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>> announcer: the following program is a special presentation of the big ten network, produced in association with the university of iowa.
Big Ten Network To Go, [ cheers and applause ] >> well, on caucus night, people get up out of their living rooms.
they drive down to the local school or to a public building of some type, walk in, and, at least this time around, what they probably encountered were huge lines... >> i just need to change my party. >> ...because they had to sign
in, and twice as many democrats showed up as were predicted or at least as showed up last time, and the republicans also had a substantial increase in turnout. >> perfect? >> perfect. [ indistinct conversations ] >> i'm gonna have you throw one
out. >> i pledge allegiance to the flag of the united states of america and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under god, indivisible... >> the republicans and the democrats do it a little bit differently.
the republicans' caucus is a little bit more straightforward. you get in, you take care of a little bit of party business right at the front, and then people stand up and talk on behalf of their candidates, and then they have a vote. >> i guess the strongest thing
with john mccain is probably his defense. he knows our country. he knows the war on terror. he was one of the first people to come out and call them islamist terrorists, i guess, or islamist... i think, extremists.
our president still doesn't call them that. >> and it's, in that sense, pretty much like a regular vote that you would have in a primary, although we write a person's name on a ballot. sometimes, if it's a smaller precinct or if the precinct
chairman is a little more organized, you might have a printed ballot, but normally you just vote, you count them up, and then that's it. you go on to other party business. >> mike huckabee. ron paul.
john mccain. >> i think it was in '96 was my first one, where it took us three hours to finish all of our after we had the presidential-preference poll, we went on to the delegates and selecting members for the county central committee and then
platform planks, and that was the one that usually takes a long time, because a number of people then want to submit things, and people want to discuss them. you have a vote. you may have to tinker with the language a little bit to get it
to a point where at least the majority agrees with it. and we went through that this year very, very quickly, and so i was amazed that with the large number of people that we had, we still got through very, very fast. >> romney got 7.
ron paul -- 10. john mccain -- 8. mike huckabee -- 8. no votes for any other candidates. >> caucuses are a very long and complicated process where you're gonna spend an hour or two on one evening, and there's no
absentee balloting. there's no way to record a preference except by coming to the caucus meeting on that night at that time, and if you're not there when you have to be there, then you don't get to participate. so caucuses are a much more
demanding method of expressing a preference than a primary. that's why most states have primaries. >> a primary -- the difference is it's an actual election, so it's exactly like a general election in the way that it happens.
so you go to your polling place, you go into the voting booth, you pull your lever or, you know, punch your button or whatever, and that's how you do it, so it's secret ballot. the caucus -- the biggest difference is it's not secret. even when you're a republican
and you're putting in a straw poll, people can see what you're putting in. and for the democrats, it's extremely unsecret. >> democrats have a 15%-threshold rule, which means if your candidate has less than 15%, you have to reorient
yourself, and so they go through a realignment process and then count, and according to the percentage of the vote in each precinct, you get a certain number of delegates to the next convention. >> the university of iowa offers students a world-class
education. for over 160 years, we've earned our place among america's great schools. >> i was a little apprehensive about walking in for the first time tonight. and i looked around to see if anybody i knew was watching me
come in, but people here have been so great, and i'm looking forward to the process. it's a different process than the republicans. the republicans are a little more sedate in their deliberations. and i understand that this could
turn a little raucous. >> pretty much, you go into a large room -- hopefully a large room. you sit down or stand under the sign of the candidate that you support with other people in your precinct and your neighborhood who also support
that candidate. if you're lucky, there might be some cookies or some coffee, or it may take a while to get everybody signed in. >> right now, i'm just a greeter and a shepherd, so right now i'm standing by the door -- right. well, i had to come in, but i'm
standing by the door and just telling people where they're going. i'm telling everybody where they are. but i'm telling the edwards people definitely come this way. i'm so sorry. >> sorry. can we sneak in?
