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The drawbacks of Iowa's caucuses

Ruth Marcus on

EDITORS -- This is written as a web item to be published no later than Monday, or until caucus voting begins at 7 p.m. Central.

DES MOINES -- Curt Johansen, 56, is leaning toward Bernie Sanders, but that inclination is irrelevant. Johansen works evenings dispatching mechanics to help truckers suffering breakdowns, which means he can't vote in Monday's caucuses, attendance required, with doors closed at 7 p.m. sharp.

Dustin Jividen, a 32-year-old printer, is all-in for Sanders, as is his wife. Will they caucus? Probably not. His wife works evenings, and Jividen would need to find a baby sitter for the kids, ages 3 and 8. "I don't think they would really appreciate standing around for a couple hours," debating the relative merits of Sanders and Clinton, Jividen said.

Pat Kerr, 64, a receptionist at H&R Block, supports Hillary Clinton. She won't be caucusing either. "I hurt my back," she said. "I can't hardly even walk."

Mary Bradish, 55 and leaning to Sanders, is one of the luckier ones. Her next chemotherapy isn't scheduled until Wednesday; if it had been a few days earlier, her compromised immune system wouldn't allow her to be around so many people. "I totally lucked out," said Bradish, who works at Wells Fargo.

Welcome to my quadrennial rant against the caucus system. The theory is Norman Rockwell heart-warming: neighbors gathered in a communal enterprise of representative democracy. The reality is jarring, as illustrated by conversations with voters I encountered during a canvassing session with Sanders volunteers Saturday afternoon.

 

The unforgiving demands of the caucus system serve to intensify the voice of the parties' most committed, and therefore likely most extreme, voters, as others are deterred by the seemingly arcane and time-consuming process. Meanwhile, caucuses disenfranchise nurses, firefighters and others working the night shift, although both parties took steps this year to offer some opportunity to participate for members of the armed forces.

Not surprisingly, the system produces anemic turnout. In 2008, with open contests in both parties, 347,000 Iowans voted in caucuses, compared with 526,000 primary voters in New Hampshire, with less than half the population.

This comparison isn't perfect -- independents can vote in the New Hampshire primary; Iowa caucusgoers must register for a party, although they can do so on-site. But the fundamental point remains: In contrast to the welcome trend of easing participation, for example by expanding early voting, the caucus system makes it harder.

In addition to rekindling my hostility to caucuses, my experience trudging along with the Sanders' volunteers offered a sobering ground-level view of campaign operations in an era of supposedly sophisticated, data-driven politics. The Sanders volunteers were high school seniors from Minneapolis; they had taken the bus that morning, along with 51 of their Blake School classmates volunteering on various campaigns (16 for Clinton, the rest for Republicans, primarily Marco Rubio.)

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