Trump wins Iowa caucuses, DeSantis finishes second ahead of Haley | CNN Politics

The latest on the Iowa caucuses and 2024 primary campaign

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Looking at Iowa map shows why 'this is a surprise'
02:52 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • Trump dominates in Iowa: Former President Donald Trump won the Iowa caucuses by an unprecedented margin, kickstarting his bid to win the Republican Party’s presidential nomination for a third consecutive time.
  • DeSantis finishes second: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis edged out former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley for a distant second-place finish. The attention now shifts to New Hampshire where the next primary contest will take place Tuesday.
  • GOP field narrows further: Entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy and former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson suspended their campaigns after poor performances in Iowa.
  • Trump in court: Meanwhile, Trump was back in a New York courthouse Tuesday for his second E. Jean Carroll defamation trial as he continues to juggle his campaign and legal calendar. He’s headed to New Hampshire this afternoon to campaign.

Our live coverage has ended. Read more about the 2024 campaign in the posts below.

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Here's how quickly the candidate fields narrow after the Iowa caucuses

Former President Donald Trump won 98 of 99 Iowa counties in the Iowa caucuses Monday and outperformed his 2016 results. He heads into next week’s New Hampshire primary having claimed more than 50% of the vote, the biggest win in caucus history.

Crowded candidate fields often narrow rapidly following Iowa and New Hampshire, which have long been the first two contests on the presidential nominating calendar. In 2016, out of the 11 major Republican candidates who competed in Iowa, it was just over 90 days before Trump was the only one left standing. (CNN is defining major candidates as those receiving more than 1% of the vote in the Iowa caucus. By this standard, Asa Hutchinson, who suspended his campaign on Tuesday after securing only 161 votes, isn’t included in this chart.)

In 2020, the Democratic presidential field quickly narrowed in the weeks after Iowa and New Hampshire: Andrew Yang left the race after the New Hampshire primary; Tom SteyerPete Buttigieg and Amy Klobuchar exited in advance of Super Tuesday; and Elizabeth Warren left after a disappointing Super Tuesday.

Eventual nominee Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders remained the final two candidates until April, when Sanders dropped out. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, who finished second and third in Iowa with 21.2% and 19.7% of the vote, need strong showings to stay in the race.

DeSantis event in Claremont, New Hampshire, canceled due to unsafe driving conditions

An event for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in Claremont, New Hampshire, hosted by the super PAC Never Back Down, has been canceled due to weather and unsafe driving conditions, according to a PAC spokesperson.

Reporters, including those from CNN, had already arrived at the event – where DeSantis was scheduled to be – when the cancelation was confirmed. The attendees who showed up are being notified.

DeSantis is in New Hampshire and will be at the CNN town hall at 9 p.m. ET tonight.

Senator from Iowa won’t say if she’d endorse Trump after he won caucuses in her home state

Sen. Joni Erns talks with media after a policy luncheon on Capitol Hill on Tuesday, January 9, in Washington, DC.

Republican Sen. Joni Ernst of Iowa on Tuesday would not say whether she would endorse former President Donald Trump after he won the Iowa caucuses Monday night by a wide margin. 

“I’m going to do everything I can to make sure that President Joe Biden does not occupy the White House,” she told CNN’s Manu Raju on Tuesday. 

When asked about Trump’s viability given the criminal allegations against him, she said: “You know he did pretty darn well in Iowa. And I think you might see that continue. So, here we go. Get ready.” 

Earlier this week, the Republican senator said she’d been courted by nearly all the candidates for her coveted endorsement but did not rule out endorsing Trump if he won the nomination, though she said she was bothered by Trump’s use of the word “hostages” to describe people jailed for their role in the January 6 insurrection.

ABC News cancels Thursday GOP debate in New Hampshire

ABC News has officially canceled their debate scheduled for Thursday in New Hampshire. The network had set a 5 p.m. ET deadline for Donald Trump and Nikki Haley to respond.

ABC News and WMUR-TV had planned to host the debate at Saint Anselm College in Manchester, New Hampshire.

The news of the debate’s cancelation comes after Haley said Tuesday morning that the next debate she will participate will be either with Trump or President Biden.

Ron DeSantis has accepted invitations to participate in ABC’s debate and a CNN debate, scheduled for January 21 at New England College.

CNN’s Ali Main contributed reporting to this post.