>> absolutely. >> thank you very much. >> no problem. i'm glad we could get them where they needed to go. >> our attendance number is 719. >> then the caucus chair calls it all to order, and the first thing after taking care of some
party business, like asking for money, because you can't have a caucus without asking for money, you go on to the presidential-preference process. >> then at this time, you need to move to your preference group. >> for the democrats, the
preference process includes literally getting up and moving, something very hard to do in the really crowded rooms sometimes, but it's getting up and moving when the caucus chair says to move and sends people to different corners of the room or to out in the hall or to a
different room entirely so that you can be counted. >> as i count you, drop your hands, okay? 1, 2, 3, 4, 5... >> and this is literally a matter of standing up to be counted for your candidate. at that point, someone will try
to count you, and given the numbers that occurred all over iowa, that counting process can be a little complicated. but someone will try to count you. they will get a final count. once that count is done and reported, the caucus chair will
indicate which candidates are viable and which are not. >> edwards -- 159, viable. gravel -- 1. [ laughter ] kucinich -- 46, not viable. >> how many was it? >> obama -- 302. >> viability, of course, simply
means having enough supporters there to reach the minimum threshold, generally 15%, but it's actually a little higher in some precincts. the candidates who are viable, lots of cheers, lots of excitement. everybody's thrilled.
the candidates who are not viable, it's a little more of a challenge. they have to start thinking about strategy at that point. >> ...have a plan that we need to readdress as a group before anybody comes in. >> you come talk to us, and
that's the offer we have on the table. >> here's a fact. edwards, obama -- they don't need us. they've got more people than they need. >> the nonviable-candidate group can just try to stay together
and attract other people, try to attract other candidate groups or uncommitteds or even people from the viable groups to join them to make them viable. or they can end up splitting up, dispersing individuals just wandering off to different or they can go as a group and
say, "let's join another nonviable group, and we'll be uncommitted together." >> unviable groups are agreeing now, if we agree with them, to come together to be a huge undecided. >> uncommitted. >> uncommitted -- i think it's
called "undecided." okay, and so if we stand with the undecideds, we'll actually have delegates, undecided delegates. >> we'd love to have you come and join the richardson people. >> so, let's just do a quick straw poll.
>> we all knew that. i bet a lot of people in this room knew that invading iraq was a terrible idea, and obama was the only one who spoke out and said, at some political risk, "this is a very terrible idea. you can't do this." >> but the real dynamics, the
real interesting part, are the people who are wandering around, trying to convince you to change your position. as you stand with the nonviable group, you will be the most popular person in the room for a very short period of time, as everybody comes by and says,
"come join us. come join us. you know, you don't want to go there. you want to go here." >> we're uncommitted right now, but we're going to decide in three minutes. >> come and join our group. yeah.
>> the bottom line, though, is in all this strategizing, all this running around, there's about 30 minutes of time in which people are milling about, trying to decide what they're going to do, eating more sandwiches, eating more cookies, you know, drinking some lemonade
or coffee, and, generally, chaos reigns for a while. >> [ chanting ] join obama! [ clapping rhythmically ] join obama! >> the precinct leaders are trying to keep their folks together, particularly groups that are close to viability.
>> so, if you are not into ranks of 10, you need to get into it. >> for how long? >> well, it's gonna be a little while. being a democrat stinks. >> i watched in a caucus as an edwards-precinct person did everything she could, short of
tying ropes around the group, to keep them all in one place so they wouldn't lose anyone. they were short just a few people of being viable. ultimately, they became viable when the entire biden group moved over to edwards. so a lot of this is going on.
it takes about half an hour, at which point the chair will say, "the realignment's over. what's your count?" >> we don't have a number yet. >> 26%. >> i was told that they might need one more, and i was willing to change from obama.
>> okay. i think we're teetering on the edge, so one second. >> i know. >> okay. >> we need reports. >> if there are any nonviable groups left at that point, those groups must disperse. it's over for them.
only the viable groups get to continue. and folks from those nonviable groups might go home. they might literally just leave, or they might disperse into other groups. but the bottom line is that you get a final count.
