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  • This was Iowa caucus night back in the mid-1970s.

  • And these are members of the national media covering

  • the voting.

  • It was so unusual to see national media in Iowa

  • back then that people actually paid to watch them.

  • The Democratic Party charged $15 a head for people

  • to watch the media watch the people.”

  • See, in previous years, Iowa’s caucuses

  • just hadn’t attracted national attention.

  • There are 3,000 frozen media members

  • in downtown Des Moines …”

  • Just over a decade later, Iowa is the place to be.

  • “… It’s Iowa caucus night.

  • Let’s party.”

  • [shouting]

  • The caucuses are now a key part

  • of the presidential election cycle.

  • Bush, 57.”

  • Theyre the first chance to see

  • what kind of support candidates have among voters.

  • So how did we get here, from caucuses that only Iowans

  • seem to care about to the national spectacle we

  • see today?

  • Turns out, a lot of it was accidental.

  • For most of Iowa’s history, its caucuses

  • were dominated by political insiders.

  • There was little room for input

  • from rank-and-file members.

  • An historian writing in the 1940s put it like this:

  • The larger number of party voters were deprived

  • of a voice.”

  • But the old ways start coming to an end in 1968.

  • The country’s in turmoil, and so is the Democratic Party,

  • mostly over the Vietnam War and civil rights.

  • Basically, the party establishment

  • wants to handle things one way,

  • and many rank-and-file members have other ideas.

  • All this comes to a head as the Democrats hold

  • their national convention.

  • Protesters gather outside.

  • So do police.

  • Inside, the mood is also tense.

  • All this division leads the Democratic Party

  • to rethink the nomination rules to include

  • the voices of all party members in the process.

  • This is how we come to the moment

  • when Iowa becomes key to electing a president,

  • basically by accident.

  • First up, how Iowa became first

  • to hold a presidential contest.

  • It starts with new rules to give everyday members

  • more of a say.

  • So by 1972, winning Iowa now involves four stages.

  • Iowans choose their top candidates,

  • first at the precinct level.

  • These are the caucuses at the heart of this story.

  • But technically, there’s further

  • voting at the county, congressional district

  • and state levels.

  • The new rules make things a lot more inclusive,

  • but this creates new delays.

  • Committees need to be formed, and everyone

  • needs to have up-to-date party materials.

  • The problem is, the state party only

  • has an old mimeograph machine to make copies of all this.

  • It’s really slow.

  • So because of an old machine and a bunch of new logistics,

  • the party decides it needs at least a month

  • between each step to do it all.

  • The national convention is set for early July,

  • so you’d think that the state-level convention would

  • happen about a month before, in June.

  • Except, the party can’t find a venue that’s

  • available to hold everyone.

  • That little detail helps push everything

  • earlier in a chain reaction.

  • See what’s going on here?

  • The precinct caucuses now have to happen early in the year.

  • The party chooses a date that makes

  • Iowa’s the first presidential contest.

  • The New Hampshire primary has been the first kickoff

  • contest since the 1950s, but Iowa Democrats

  • aren’t necessarily looking for national attention.

  • They just think itll be fun to be first.

  • Still, attention is what they get.

  • The story begins with George McGovern.

  • People didn’t know much about the Iowa caucuses.

  • As a matter of fact, there wasn’t a great deal

  • of interest in them.”

  • He’s the long-shot candidate.

  • He’s been at the bottom of national polls.

  • He often walked the campaign trail alone,

  • little known by the voters.”

  • Most people think this guy, Edmund Muskie,

  • is going to be the big winner in Iowa.

  • That challenge is great, but we can meet it.”

  • Then comes caucus night.

  • As the people vote, state party officials

  • gather at their headquarters.

  • Richard Bender is one of them.

  • And we had about 10 or 12 press people show up.

  • These press people included one guy, Johnny Apple.”

  • Johnny Apple, a 37-year-old political correspondent

  • for The New York Times.

  • Iowa’s Democrats aren’t ready to publicize the results

  • right away.

  • They hadn’t expected much demand.

  • According to Bender, only Johnny Apple

  • asked for them that night.

  • “I happen to be fascinated with such things,

  • so I made it my business, beforehand, to understand it.”

  • Bender sets up a phone tree to gather results

  • from across the state.

  • He adds them up himself with a calculator.

  • And the next day, Apple’s article

  • helps swing the national spotlight onto the caucuses.

  • He’s got quite the story to tell.

  • Muskie’s won, but just barely.

  • Not the runaway win people were expecting.

  • And McGovern comes in a strong second.

  • No one expected that, either.

  • The reformed caucus rules helped a long-shot candidate

  • rise to the top.