House GOP conference chair calls on DeSantis and Haley to drop out of race

House GOP Conference Chair Elise Stefanik, one of former President Donald Trump’s most loyal allies on Capitol Hill, is called on Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley to drop out of the presidential race Tuesday after Trump’s landslide victory in Iowa.

In the run-up to the Iowa caucuses, Stefanik – the first member of GOP leadership to endorse Trump – had been lobbying her colleagues to back Trump, as CNN previously reported.

Key things to watch for at DeSantis’ CNN town hall in New Hampshire tonight

Republican presidential candidate and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis participates in a CNN Republican Town Hall moderated by CNN’s Kaitlan Collins at Grand View University in Des Moines, Iowa, on Thursday, January 4.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is getting right back to work Tuesday, a day after his second-place finish in the Iowa Republican caucuses, making his case to voters at a CNN town hall in New Hampshire tonight at 9 p.m. ET after a brief stopover in South Carolina.

Here are four things to watch for in his CNN town hall:

  • His answers about Iowa: DeSantis spent big money and a lot of time in Iowa, which, in theory, should have been ripe for his conservative message. But he finished only slightly ahead of Haley. So what went wrong in Iowa? In the week before the caucuses, DeSantis began to attack right-wing media organs for their kid-gloves treatment of former President Donald Trump. Even then, it’s hard to hand-wave a 30-point loss and a failure to win any of Iowa’s 99 counties. New Hampshire has a very different electorate, as does South Carolina (to a lesser extent), but candidates want to tell stories. What kind of story will DeSantis tell about his disappointing returns in the Hawkeye State?
  • The expectations game: Unlike in Iowa, DeSantis will enter New Hampshire as an underdog. He says he likes that role, but after underperforming his initial expectations in Iowa, his campaign is in desperate need of good news. The Florida governor will likely try to paint a picture of what success for him in the Granite State looks like – and it will be instructive to see where he sets the bar.
  • Does DeSantis go harder at Trump? CNN’s entrance poll in Iowa showed DeSantis in a stronger position than Haley among conservative voters — especially those looking for a candidate who shares their values. What the Florida governor has never figured out, though, is how to chip away at Trump’s lead without alienating more of those conservative voters than he’s attracting.
  • DeSantis’ case against Haley: Haley has long viewed New Hampshire as a springboard for her campaign — a state where a win could effectively turn the GOP primary into a one-on-one race between Trump and his former US ambassador to the United Nations. But DeSantis sent the signal Tuesday that he isn’t leaving anytime soon by traveling to South Carolina before continuing to New Hampshire.

Read more about things to watch for in DeSantis’ CNN town hall.

Trump campaign seeks to blunt Haley’s rise in New Hampshire 

Donald Trump’s campaign is shifting focus to New Hampshire and sharpening its attacks on GOP rival Nikki Haley as it seeks to combat her recent rise in the polls, which has been fueled largely by support from independent and moderate voters.

In recent weeks, Trump’s campaign launched a series of television ads attacking the former South Carolina governor on immigration, something Trump’s team views as a top issue for Republicans in New Hampshire. 

“One reason was to instill a ceiling with Republicans and right leaning independents,” a senior Trump adviser said of the ads. 

The campaign also released ads hitting Haley on her calls to reform social security and Medicare, with the intention of reaching independent and left-leaning voters.

According to the adviser, Trump’s team believes that potential Haley voters in the state are moderate to left-leaning independents who are able to vote in the primary. A recent CNN poll had Haley trimming Trump’s lead down to single digits, winning 55% of self-identified moderate voters, while Trump secured 60% of those who identified as conservative. 

Advisers to Trump insist the former president will win the New Hampshire primary, however, they have expressed some concern over Haley’s recent poll performance. Originally, Trump was only slated to do a few events in New Hampshire between the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire’s primary, but he has now added events almost every day before the ballots are set to be cast on January 23.

Trump advisers also said that they believe that Vivek Ramaswamy’s exit from the primary race can only benefit Trump.

Haley says the US has "never been a racist country"

Nikki Haley during a Fox News town hall in Des Moines on January 8.

Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley claimed the US has “never been a racist county” during an interview with Fox News Tuesday. 

Haley’s remarks were in response to MSNBC Joy Reid’s comments on whether Haley could win the GOP nomination as a woman of color. Haley suggested Reid “lives in a different America than I do,” pointing to her own rise as the daughter of immigrants to governor and UN ambassador.