you know how many are supporting each candidate. each remaining candidate is viable, and the caucus chair then does the math calculation, with precinct leaders for each candidate looking over his or her shoulder to make sure it's done right, and awards the
>> and clinton -- 57. >> edwards -- 169. >> obama -- 177. >> congratulations for pulling this off. don't leave if you're interested in resolutions and electing delegates to the convention and delegates to platform
committees. we've got more fun ahead. >> so we now have the delegate numbers. the precinct chair calls it in. the caucus chair calls it in to the state party, so the numbers get called in while the groups actually elect people to be
those delegates. once that's done, most people leave, but a few hearty souls stick around. maybe 5% of the people who went to the caucus stick around to do a whole bunch of party business -- electing local party officials, voting on resolutions
to build the platform and things like that, another half-hour or so of work, and then it's over. everyone goes home. the chair is left to clean up. >> so, it's not until 1972 when all of the energy is devoted to getting the voters to be involved and express a popular
preference rather than a party preference that iowa is discovered as being the first state with a popular expression of preference, and so iowa now gets all the attention. >> i didn't understand why a caucus should be first, because traditionally, when you think of
a caucus, you think low participation, not representative of the rest of the nation as to who goes to a caucus, regardless of what state it's in. and then you put it in iowa, which is lily-white and midwestern, and you know that it
just maybe wasn't the most representative -- at least that's what i thought before i got here. but having watched the process, i think the people of iowa take it very, very seriously. >> it's part of a four-stage process -- precinct caucuses,
county conventions, district conventions, and a state convention, all of which eventually lead to electing delegates to the national well, in order to do that, you need time in between each event. and the party rules in the democratic party changed after
1968 to increase the amount of time required. by accident, that pushed iowa early. >> because they've been first in the nation for so long, they're used to what they need to do, and they really go to the rallies.
they really pay attention to what's going on. they're very informed. i mean, it was freezing cold the night of the caucus, and the line at my caucus was out the door and around the corner. >> new hampshire has been first in the nation virtually forever
and guarded that zealously. well, the iowa caucuses -- no one went to them. no one cared. it didn't matter. and then suddenly they were first. and in becoming first, george mcgovern's campaign and,
even more so, jimmy carter's campaign in 1976 took tremendous advantage of that. the media paid attention, and we began to snowball. >> thank you! >> ...robots of the world want you to apologize. >> get out of here!
[ audience booing ] >> you need to find more environmentally responsible ways to protest than throwing graffiti. >> the interesting thing about the caucuses and, i suppose, what makes them important to the process as a whole is it gives
the candidates an opportunity to engage in what we call "retail politics," and that means getting out and meeting the people. >> read it on the plane. >> listen, i know what you're talking about. i -- is your phone number on
here? put your phone number. i'll call you. >> if there are some candidates in a -- this is true pretty much of all candidates when you get later in a campaign -- where it's such a big operation that the best they can do is come in,
give a speech to 400, 500 people, 1,000 people, depending on the size of the venue, and they really don't get that opportunity to meet the people, meet the individuals who are going to be casting those votes or going to those caucuses early in the process.
and so this gives them that opportunity to do that and to find out what's on people's minds. i mean, "what do you want to know about? what issues are important to you?" >> ...that we help our science
and math by not neglecting the arts in the elementary schools. >> yeah, i'm pushing that big -- art in the schools. >> yes. >> a big federal effort. i will do that. >> you can have these polls. you can have all this thing and
another thing, but you don't hear those stories from individual people, whether it's something that was a terrible kind of story or something that's inspirational, whatever it happens to be that you want to hear that from those people. >> four weeks later, i got the
birthday card back in the mail marked "return to sender, casualty department, u.s. army," yet another reminder that he was gone. i took that card and i went to the store and i bought two helium balloons. i drove to his grave.
i sat beside him. i attached that card to the balloons. i let it go. i watched it drift up into the sky and on along the breeze. [ voice breaking ] we're gonna bring them home. we're gonna bring them all home.
>> and i think that's important for the candidates, because otherwise, if they're just sort of showing up at an event, they see this sea of faces out there, but they don't really make that connection to understand that, "look, i'm going to be leading real people, not just this sea
of faces or not just, you know, unknown votes that are out there on election day." >> ...a documentary on -- >> on the caucus? >> we love candidates who love iowa, so -- >> it's hard not to right now. >> can you just tell us a little
about your experience in iowa? >> i think the iowa caucuses are very important because it means that people like me, who don't have the funding of some of the others, still can be competitive. if we lose that, we don't just lose the iowa caucus.
we lose the potential of the presidency of being a people's presidency and it becoming a plutocracy. be the worst thing that ever happened. and to have to become president, you should earn it, not buy it. and one of the reasons that this
is such an important part of the path to the presidency is that in iowa, they're just not that impressed 'cause you have money. they want to know what are your ideas, and i really think the country's interests are involved in preserving the caucus. >> thank you.