  • And because this is happening so early in the election now,

  • and because Apple’s article gives the results

  • national coverage, something else happens.

  • That got picked up by some of the national news shows.”

  • The Democratic front-runner has been damaged in Iowa.”

  • And wow, all of a sudden, we were

  • being paid attention to.”

  • McGovern eventually wins the Democratic nomination.

  • “I accept your nomination with a full and grateful heart.”

  • He loses the presidential election,

  • but some haven’t forgotten what those early caucuses did

  • for McGovern, including Georgia’s former governor,

  • Jimmy Carter.

  • Three years later

  • There was a major headline on the editorial page

  • of the Atlanta Constitution that

  • said, ‘Jimmy Carter’s running for what?’

  • [laughter]

  • And theWhatwas about this big.

  • [applause]

  • I’m running for president.”

  • Carter heads to Iowa before any other Democratic candidate.

  • He’s got no national profile.

  • He didn’t have hordes of press following him around.

  • It was a very lonely campaign.”

  • Washington pundits call his candidacy laughable.

  • “I remember when we couldn’t find a microphone.”

  • Jimmy Who?” becomes a catchphrase.

  • Carter’s own campaign film plays it up.

  • Jimmy who?”

  • “I don’t know who he is.”

  • But as long as Iowans come to know him and like him,

  • Carter bets that the media will

  • start paying attention, just like with McGovern

  • four years earlier.

  • Carter campaigns as locally as possible.

  • One day, he learns that he’s been invited on a local TV show.

  • And I said, that is great.

  • I can’t believe it.

  • I said, ‘What are we going to do?’

  • He said, ‘Do you have any favorite recipes?’

  • And I said, ‘What do you mean, recipes?’

  • He said, ‘Well, this is a cooking show.’

  • Well, they put a white apron on me and a chef’s hat.

  • That was my only access to TV when I first

  • began to campaign in Iowa.”

  • His opponents are in Iowa, too,

  • but they spend far less time there.

  • Carter wins.

  • Surprisingly top of the class after his win

  • in a somewhat obscure race in Iowa against the others.”

  • You can’t tell until we go to the other 49 states,

  • but it’s encouraging for us.”

  • A year later

  • “I, Jimmy Carter, do solemnly swear —”

  • he becomes the 39th president.

  • Now we need to head to 1980 because we haven’t talked

  • about the Republicans yet.

  • Here’s the state’s Republican chairman that year.

  • He’s asked why Iowa’s caucuses have become so important.

  • “I think because Jimmy Carter got his start in Iowa

  • in 1976.”

  • The Republicans in Iowa are keen to copy the Democrat’s

  • success, and one candidate in particular

  • gets inspired by Carter’s underdog win:

  • George H.W. Bush.

  • He's running against Ronald Reagan, Bob Dole

  • and others,

  • and he’s near the bottom of the pack.

  • Your name isn’t really a household word,

  • but Ronald Reagan can —”

  • But Bush goes big in Iowa.

  • He gets a surprise win.

  • It’s a far cry from just months before.

  • “I was an asterisk in those days.

  • And my feelings got hurt.

  • And now, I’m no longer an asterisk.”

  • Bush is now the third underdog to get

  • a boost from the caucuses.

  • The next morning on CBS, he distills the essence

  • of this new Iowa effect.

  • We will have forward, ‘Big Moon our side,

  • as they say in athletics.”

  • “ ‘Big Mo?’ ”

  • Yeah.

  • Momomentum.”

  • Bush loses to Reagan, but becomes vice president.

  • And the desire to capture theBig Mofrom Iowa

  • has only grown, thanks in large part

  • to Iowa’s embrace of being first, and the media storm that

  • descends every four years.

  • That’s despite the fact that most candidates who win

  • This is a job interview.”

  • don’t become president.

  • Plus, many point out that the state’s overwhelmingly white

  • population doesn’t reflect the country’s diversity.

  • “I actually think that we can find

  • places that represent that balance

  • of urban and rural better.”

  • But the race to get theBig Moout of Iowa

  • persists because it’s the first chance

  • to upend expectations, and put political fates

  • in the votershands.

  • Hey, this is Dave. I'm one of the producers who worked on this video.

  • Because no one was really paying attention to the Iowa caucuses before the mid-70s,

  • it was actually quite difficult to find archival material.

  • We spent countless hours looking.

  • But that just goes to show how the importance of Iowa we take for granted today

  • essentially came out of nowhere.

  • A total accident.

  • Over the next few months we'll be following the 2020 election carefully.

  • Tell us what you want to know.

  • Keep watching. And subscribe to The New York Times.

This was Iowa caucus night back in the mid-1970s.

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