IOWA's election results and the future
February 2 2016 By Abiodun Giwa
We wait, the day arrive and the results are known. Uncertainty over.Ted Cruz and Hillary Clinton emerge winners at the Iowa's election primaries balloting, Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders coming second. Are there any surprises in the results?
Some analysis show surprises in Cruz's defeat of Trump, Clinton and Sanders' earlier tie, before Clinton's razor thin victory.
The primary election has started and the end result about the candidates who would emerge as their party's nominees remains a goal for Clinton, Sanders, Cruz, Trump and Rubio.
Note that Rubio is in the third position in the Republican Party's results, and so he remains highly competitive like anyone else in the first three positions in the party's result.
Did Clinton anticipated almost a tie with Sanders in Iowa, where the polls have put him ahead of Sanders, and where Sanders played to catch up in the last two weeks before the election? Could Trump have defeated Cruz in Iowa against polls results two weeks before the elections that Had Cruz ahead, before he created a momentum that almost put him at a tie with Cruz, while some polls actually showed him ahead of Cruz? What chances have all these candidates as they go into the next round of the battleground states in New Hampshire?
Some analysts said that Sanders was supposed to have defeated Clinton in Iowa, but some other analysts disagree, saying that Clinton's fame and the New York Times endorsement of her as the most experienced of all the candidates on the day of the election removed the ground from Sander's feet. The optimists on Sanders' side see his performance against Clinton as showing that Americans are seeking newness and that whatever happens in New Hampshire, where Sanders is comfortably in the lead in polls ahead of Clinton will determine the battle ahead of Clinton and Sanders. Though some analysts think that Clinton will have the edge in states with large number of black voters.
Keen analysts said that if Trump had defeated Cruz in Iowa with the polls showing very early and all the way to two weeks before the elections and before Trump's fierce campaign in Iowa to upstage Cruz, they say Trump's victory in Iowa against Cruz would have been a big surprise. They say that the results show that the polling for the Republican candidates before the elections hold. Observers say that Ben Carson's accusation against Cruz's camp about the spreading of wrong information that he was withdrawing from the race and that such misinformation could have benefited Cruz cannot be ruled out, but that it is a game politicians play.
Observers say that the wonder of the Republican Party's election results is Trump's ability to snatch the second position in his party's Iowa's first balloting, considering that he is not a traditional politician, and that it is his first time to partake in such elections against traditional politicians. They say he has a momentum awaiting him in New Hampshire, just like Sanders.
Both Trump and Sanders will be going to New Hampshire with a determination to show that they are still in the reckoning as the elections go into the future. Of course, It is expected that Clinton and Cruz will give both Trump and Sanders a hell of challenge, despite their lead in the New Hampshire polls .
Some analysis show surprises in Cruz's defeat of Trump, Clinton and Sanders' earlier tie, before Clinton's razor thin victory.
The primary election has started and the end result about the candidates who would emerge as their party's nominees remains a goal for Clinton, Sanders, Cruz, Trump and Rubio.
Note that Rubio is in the third position in the Republican Party's results, and so he remains highly competitive like anyone else in the first three positions in the party's result.
Did Clinton anticipated almost a tie with Sanders in Iowa, where the polls have put him ahead of Sanders, and where Sanders played to catch up in the last two weeks before the election? Could Trump have defeated Cruz in Iowa against polls results two weeks before the elections that Had Cruz ahead, before he created a momentum that almost put him at a tie with Cruz, while some polls actually showed him ahead of Cruz? What chances have all these candidates as they go into the next round of the battleground states in New Hampshire?
Some analysts said that Sanders was supposed to have defeated Clinton in Iowa, but some other analysts disagree, saying that Clinton's fame and the New York Times endorsement of her as the most experienced of all the candidates on the day of the election removed the ground from Sander's feet. The optimists on Sanders' side see his performance against Clinton as showing that Americans are seeking newness and that whatever happens in New Hampshire, where Sanders is comfortably in the lead in polls ahead of Clinton will determine the battle ahead of Clinton and Sanders. Though some analysts think that Clinton will have the edge in states with large number of black voters.
Keen analysts said that if Trump had defeated Cruz in Iowa with the polls showing very early and all the way to two weeks before the elections and before Trump's fierce campaign in Iowa to upstage Cruz, they say Trump's victory in Iowa against Cruz would have been a big surprise. They say that the results show that the polling for the Republican candidates before the elections hold. Observers say that Ben Carson's accusation against Cruz's camp about the spreading of wrong information that he was withdrawing from the race and that such misinformation could have benefited Cruz cannot be ruled out, but that it is a game politicians play.
Observers say that the wonder of the Republican Party's election results is Trump's ability to snatch the second position in his party's Iowa's first balloting, considering that he is not a traditional politician, and that it is his first time to partake in such elections against traditional politicians. They say he has a momentum awaiting him in New Hampshire, just like Sanders.
Both Trump and Sanders will be going to New Hampshire with a determination to show that they are still in the reckoning as the elections go into the future. Of course, It is expected that Clinton and Cruz will give both Trump and Sanders a hell of challenge, despite their lead in the New Hampshire polls .