>> why is iowa important? iowa's important primarily because it's first. whoever was first would have this attention because it is the very first time that voters get to weigh in on the candidates, and in this day and age of the permanent campaign of large,
huge, frankly, fundraising efforts of tremendous media- and consultant-driven campaigns, the media's going to pay attention to where the first votes get cast, no matter where they are. >> i can hear you. can you hear me, and why can't
you hear me? is romney set up or not? ask if romney is set up. >> is romney set? >> you've talked about going negative in south carolina and said, "put some good in there if you have to with the bad. do what you got to do."
did you say that? >> she's discovering this neighboring state of new hampshire. >> there were so many folks here, much more media attention, and occasionally, then, as people were talking to me, they would say, "well, what do you
think about the national media? what do you think about all of this attention, and, you know, what caused it?" well, i think the thing that mainly caused it was the fact that we had very interesting races on both sides of the aisle.
>> the process of who gets attention is really an interactive process. i mean, it starts with media buzz. it starts with public-opinion polls. it starts with campaign contributions.
and out of those sort of straws in the wind, you begin to get a sense of, "well, which candidates are the serious candidates? which ones are not?" >> senator, this way. >> the issues are gonna make the difference.
and i think you got to look at what has transpired in the national defense just in the case of pakistan last week. >> ...near-record turnout here in iowa. there are lines around the block, overcrowding of caucus centers, and a lot's gone into
it -- $50 million spent on tv ads alone in iowa. >> ...the senator from iowa also running for president. but the difficulty is... >> yes, electability usually does mean... >> and if you can get the press to reorient itself from saying,
"oh, this is somebody who's running" to "this is somebody who could be the next president," then you've really taken a big step towards improving your chances of running. >> ...comunidad de aquellos que eran residentes a que se
hicieran liberanos. >> yes, the polling numbers for the people who have dropped out -- talking 457 votes -- the polling numbers -- i didn't either. last night, i was running my model. i was actually predicting.
i'm not showing... >> the reason polling matters to the media is they need a new story every day. they've got -- even in the internet age, you've got -- actually, maybe even more so in the internet age, you got space to fill.
you got people to get. you've got eyeballs to attract, and to attract those eyeballs, you got to have something new. polling gives them something to talk about that's relatively easy. and the story has a tendency to write itself as long as the
pollster presents it well. >> i don't know. i mean, the polls haven't been particularly accurate this time around, and i don't know that they were so inaccurate here in iowa. i mean, they were actually pretty dead-on in that it showed
that it was pretty dead-on -- i mean, that particularly the democrats were so tight together, it was really hard to predict who was gonna win, and, in fact, that's what happened. but they've been so bad otherwise. particularly in new hampshire,
they were really bad and in some other places, and i think this year, they just didn't estimate how many young people would come out and kind of different types of people that would come out. and so their sample was just flawed in who they were getting, and, i mean, it's really hard to
sample, and particularly here in iowa, it's hard to sample caucusgoers, 'cause it's hard to figure out who's gonna actually go, and most of the time, they're doing the sampling based on who went in the past. and so if people didn't participate in the past, you
don't know to go ask them. >> and so the fact that the polls jump all over the place in the iowa caucuses isn't because the pollsters do a bad job. it's because the key question, "are you going to caucus?," is virtually impossible for people to answer before the caucuses.
they can say they're going to caucus, they can say they're not going to caucus, but caucus night, you got to get out at the same time. it might be cold. it might be snowy. it might be who knows what. there might be something going
on in your life. and so it's just really hard to find folks. >> i read where the des moines register came out with a poll right before the caucuses, and a lot of people wanted to dismiss the results. they showed obama in the lead.
but their profile of who was gonna vote didn't fit preconceptions. there was too many young people. there were too many independents. there were too many first-time caucusgoers. and this was -- that would have
been an unusual turnout, and therefore, the conclusion, the inference, was this was an incorrect sample and, therefore, the results aren't reliable. well, as it turned out, the des moines register got it right. there was a very high turnout of
first-time caucusgoers. there were a lot of young people participating, a lot of independents registering as democrats and as republicans. >> okay, we had the iowa results and the iowa caucuses. how did that affect what was going on in new hampshire?
