What is a delegate equivalent? Or a viability threshold? The Iowa caucuses, explained. – USA TODAY

Thanks! Share it with your friends!

Close

DES MOINES – The day you’ve been hearing about for months is finally upon us: the Iowa caucuses.

Iowa’s first-in-the-nation caucuses on Monday kick off the start of the primary election season, and many Democratic presidential candidates have been zig-zagging across the state in the week leading up to the big night.

But the Iowa caucuses are different than other primaries, and there is some specific terminology you might hear Monday that seems sort of … odd. Well we’re here to help.

Here are some common questions about the Iowa caucuses, and what you need to know while waiting for the results: 

What is a caucus?

First things first.

A caucus is a party-organized gathering of members to discuss their presidential preferences, elect local party leadership and discuss issues that make up the party’s platform. 

The Republican and Democratic parties each hold their own caucuses, but they don’t use the same process.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2020/02/02/iowa-caucus-how-iowa-caucuses-work-and-terms-know-definitions/4588880002/

Comments

Write a comment