indian-American entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy’s exit from the race, with Trump garnering his endorsement. Despite legal challenges and indictments, Trump leads Biden in key swing states, setting the stage for a challenging yet formidable campaign ahead.

Notably, Trump kickstarted his bid to win party’s third consecutive presidential nomination despite skipping the GOP primary debates. The results also demonstrated how ‘devoted’ Republicans remain to Trump amid his highly unusual campaign — one being waged between court appearances, indictments and removal from ballots.
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis came a distant second with eight delegates and former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley finishing not much behind with seven delegates as the contest moves to New Hampshire, where the latter enjoys some clout.
Trump who came one step closer to the Republican nomination, deviated from his usual attacking style and congratulated his GOP rivals. He called DeSantis, Haley and Vivek Ramaswamy as “very smart people, very capable people”,

“It’s just so important, and I want to make that a very big part of our message: We’re going to come together. It’s going to happen soon, too,” Trump said.
Another major takeaway was the contest turning into a three-way race with Ramaswamy dropping out of his White House bid. However, Trump continues to lead with a whopping margin.
The Iowa caucus victory is considered the first step in Donald Trump’s bid to claim the Republican nomination in a third consecutive election. Incidentally, Trump had lost in the State eight years ago to Senator Ted Cruz, according to The Hill.
Also, the entrance polls showed the breadth of Trump’s support across the GOP’s key constituencies
53 per cent of White evangelical Christians backed Trump, to DeSantis’ 27 per cent and Haley’s 13 per cent — figures that underscore why Trump is the heavy favourite in South Carolina – where evangelicals make up a huge share of the party’s primary electorate – even though it’s Haley’s home state, according to CNN. Meanwhile, Haley and DeSantis, while speaking to supporters after Trump had taken his victory lap, both vowed to continue their campaigns.
Notably, Haley, is within a difference of single digits of Trump in New Hampshire, polls show, CNN reported.
She’s hoping to capitalize on a more moderate primary electorate there — and use it as a launchpad to effectively clear the field and position herself as the party’s lone Trump alternative.
“I can safely say, tonight, Iowa made this Republican primary a two-person race,” she told supporters.
As the race shifts to more favourable territory for Haley, she used her speech Monday night in Iowa to argue she’s the ‘antidote’ to a Biden-Trump rematch.
Haley argued that the majority of Americans disapprove of both the current and the former president and insisted that her campaign is “the last best hope of stopping the Trump-Biden nightmare.”
While she congratulated Trump on his win, she argued that the former president and Biden share “more in common than you think.”
“Trump and Biden both lack a vision for our country’s future because both are consumed by the past, by investigations, by vendettas, by grievances. America deserves better,” CNN quoted her as saying.
Florida Governor DeSantis, who was declared the second-place finisher in the caucuses told supporters that he had survived having “everything but the kitchen sink” thrown at him in Iowa, as he vowed to continue his campaign.
DeSantis campaigned very hard in Iowa, completed the “full Grassley” — visiting all 99 counties. But, ultimately, he was able to manage a distant second-place finish, behind a former president who hardly campaigned in Iowa and a late-rising rival who has long been much more focused on New Hampshire, CNN reported.
However, he’s entering what could be a ‘difficult stretch’, with polls showing him far behind Trump and Haley in New Hampshire. “We’ve got our ticket punched out of Iowa,” the Florida governor said.
DeSantis is set to visit South Carolina, Haley’s home state, on Tuesday before heading to New Hampshire, the arena of next GOP contest.

Another significant development after Iowa results was Indian-American entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy dropping out of the 2024 Republican presidential race after finishing fourth in the Iowa caucuses.
He has endorsed former President Donald Trump and urged Republican voters to put an “America First patriot” in the White House.
Taking to social media platform X, Ramaswamy stated, “This entire campaign is about speaking the TRUTH. We did not achieve our goal tonight, & we need an America-First patriot in the White House. The people spoke loud & clear about who they want. Tonight I am suspending my campaign and endorsing Donald J. Trump and will do everything I can to make sure he is the next U.S. President.”
The 38-year-old political novice said at a press conference at Des Moines, “There is no path for me to be the next president absent things that we don’t want to see happen in this country,” as reported by the Washington Post.

However, the road ahead is not easy for the former president as he continues to face substantial challenges to his campaign, including multiple criminal indictments and ongoing legal battles in courtrooms across the country.
In a handful of states, he even faces efforts to remove him from the ballot. Last month, the Colorado Supreme Court ruled that Trump is ‘disqualified’ from competing in the race under the 14th Amendment’s insurrection clause, finding that he violated his oath with his actions around January 6, 2021. But Trump has framed his legal issues as “political attacks” arguing he is the victim of a “witch hunt” as he vies for another term.
The next US presidential election is scheduled for November 5, 2024.