Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
International

Fighting in Iowa, Hillary Clinton fears repeat of 2008 loss

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Jan, 2016 12:44 PM
    CEDAR FALLS, Iowa — When Bernie Sanders rolled into Decorah, nearly 2,300 people were waiting for him.
     
    Chants of "Feel the Bern" filled the spirited hall from a crowd roughly equivalent to a quarter of the town's population. "If we have the kind of turnout that I hope we can," Sanders told the rally, "then we're going to win here in Iowa."
     
    Two days later, on Tuesday, Hillary Clinton received a far less raucous greeting in the same northeastern Iowa college town. A largely elderly crowd of 450 listened quietly, clapping politely at her applause lines.
     
    It's all beginning to resemble a bad flashback for the second-time Democratic presidential candidate, who once again finds herself barnstorming through the frozen stretches of Iowa with a diminished lead in the polls and an underdog rival on the rise. Then-Sen. Barack Obama upset Clinton in Iowa, jump starting his successful campaign for the nomination.
     
    "If you go to caucus on Monday night and stand up for me there, I will work my heart out for you as your president," Clinton said, urging her supporters to turn out for the Iowa gatherings in schools, churches and even private homes that open voting in the 2016 presidential campaign. "The stakes in this election are so high. "
     
    "None of this is easy," said Clinton, talking about President Barack Obama's work on health care but also alluding to the sweeping political changes being promised by Sanders. "This is really hard, slow, painful political work to get through the thicket of objections, of special interests and powerful forces."
     
    Her final days in Iowa are a sprint through Iowa's biggest cities and — more notably — small towns — as Clinton tries to stave off Sanders' effort to turn his late boost of enthusiasm into a strong showing at the caucuses.
     
    With stronger backing in college towns and urban centres, Sanders is hoping to expand his reach and undercut her appeal in more rural areas of the state.
     
    That leaves Clinton trying to reinforce her support in places like Decorah, a town of about 8,000. Obama easily bested Clinton in the county to win the most delegates in 2008.
     
    This year, the county has 11 state delegates up for grabs, out of 1,401 statewide — far fewer than the bigger population areas.
     
    But Obama showed that Iowa is won not by concentrating support but by picking-off a winning share of delegates in a broad swath of counties. Sanders aides know their prospects in the state depend on turning those screaming fans into caucus-goers, willing to sit through an hours-long process.
     
    Sanders tried to lower expectations Tuesday, telling AP that the notion he must win the caucuses is "mythology."
     
    "If I lose Iowa by two votes and end up with virtually the same number of delegates ... is that a tragedy? No," Sanders said aboard a charter flight to a rally in Duluth, Minnesota. "We are running a campaign that will take us to the convention and I'm very proud of the kinds of enormous gains we have made."
     
    But for Clinton, it wasn't supposed to get this close. In 2008, she campaigned hard in the state, despite recommendations from an aide who called Iowa "''our consistently weakest state" and urged her to focus elsewhere, according a leaked memo.
     
    But Clinton ended up finishing third behind Obama and former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards, and didn't come back to Iowa until 2014.
     
    Determined not to repeat her losing effort, her campaign arrived in Iowa early last year and quickly built up a sizable staff, led by some of the strategists who worked on Obama's 2008 bid. She's held more than 100 Iowa events since announcing her campaign in April. An army of celebrities, former Iowa officials and prominent party leaders has hosted dozens more.
     
    "It was mid-summer before Sanders had people on the ground," said Matt Tapscott, Democratic chairman of Winneshiek County, where Decorah is located. "She had the resources to put people on the ground early. They opened up an office early." Tapscott has endorsed Sanders and thinks he can achieve a strong finish.
     
    With Sanders rising in national polls, some Democrats close to the campaign now grumble that she is focusing too heavily on Iowa. They worry she'll be less competitive in later contests with far more delegates at stake.
     
    But former Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin, who is backing Clinton, said she was right to invest in the state and he expressed surprise at Sanders' rise.
     
    "It seems like in every caucus, there's always the unique, there's the new," said Harkin, who beat Bill Clinton in 1992 to win Iowa. "Young people tend to like new things. I think a lot of that is true of Bernie. He's unique, he's new, he hasn't been out for 20 years on the national scene like Hillary."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Vancouver Mining Executives Trapped In Their Rooms As Gunmen Stormed Mali Hotel

    Vancouver Mining Executives Trapped In Their Rooms As Gunmen Stormed Mali Hotel
    The B2Gold Corp. executives were in the Radisson Blu hotel in the capital Bamako when Islamist militants launched the attack Friday morning.

    Vancouver Mining Executives Trapped In Their Rooms As Gunmen Stormed Mali Hotel

    Modi Calls For New Global Resolve To Fight Terror

    Modi Calls For New Global Resolve To Fight Terror
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday called for a new global resolve to fight terrorism and spoke of the need for unimpeded commerce in the Asia Pacific and the Indian Ocean regions.

    Modi Calls For New Global Resolve To Fight Terror

    Donald Trump Says He Would 'Absolutely' Implement Muslim Database If Elected

    Donald Trump Says He Would 'Absolutely' Implement Muslim Database If Elected
    I would certainly implement that. Absolutely," Trump told an NBC News reporter between campaign events Thursday in Newton

    Donald Trump Says He Would 'Absolutely' Implement Muslim Database If Elected

    Russia Pounds Islamic State Terrosits With 'For Paris' Bombs

    Russia Pounds Islamic State Terrosits With 'For Paris' Bombs
    Unverified images have been circulating on the internet of Syria-bound US missiles bearing the handwritten inscription "From Paris with love".

    Russia Pounds Islamic State Terrosits With 'For Paris' Bombs

    Harjit Sajjan Defends Refugee Plan, Says Government Is 'Mindful' Of Recent Attacks

    Harjit Sajjan Defends Refugee Plan, Says Government Is 'Mindful' Of Recent Attacks
    HALIFAX — Defence Minister is defending the Liberal government's plan to resettle 25,000 Syrian refugees by the new year.

    Harjit Sajjan Defends Refugee Plan, Says Government Is 'Mindful' Of Recent Attacks

    Sikhs Visiting Pakistan For Guru Nanak's Birthday

    Sikhs Visiting Pakistan For Guru Nanak's Birthday
    Dozens of other Sikh pilgrims would arrive by air in Pakistan from different countries and then leave for Hasan Abdal town in Punjab province's Attock district.

    Sikhs Visiting Pakistan For Guru Nanak's Birthday