did, in fact, huckabee spike up? yes, he did a little bit. how about mccain? mccain also got a surge, 'cause those were the two that were seen as doing really well in iowa, and they got a bit of a bump in new hampshire, even though new hampshire voters will
tell you, "oh, no, iowa results didn't affect us at all." but it does a little bit because they get a little bit more media attention, and so now people are looking at those candidates again if they hadn't supported them initially. so, the polls make a bit of a
difference, but you do have to take them with a grain of salt. >> aside from enjoying everything on a stick at the iowa fair, which is always a great joy here, the thing i think i've carried away the most is i love the independence and the notion that iowans, i think
this time and historically, as well, make up their own minds. i mean, they're being told all the time by people who spend here deciding what you're going to do on a caucus night, and you have proven over and over and over again you make up your own minds, and that's a good thing
for america. >> thank you. governor? >> well, i've studied the history of the iowa caucuses. what i like best about iowans is you like underdogs. >> if we're talking about a debate and you're listening to all these candidates speak, then
you might listen to them unfiltered, speaking for themselves, and go, "gosh, i really don't think that's my guy." i mean, if you go back to 2000, the famous sighs by al gore offscreen -- he's not even in the picture -- but george bush
is answering a question, and al gore's going... [ sighs ] and that really hurt him, because it gave an impression of who he was to the voters that was hard to overturn. you can't, with an ad, undo the impression that you make with
that, and in the same way, in a debate, it's uncontrolled. >> with relatively little foreign-policy experience of your own, how will you rely on so many clinton advisers and still deliver the kind of break from the past that you're promising voters?
>> well, the -- you know, i am -- >> i don't want to hear that! >> well, hillary, i'm looking forward to you advising me, as well. i'll want to gather up talent from everywhere. >> to me, the debates didn't
seem to be effective until it got down to maybe six, but five would be better, and i know that some of the debate organizers took some criticism for not allowing some of the second- or third-tier, if you want to call them that, candidates -- in other words, the people that
were not polling very well -- in one party or another. >> congressman paul, what's the biggest obstacle standing in the way of improving education? >> do i have to raise my hand to get a question? i'd like to address that question.
>> i'm getting to you. >> no, you're not. you haven't in several go-rounds, so i have to make an issue out of it. i would like to address the question of education. >> go ahead. >> i don't wish it to pass on.
>> please, you have 30 seconds. >> they had a minute. why do i get 30 seconds? see, your unfairness is now becoming so apparent that the voters in iowa must understand there's a reason for it. and the reason for it is what i'm about to say.
>> sometimes it's a matter of format, if you're going to have a very small location or the type of sitting-around-the-table, talking kind of a thing. but just to have nine -- eight, nine candidates onstage all at the same time, then nobody's
really doing a great job, and it makes the process not as effective and not as useful to the people that are deciding -- ultimately, the voters. >> are you ready to caucus? 'cause hillary's ready to lead let's hear it for our
nominee h.r.c. >> no, he's just our family pet. >> another parrot for peace. >> is he going to the caucus? >> he'll caucus when we do. >> there's more coming. a bloody america. i spit on you.
>> thank you all so much. man, we couldn't get -- we couldn't get another human being in here with a shoehorn. thank you for coming, all of and i also want to say, for those of you who haven't looked, it's amazing. we got all these people looking
in through the windows. >> the organization is you have a precinct captain in every precinct. that's a volunteer operation. you have people who are jazzed enough to get out on cold days and knock on doors and make their phone calls even though
people hang up on them and get out and do stuff. and in this way, the grassroots nature of iowa is something that used to be standard for politics. but presidential campaigns got away from them when they went to spending so much money on
television. all the money went to it didn't go to building organization and volunteers. and, nationally, that's still true. even in iowa, people were speculating that media was going to matter a lot more than
organization. in the end, you can't fight a really committed corps of volunteers who are iowans. howard dean tried to build this, but he brought a lot -- he brought 4,000 people in from out of state to knock on the doors. mike huckabee didn't do that.
mike huckabee had real iowans doing whatever they did to get votes out. >> it's the way that we keep track of the people we call. we have a status sheet where it's complete calls, bad numbers, and then our question one is "who's your first choice
for the republican nomination?" question two is "who is your second choice?" and then our third question is if you'll be going to the iowa caucus or not. and then each candidate is assigned a certain letter. so it makes it very easy.
