Pete Buttigieg holds thin lead over Bernie Sanders in Iowa

Bloomberg Updated - December 06, 2021 at 03:13 PM.

However, the Democratic Party’s head has asked the State party to retabulate the results.

Pete Buttigieg, former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, and 2020 presidential candidate, at an event in Iowa. (File photo)

Pete Buttigieg holds a razor-thin lead over Bernie Sanders in the Iowa caucus with 100 per cent of precincts reporting.

Buttigieg had 26.2 per cent of state delegate equivalents to Sanders 26.1 per cent, according to official results. Elizabeth Warren had 18 per cent, Joe Biden had 15.8 per cent and Amy Klobuchar had 12.3 per cent. Other candidates were far behind.

The

Associated Press , whose race calls are considered official, said on Thursday that it would not declare a winner in the Iowa caucus because of the tight margin and the irregularities in the caucus process.

The final count was delayed for three days because of problems with a smartphone app that precincts used to report results and because of phone lines jammed by supporters of President Donald Trump and a large volume of calls due to the apps failure.

 

Both Buttigieg and Sanders have declared victory in Iowa, based on different yardsticks. Buttigieg leads in state delegate equivalents, which the party will use to determine delegates to the Democratic National Convention.

Iowa awards 41 pledged delegates to the convention, a little more than 1 per cent of the total. But it has held outsized influence because its the first opportunity for voters to have their say in the 2020 election cycle.

Sanders is leading in the popular vote. In the first round of caucusing on Monday night, Sanders led by more than 6,000 votes. In the second round, that lead shrunk to about 2,600 votes.

Delegates can differ from popular votes because of rounding, coin flips, and a process that weights some precincts more than others based on how many Democrats have voted in previous elections.

Buttigieg said he is happy with the result no matter how the final delegates are allocated. “I’ll leave it to the party to get into that, but you know what I’ll say is nothing can take away what happened on Monday,” he told CNN . “It’s an extraordinary moment for the movement that we have built and now were looking ahead to New Hampshire and beyond.”

New Hampshire holds a primary on February 11.

Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez has asked the state party to retabulate the results, citing the problems that caused the three-day delay.

Published on February 7, 2020 06:07