“I mean, yes, I’m a brown girl that grew up in a small rural town in South Carolina who became the first female minority governor in history, who became an UN ambassador and who is now running for president. If that’s not the American dream, I don’t know what is. You can sit there and give me all the reasons why you think I can’t do this. I will continue to defy everybody on why we can do this. And we will get it done,” Haley said.


When asked by “Fox & Friends” host Brian Kilmeade if the GOP is a racist party, Haley made a broader point that the US have “never been a racist country.”

“We’re not a racist country, Brian. We’ve never been a racist country. Our goal is to make sure that today is better than yesterday. Are we perfect? No. But our goal is to always make sure we try and be more perfect every day that we can,” Haley said. 

“I know, I faced racism when I was growing up. But I can tell you, today is a lot better than it was then. Our goal is to lift up everybody. Not go and divide people on race or gender or party or anything else. We’ve had enough of that in America,” she added.

A Haley campaign spokesperson looked to clarify those comments later Tuesday, saying “America has always had racism, but America has never been a racist country. The liberal media always fails to get that distinction. It can throw a fit, but that doesn’t change Nikki’s belief that America is special because its people are always striving to do better and live up to our founding ideals of freedom and equality.”

More context: Haley had previously faced criticism for failing to mention slavery when initially asked by a voter about the cause of the Civil War during a town hall last month. Following mounting backlash, Haley said “of course” slavery was the cause of the Civil War, adding she assumed it was a “given.” The former South Carolina governor on Tuesday said her motivation for running for president is to prove gender or race don’t act as a deterrent. CNN has reach out to Haley’s campaign for comment.

Why these Haley supporters in Iowa are ready to vote for Trump in November

Nikki Haley speaks during a caucus night watch party in West Des Moines, Iowa, on Monday.

CNN is tracking the 2024 campaign through the eyes and experiences of voters who live in key places or are part of critical swing voting blocs. Four members of our Iowa group settled on Nikki Haley for the Iowa caucuses and were disappointed by the results.

Betsy Sarcone is a single mom and real estate agent in the Des Moines suburbs.

When we first met last summer, she groaned at the prospect of a Biden-Trump rematch but said this: “That’s really hard. But I’d have to go Biden, honestly, I just, I can’t put my rubber stamp on Trump having more influence over this country.”

Now, though, a switch.

“I expected a Trump landslide,” said Shanen Ebersole, a cattle farmer who was among the few in conservative Ringgold County who voted for Haley. As the campaign moves on from Iowa, this was her hope: “The real question is who can beat Biden. That’s what Republicans need to focus on.”

Here’s what else these voters had to say after the Iowa caucuses.

Analysis: Trump outperformed in every county on his way to a decisive victory in Iowa

Former President Donald Trump’s commanding victory in the Iowa Republican caucuses confirmed the writing on the wall — a committed core of the party will follow him into the freezing cold or anywhere else.

Voters braved wind chill that reached the negative 30s to appear at their caucus sites. However, the turnout, according to uncertified results, was down by about 41% from 2016 — the last time Trump faced a crowded field of rivals. The drop was reflected in all of the state’s 99 counties.

Trump pursued an incumbent’s strategy of staying above the fray of the campaign in Iowa. While he made appearances in the state, he skipped debates and appearances with other candidates.

The decision paid off. He ran more strongly among most demographic groups of Iowa caucus-goers than he did in 2016 – men, women, college graduates, non-college graduates, White evangelicals and conservatives. They all turned out for him.

Here’s a look at his performance:

Keep reading for more analysis of Iowa entrance polls.

Here's what some voters are saying about DeSantis after a campaign stop in South Carolina

After finishing second in Iowa, Ron DeSantis made a campaign stop in Greenville, South Carolina, on Tuesday morning.

CNN spoke to some voters present at the event. Here’s what they said:

Billy Cash said he arrived as an undecided voter, but after hearing the Florida governor, he may be inclined to vote for him. “I was really impressed by DeSantis,” Cash said. “My main issues are the border and getting rid of people from the administration in there now.”

Zhe Little said he showed up to see the candidate he already planned to vote for in the primary next month. “I feel he actually talks a lot about what matters to the South Carolina voter. We’ve seen what he’s done for Florida and his policies. I believe he can do it on a federal level,” Little said.

Bill Burgess told CNN he and his wife are leaning toward DeSantis right now, and the Florida governor’s military experience appealed to him. “He’s the only candidate that was in the military. I was in the military and I have an affinity for folks that were in the military,” he said. “I think they have a different level of consciousness than the regular candidates.”