we scan them through a machine. and we keep track of who's supporting who, and then right before the iowa caucus, we call all of our supporters, make sure they go caucus for rudy. >> i'll have to get some more information about that, but i know for sure that there's great
childcare providers for that evening. so there's no reason why you can't participate. >> hey, is this daniel? >> facebook has become so politically aware that there are so many different applications about u.s. politics, or you can
go on record and say, you know, "this is who i'm planning on voting for." and you can debate certain issues and take a stance. you know, you can see how you're indirectly affecting other >> ...and one democratic caucus. and they'll have nothing to do
with one another. i am on the board of directors at the league of women voters, and we're just educating people on the caucus process on a bipartisan level about the democratic and republican caucuses. i do them all over the state,
about one a day -- sometimes two a day. i have two tomorrow. i love this process, and i want iowa to be first, and i want people to participate. >> and then it was in '03 that we came up with the idea of having a coffee-bean caucus with
the iowa caucuses. we decided to have one bean, one vote and had mason jars for each candidate. as you get closer to the caucus, you start to see more of -- a lot of the staff coming in to eat, too, and then right after the caucus, we'll have quite a
bit of the political staff coming in, you know, before they move on to the next thing. >> iowans like people who are reasonably nice, that can get along with people, and care a lot more about accomplishing things and running our government efficiently than, you
know, just winning. >> see this handy-dandy list here. okay, so, let's see. yeah, i've seen biden. i've seen hillary a couple of times. i've seen dodd. seen edwards and his wife.
i've seen giuliani and huckabee and duncan hunter. i haven't seen kucinich, and i haven't seen richardson. i've seen ron paul and obama -- rode an elevator with him. seen mccain. seen romney. seen tancredo and thompson, too.
>> what's that there? >> oh, this is a summary. >> oh. >> it's put out by the iowa christian alliance. i'm an agnostic myself, but they put together a nice summary thing. you can have that if you want.
>> when we were at a mitt romney event at kirkwood, we actually walked out with the snowman right when mitt was onstage with the gentleman who was introducing him, so that got a big notice. >> and we got thrown out. >> yeah, we did.
we got thrown out. >> at the beginning of the campaign, they were just saying, "global warming's a problem, and we need to do something about it." well, by us asking specific questions, they realized that they have to answer -- be able
to answer those specific questions, and i think that's helped formulate their policy. >> and as a retired federal employee, i am really concerned about the fact that i'm being penalized and my social security is reduced because i am a civil-service annuitant, and i
did work for 10 years under social security, and i get $100 a month for that, which is a real pittance, as far as i'm concerned. i think that law is totally unfair, and it particularly affects women who have spent the early part of their career
trying to make sure their children were taken well care of. they didn't perhaps start their career with the federal government at an early age. >> i'm learning as i'm going. i've been looking on the internet, and i guess part of
what i've learned has been correct, but i also -- there was some confusion because i found more about democratic stuff, not realizing that it's done a little differently. i actually prefer this way from what i've heard. i was kind of worried about it.
i didn't want to have to go stand in groups. >> in bangladesh, we have two prime ministers in the last 15 years were all women. and in muslim country, you know, we could bring the woman as the head of the country, so i decided we can bring woman
president, the best country in the world, the united states of america, the first woman president. >> oh, i have a strategy that i don't want to reveal at this time. you know, as an independent, we like to make trouble.
>> i don't like politics. i just like people with vision. >> yeah, i saw him in muscatine earlier today at noon, and then 3:00, i was back here, getting my picture printed off, getting it signed. >> well, we have caller i.d., and if it's a poll, we answer,
'cause we're from iowa, and people care. >> you go to a basketball game, you can feel the energy in lieu of sitting in your chair and watching it on tv. hopefully all the people are getting out -- people standing outside, you know, peeking
through windows. you know, you can. you can feel it. and hopefully that translates over into tomorrow's caucuses and everybody gets out and does their thing and takes -- you know, takes it back, you know. change is a good thing.
>> and the easiest way to not get elected in iowa is to say something mean. you know, we would rather elect the wrong guy that's nice than the right guy that's a jerk. and, you know, that's just iowa. >> ay, arriba y arriba ay, arriba
yo no soy marinero soy capitã¡n >> i wanted this. i want to take care of this community, and i want to go house-by-house with the people i know and talking about bill richardson and telling the people why i like him.
this is what i'm doing. this is what i do, and i think it's working. now, today, the people came. latinos came. >> and it looked the old-timers are here early, because they knew what was going on, and out in the hallway there, there's
probably another couple thousand people trying to get in here. and the thing that impresses me is that it's like i want to see the media take a look at this sort of thing, 'cause lately there's been criticism about, oh, a small state, unrepresentative, blah, blah,
blah, blah, blah. makes you sick. instead, it's a sense of "this is participatory democracy." it's exactly what it's supposed to be. this is what the candidates have to face. they have to run through this
obstacle course that is iowa, and they have to meet the people face-to-face, shake their hand, look them in the eye, tell them where they stand on things, and take the consequences. >> so, actually, this is my first caucus, and i think that learning about it, being part of
government and politics and everything in new york, it just boggled my mind how the whole process works, and i thought that it was really interesting, because in new york and other places, you know, when you have, like, a regular election, it's private.
