I'm not even sure this is a debate but I have a question and it's touching on politics so I'm putting it here. I understand that "the point" is an early read on candidates, etc. before the primary elections but, at the risk of offending people from Iowa, WHY IS IT IN IOWA?
The state of Iowa doesn't seem (to me) to be particularly representative of mainstream voters in either party. They're always saying it's way more conservative than mainstream Republican voters and I believe it's the same for Democrats. I believe there are also many fewer minority voters, urban districts, etc. and more rural districts than in the average state.
Now, maybe I'm an idiot and Iowa is actually super representative of the US voting population (and feel free to tell me so) but every election my reaction is "Why do we spend so much time focusing on the electorate in ONE, non-nationally representative state." I mean there are candidates that literally spend 2-3 years canvassing one state. Is this just a historical relic or is there a legitimate reason I should care what Iowans think any more than anyone else?
Can someone give me a civics lesson?
Thanks.
The state of Iowa doesn't seem (to me) to be particularly representative of mainstream voters in either party. They're always saying it's way more conservative than mainstream Republican voters and I believe it's the same for Democrats. I believe there are also many fewer minority voters, urban districts, etc. and more rural districts than in the average state.
Now, maybe I'm an idiot and Iowa is actually super representative of the US voting population (and feel free to tell me so) but every election my reaction is "Why do we spend so much time focusing on the electorate in ONE, non-nationally representative state." I mean there are candidates that literally spend 2-3 years canvassing one state. Is this just a historical relic or is there a legitimate reason I should care what Iowans think any more than anyone else?
Can someone give me a civics lesson?
Thanks.
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