Manchin says any third-party bid would likely come after Super Tuesday, also vowing to "never be a spoiler"

Senator Joe Manchin is seen in Manchester, New Hampshire, on January 12.

Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin, reacting to former President Donald Trump’s landslide Iowa victory, said he wouldn’t run on a third-party ticket if it would help elect Trump — but also said voters are clamoring for an alternative as he warned President Joe Biden to shift his policies to the ideological center.

Manchin acknowledged it would be “extremely tough” to win as a third-party candidate but that “you’ve never had this many percentage of people within their own party structure that are looking for something different.”

He said there’s time for him or another independent to run since there is no primary campaign for a third-party candidate. He expects a final decision would be made after Super Tuesday on March 5 when millions of Americans cast their votes.

Manchin also said that Monday’s results in Iowa show Trump’s base is “pretty much immovable” and “no matter what he does, no matter how egregious it is to our society or to our country, it seems to embolden him.”

Harris dismisses concerns over winning Black voters

Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at a voting rights event in Atlanta on January 9.

Vice President Kamala Harris attempted to brush off concerns that President Joe Biden’s campaign is struggling to win Black voters, a key constituency behind his 2020 election win, but said the campaign will look to communicate policies championed by the Biden administration to those voters.

“We’ve done really good work; our challenge will be to let people know who (brought) it to them,” Harris told ABC News in an interview airing Tuesday.

Earlier this month, Democratic Rep. Jim Clyburn told CNN he was “very concerned” about Biden’s standing with Black voters, acknowledging in an interview that the Biden campaign has not “been able to break through that MAGA wall in order to get to people exactly what this president has done.” 

Harris acknowledged that communicating that message to Black voters who might be inclined to sit out 2024 would pose a challenge.

She also hinted that the campaign will likely go on the offensive against former President Donald Trump as the 2024 general election ramps up in the coming weeks.

DeSantis pledges to "work hard" in South Carolina and predicts winning delegates in Nevada

Ron DeSantis takes questions from reporters after a rally on Tuesday.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Tuesday said South Carolina is an important state and and blasted former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley for “not competing” in Nevada.

Nevada’s Republican presidential caucuses will be held next month, weeks before the South Carolina GOP primary.

“(South Carolina) is her home state; if she can’t win this, then I don’t see, you know, how she can say she’s going to win … on Super Tuesday or any of those other states,” DeSantis said.

DeSantis said he would “work really hard” in South Carolina, a state where he acknowledges his campaign hasn’t spent a lot of money yet.  

“We’ve got a good footprint, But I think you’re gonna see us be present more, not just in terms of me being in the state more, but also terms of paid media, where we’re going to be able to tell our story,” he later told reporters in Columbia, South Carolina.

He argued that there’s “a lot of real estate between now and the South Carolina primary in terms of political time” that will allow narrative shifts in the race.

View the 2024 election events calendar.

Supporters line up in the snow for Trump’s return to New Hampshire

Supporters of Republican presidential candidate and former President Donald Trump wait in line during a winter snowstorm to enter a campaign event in Atkinson, N.H., on Tuesday, Jan. 16.

Hours before former President Donald Trump returns to New Hampshire, a line is already starting to form outside Atkinson Resort & Country Club.

Some people were lined up just before 11 a.m. ET, and within an hour, that number had already grown to a few dozen.

Supporters are bundled up as they wait to enter the venue. Temperatures have remained below freezing throughout the morning with a steady stream of snow, although temperatures are not nearly as record-breaking as they were in Iowa.

Donald Trump supporters wait in line to enter a campaign event in Atkinson, N.H., today.

Trump is scheduled to speak at 5 p.m. ET in his first visit to the Granite State after winning the Iowa caucuses on Monday night and making a stop in New York Tuesday to attend the opening of his second E. Jean Carroll defamation trial.

DeSantis rips Haley for not committing to Thursday debate and says he’s "the alternative" to Trump

Republican presidential candidate Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis takes questions from reporters after a rally on Tuesday, Jan. 16, in Greenville, S.C.

In his first campaign appearance post-Iowa, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis criticized 2024 opponent Nikki Haley in her home state for failing to commit to a debate in New Hampshire – a state he says she won’t win – though he wouldn’t explicitly say if he would beat her in South Carolina.