>> so, i jumped in my car, and i left 80-degree weather back there in mississippi, and i drove here in the ice and the storm. i had to hang over in st. louis, and i got here. but my whole problem -- my reasoning for coming is because
i believe in hillary. so as i was in mississippi and watching the polls in iowa and new hampshire and south carolina, i was a little comfortable with her lead, but when barack obama pulled out the big dog, or the big -- what do you call it? -- the weapon of
mass destruction, i looked and screamed, "oh, no! it's oprah, the weapon of mass destruction! i got go to iowa and help hillary!" >> whoo! whoa! all right!
whoo! fired up! we're fired up! oh, yes, we are, iowa. we need some fire in iowa tonight. >> there's really not a lot of differences between women who participate in a caucus and men
who participate in a caucus, which is really unusual, because if you take the mass that could participate in any election, women vote at the same rate, but they tend to do things like wear buttons or put bumper stickers on their car or kind of proselytize the other people
about candidates at different rates, at kind of lesser rates. >> michael moore and paul krugman also are not allowed to endorse a particular they've also consistently gone for edwards, so... >> michael moore's not allowed to endorse a candidate?
>> in his letter today, he said, "i'm not endorsing a candidate." >> oh, he's allowed to. he just didn't endorse a >> well, then he fairly clearly endorsed edwards in his letter today. >> well, why didn't he endorse edwards?
>> the same reason as krugman. >> no, krugman works for the new york times. michael moore works for michael moore. >> okay. well, then, they're both endorsing edwards, for god's sake. >> i want to say something about
obama and healthcare. obama and edwards have very similar plans, and the thing about obama is that his is not mandatory. the reason it is not mandatory is so that people who cannot afford it will not be forced to pay for something that they
cannot afford. that is the main difference. no. >> that's why we like kucinich. >> yeah. [ indistinct talking ] >> ...out of the plan and increase the price for all the rest of us in it.
you do the right thing and pay for it. >> i actually was going to leave. i was gonna go to spain. but i changed my ticket so i could stay and caucus. it's just tremendously important, and my vote here is
worth, i don't know, 200 in any other state or -- i lived in boston for a while, where, as a democrat, my vote meant nothing, really. so, it's nice to have some serious influence. >> i think in the end, the iowa caucuses mean whatever we want
them to mean in any given cycle. they are, in fact, the first test of candidates. but for the most part, political scientists have a hard time proving, statistically, that iowa matters. now, the reality is i think the political scientists are just
wrong. i think the models that political scientists build don't really take into account very well the unique factors that are iowa. in iowa, they had lots of television commercials, even more stuff in their mailboxes,
more people knocking on their doors, candidates talking to them personally, and so they have a huge amount of information to work from. the result is they have a very different view on the campaign than national voters who haven't yet had a campaign to respond
to. so it isn't that iowans are brilliant in some ways, although maybe they are. what it really is is that iowans have this opportunity, and through years of experience, they take it very seriously. >> okay, these are the numbers.
obama -- 384. edwards -- 169. >> mitt romney -- 7. duncan hunter -- 0. >> ...in politics, just like a new day is needed in american government. and tonight, it starts here in but it doesn't end here.
it goes all the way through the other states and ends at 1600 pennsylvania avenue one year from now. >> it has been just a pleasure to campaign here, although, you know, the weather's kind of like chicago. but i love iowa.
and i'm grateful to iowa, and because of iowa, we might just win this thing! we might just win! >> and the river's still flowing but i don't know, don't know which way it's flowing in the middle of the road
think about me >> what i believe is hand-to-hand grassroots democracy. -- captions by vitac --www.vitac.com >> announcer: the preceding program was produced by the university of iowa in association with the big ten
network.
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