Politics

After Losing First-In-Nation Caucus For Being ‘Too White,’ Iowa Democrats’ Tuesday Isn’t Super

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In their coverage of Super Tuesday results, the usual suspects in corporate media mostly glossed over Iowa’s long-delayed Democratic Party caucus results, treating the Hawkeye State like the flyover country they and their pals in the Democratic National Committee deem it to be. 

Fitting treatment for the Democratic Party of Iowa, which puckered up on the posteriors long ago in deference to the DNC’s decision to bump Iowa from its first-in-the-nation presidential caucus position after nearly 50 years. The DEI-driven DNC decided Iowa was simply too white, not diverse, equitable, and inclusive enough to serve as the overture to the grand opera that is the U.S. presidential nominating process. 

Yes, there was some resistance — mostly in the form of weeping, wailing and the gnashing of teeth— by state party officials. Ultimately, though, as they grabbed another cup of far left Kool-Aid, many Iowa Dem party loyalists went along and got along. They might not have liked their relegation, but, effectively brainwashed in the cult of diversity, equity, and inclusion, they understood their white supremacy had gotten them to the front of the nominating line. Reparations were long overdue. 

Instead of Iowa getting together, as Republicans continued to do, in high school gymnasiums, churches, restaurants, and living rooms across the state to caucus for their favorite candidate, the state party submitted to a mail-in preference vote. While leftists’ love affair with vote-by-mail remains as torrid as ever, this preference card scene was nationally humiliating, for Democrats and Republicans, alike.

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