So Mitt Romney won Iowa by eight votes, giving him the Big Mo (thats momentum) as he marches forth into the primaries. What happened to Rick Santorums surge? Did a Dodge Caravan full of supporters break down on the way to the gymnasium? I mean, world history has pivoted on less.
About 123,000 people participated in the Iowa Republican caucuses. Thats only 19 percent of the states registered Republicans, who make up only 29 percent of Iowas 2.1 million registered voters. The Iowa total accounts for less than 2 percent of Americas 137 million registered voters.
Meanwhile, the caucuses are not especially voter-friendly. Participants have to arrive at a set time and listen with friends and neighbors to speeches for each candidate before casting their ballots.
The caucuses favor those who dont work evenings, dont have babies to breast-feed and can drive in the dark or have others who can drive them. They empower the strong-willed and turn off the privacy-minded.
The heavy weight given the caucuses is not the peoples fault, but that of media in need of news in the political quiet of the holiday season. They turn what should be an inconsequential and flawed expression of the peoples will into a rocket on which may ride the future leader of what we used to call the free world.
Santorums hopes were hardly dashed by Romneys one-short-of-a-baseball-team margin of victory. He had the good fortune to have been completely written off a few weeks ago, thus helping his performance land in the coveted better than expected category.
In such circumstances, one must always ask: better than expected by whom? In this case, its the fraction of a fraction of likely caucus-goers who had been polled over the last month. At various points, the surveyed few had rotated their affections among Rick Perry, Newt Gingrich, Herman Cain and Michele Bachmann. Perhaps Santorum entered the final days as the man-of-the-hour because it was he the minute hand was passing on caucus day. Santorum will now head to the next phase of the campaign with momentum, reports Politico. Oh-kay.
With more journalists dissecting the caucuses than voters for Romney, the commentators deserve commentary. The most potent review of the bunch comes from The New Yorkers George Packer. He marvels at how political reporters quickly began to regard Santorums loony remarks -- about Obama siding with evil in Iran or engaging in absolutely un-American activities -- as simply routine rhetoric. At that point, Packer observes, there isnt much for the political journalist to do except handicap the race and report on the candidates mood.
And that they did and will continue doing until the 270th electoral vote is counted.
My mood darkened considerably in the run-up to Iowa, as the few plausible Republican candidates felt obliged to disavow every position that I admired. For example, the individual mandate requiring almost everyone to buy health insurance makes supreme sense. The mandate was a necessary piece of Romneys health care plan for Massachusetts, but the former governor abandoned the concept after it became part of the Democrats national version. And why did Gingrich have to renounce that nice ad he made with former Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi promoting a bill to address global warming?
In the sad politics of our day, the consequential gets lost in a series of sideshows. Who turns up in the Iowa dark for the caucuses is all-important, not how representative they are. And what theyre turning up for seems to matter even less.