DeSantis said the Iowa caucuses prove he is “the alternative” for voters seeking a different option than Donald Trump, not Haley, who he says won’t appeal to core conservative voters.

DeSantis said this is something Haley can’t do.

Claiming Haley doesn’t gaggle with press or take questions from voters, DeSantis said, “They basically have her hermetically sealed, because, you know, she’s got this problem with ballistic podiatry, shooting herself in the foot all the time.”

Haley does take voter questions, though she does not gaggle as regularly as DeSantis on the trail.  

“That’s just not going to fly. We’re supposed to have a debate on WMUR on Thursday night. I committed to it. She now is saying she’s not going to debate, and I understand why,” DeSantis said. 

"We can't go through 4 more years of chaos," Haley tells CNN in her post-Iowa pitch

Nikki Haley, former ambassador to the United Nations and 2024 Republican presidential candidate, speaks during a caucus night watch party in West Des Moines, Iowa, on Monday, Jan. 15.

After coming in third in the Iowa caucuses, Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley is looking ahead to New Hampshire — where her support has grown dramatically — and arguing that she is a better candidate than former President Donald Trump because America “can’t go through four more years of chaos.”

She said reelecting Trump or President Joe Biden would mean America has “more of the same,” citing their age and investigations “that are distractions.”

Haley also said she intends to accept debate invitations if Trump is on the stage. Earlier Tuesday, she said that the next debate she will participate in will be either with Trump or Biden.

“There is nobody else I need to debate,” she said. “I have had five strong debates and have done plenty of them. He can’t hide forever. At some point, he’s got to get on a debate stage.”

Biden campaign says Trump victory in Iowa reflects "threat to our democracy"

Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during his Iowa caucus night watch party in Des Moines, Iowa, on January 15.

The Biden campaign on Tuesday starkly framed former President Donald Trump’s sweeping victory in Iowa as a “threat to our democracy” looking to “consolidate his power.”

The communications director for the Biden campaign, Michael Tyler, told CNN Tuesday that the Biden campaign will “have the message necessary to defeat Donald Trump,” pointing to abortion, health care, as well as the former president’s dictator comments.

Asked to dig into the campaign’s takeaways on CNN entrance polling that suggested 65% of GOP caucus-goers in Iowa would still vote for Trump if convicted of a crime, and 31% would not, Tyler suggested it reflected both low turnout and Trump’s consolidation of his base. 

“Turnout wasn’t that high in Iowa, and what you saw was Donald Trump consolidates the extreme MAGA base in Iowa. The fact of the matter is, he is running, and all these candidates are running on an agenda that’s as dangerous as it is unpopular,” he said. 

He pointed to the 2022 midterm elections and 2023 off-year election results as evidence of Americans rejecting that agenda.

Asa Hutchinson suspends his presidential campaign

Republican presidential candidate former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson speaks at a caucus site at Horizon Events Center, in Clive, Iowa, Monday, Jan. 15.

Former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson announced Tuesday he is suspending his presidential campaign after a weak showing in the Iowa caucuses on Monday night.

“My message of being a principled Republican with experience and telling the truth about the current front runner did not sell in Iowa. I stand by the campaign I ran. I answered every question, sounded the warning to the GOP about the risks in 2024 and presented hope for our country’s future. Susan and I are blessed beyond measure, and we are grateful for the opportunity to have fought in the political arena for America,” he added.

Sununu expects "strong second" in New Hampshire for Haley

Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley is endorsed by New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu at a campaign town hall in Manchester, New Hampshire, on December 12, 2023.

New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu on Tuesday downplayed Nikki Haley’s third-place finish in Iowa and laid out an expectation for a “strong second” in New Hampshire — suggesting she could even surpass that and clinch the GOP primary on January 23.

Sununu, who endorsed Haley last month, told Fox News in an interview he didn’t think there was any “higher expectation” than Haley’s third-place finish in the Iowa caucuses.

“She was challenging Ron (DeSantis) for second when Ron put everything he had into Iowa. Ron hasn’t been in New Hampshire in a month,” he said. He added that Haley is “challenging to actually beat Donald Trump” in the Granite State, where he claimed she was “within single digits.”

As Haley has tried to consolidate a broad anti-Trump coalition in New Hampshire, where undeclared voters can vote in the GOP primary, Sununu concurred that the number of Democrats who had changed their party registration by the October 6 deadline to be able to vote for a Republican was “not significant at all.”