Stlkofta said:
FireAg said:
LMCane said:
Phatbob said:
FireAg said:
That's a very defeatist attitude...
You're basically saying DeSantis can't win the nomination...
I disagree...but he is going to have to attract some from the Trump base to be the nominee...
I don't think he can't win the nomination, it's just going to be difficult. He's going to have to do it without the only-Trump faction of the party that insist on taking this whole thing down with them.
If Desantis can win Iowa -
the entire calculus of the national election changes the same day.
Based on what?
Ted Cruz is on Line 1 for you...
Winning Iowa would be a boost to his chances, but winning Iowa is a poor indicator for clinching the R nomination...
Based on dynamics.
In 2016, no one anticipated Trump was going to do what he ended up doing in the primaries. Caught the field flat-footed, Cruz included.
For the establishment Republican, Cruz was a despised outsider. They were not going to rally around him early in the process regardless of how he did in Iowa or the other primaries.
In 2024, Trump is the front-runner without question. Those who do not want Trump as the nominee will be looking to coalesce around an alternative as early in the process as possible.
The winner in Iowa or perhaps New Hampshire, under those conditions, has a far better chance of getting that advantage of consolidation than Cruz did in 2016.
Trump rolls those early primaries like Tom Osborne's Cornhuskers in 1996 and 1997, then any hope of a relevant opposition figure emerging as a contender is done and dusted.
Perhaps...but precedent in the R nomination process says otherwise...
Winning Iowa does not preclude you from winning the nomination, but on the R-side, it definitely doesn't point toward an assured path to victory at the convention:
2020 - Donald Trump (Trump)
2016 - Ted Cruz (Trump)
2012 - Rick Santorum (Romney)
2008 - Mike Huckabee (McCain)
2004 - W Bush (unopposed)
2000 - W Bush (W Bush)
1996 - Bob Dole (Dole)
1992 - HW Bush (unopposed)
1988 - Bob Dole (HW Bush)
1984 - Ronald Reagan (unopposed)
1980 - HW Bush (Reagan)
Only twice in the last 11 election cycles has the R winner of the Iowa Caucuses won Iowa
and gone onto win the R nomination, when competing against other contenders...
In the times where there was opposition in Iowa on the R ticket, the winner in Iowa went on to win a contested nomination just 29% of the time...71% of the time, the Iowa winner did
not win the nomination when contested... In theory, you could argue that Trump 2020 was "contested" in Iowa, but that was still a foregone conclusion as to who was going to win (Weld got 1 delegate to Trump's 39)...
Ronald Reagan competed 3X in the Iowa Caucuses...a man who all R's point to as standard for conservatism...he lost the Iowa Caucuses 67% of t time, with his only victory there being when he was the unopposed incumbent POTUS in 1984...