Stop whining about Iowa and NH


By Jonathan Bernstein

Bloomberg View

Every four years we hear it: the many, many complaints that Iowa and New Hampshire are unrepresentative of the nation yet they get to go first in presidential voting. Black, Hispanic and Asian voters are scarce. There are no major cities.

But if you accept that the parties choose nominees, it doesn’t matter which states vote first. And Iowa and New Hampshire are really national, not local, battles.

It isn’t as if a representative sample of all Democratic or Republican voters chooses the parties’ nominees anywhere. Those with clout are the most active members, at the state and national levels – the politicians, campaign and governing professionals, donors and activists, formal party officials and staff, party-aligned interest groups and the partisan press.

Volunteers who travel to Iowa or New Hampshire to participate have the time to do so and, unless campaigns subsidize it, the money to afford it. Campaign staff and political consultants have complex incentives they do not share with ordinary voters, and the donors have their own motives.

All of them are far more involved in politics than ordinary voters are. Iowa was and New Hampshire is chock-full of party actors from all over the country.

Some states have to go before others, and there are advantages for the parties in stability. If primaries and caucuses are mainly used as sources of information about the candidates, then it’s important for that information to be easy to understand. Party actors with experience (and even media veterans) know how to read what is going on in Iowa and New Hampshire.

Switching to two other states would require learning about different idiosyncrasies. Rotating which states go first, as some have suggested, would be even worse because no one would ever know how to interpret events.

Specific parts of the process can be fixed or improved. Iowa’s caucuses are run in a shockingly amateurish way, as New York magazine columnist Ed Kilgore has detailed. The state of Iowa should take over what have tr aditionally been party-run contests.

A state-run system would make it easier to address another complaint about the caucuses: that they unfairly limit participation to those who can show up in person. There’s no reason the caucuses couldn’t accommodate absentee voting, and the state is in a better position to administer it.

In the end, the real reason why Iowa and New Hampshire should continue to go first is that they’ve gone first for decades. And instead of arguing whether voters in those two states are representative, the better question is whether the Democrats and the Republicans nationally are sufficiently open to new voices and new interests. That’s a discussion worth having.

Jonathan Bernstein is a Bloomberg View columnist. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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