
Iowa Caucus Announces New Election Technology for First Caucus State
Iowa’s caucus is the first in the nation, but Iowa is also the first state trying out new technology during the election process.

Iowa’s caucus is the first in the nation, but Iowa is also the first state trying out new technology during the election process.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush will run for president in 2016, according to several senior aides who confirmed Thursday that the Republican would announce his widely expected decision in Miami later this month.

Democrat candidate Bernie Sanders, an underdog in comparison to his competitor Hillary Clinton for the 2016 presidential nomination, drew larger crowds over the weekend than Clinton did at an event Monday in New York City.

GOP presidential candidate Dr. Ben Carson’s campaign message – “We The People” – seems to be helping him climb in the polls.

LE MARS, Iowa (AP) — Rick Perry’s early, hands-on approach in Iowa contrasts with the 2016 presidential prospect’s failed bid four years ago, when he entered the race relatively late and stumbled in the debates.

Iowa’s Department of Public Safety won’t criticize Hillary Rodham Clinton’s campaign operatives for speeding across the state at speeds of 95 miles per hour, but criticized a reporter for the U.K. Daily Mail for going just as fast while taking video of his car’s speedometer earlier this week.

American Future Project, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal’s issues advocacy group, is running ads starting today in Iowa touting the need for protection for religious liberty in America.

Both MSNBC and the Brody File are reporting that, contrary to a previous Buzzfeed report, Jeb Bush does indeed intend to “campaign hard” in Iowa.

The Iowa National Security Action Summit this Saturday is expected to feature experts and leaders who will address the need to defeat jihad, border security, and the hollowing out of the U.S. military, among other topics, according to the organization hosting the event.

Hillary Clinton announced her candidacy for President on April 12, just over one month ago. Since then she has held meetings with hand selected Democrats but has only answered a total of 13 questions from the media. And frankly, some of those questions were softballs and some of Hillary’s answers were dodges.

A poll released this week by Quinnipiac University purports to show that Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton has “an early lock” on the Democratic nomination, “apparently undamaged by a nationwide flood of negative publicity.”

“Unaccountable money” in politics is a theme that Clinton has been pushing on the trail, seemingly unaware of mounting criticism of her own questionable financial activities while in a position of power.

DES MOINES, Iowa — Carly Fiorina kicked off her five-day tour this week through Iowa with a meet and greet in Council Bluffs – followed by a pit stop at Dairy Queen, not too far from the Des Moines area, where

Madam Candidate of the People was in her magical mystery conversion van, flying over the cornfields of Iowa this week taking enemy fire. This required evasive maneuvers that launched her coterie of handmaidens, purse-holders and security guards all around the plush leather cabin of the magical, age-reversing van.

By Friday, more of the secretive machinations used to plan the less than spontaneous meetings with purported “ordinary” Iowans arranged by Hillary Clinton’s campaign have been revealed.

They don’t have to see Hillary as a fantastic candidate in order to abandon their duty of opposing her, the way they’re supposed to oppose everyone who tries for high office, and America is supposed to be better-governed for it. They’re on autopilot, running tired ideological programs written decades ago.

More details about the behind-the-scenes orchestration of Hilary Clinton’s meetings with “ordinary” Iowans are leaking out.

As reporters literally ran to Hillary Clinton’s “Mystery Van’” campaign stops in Iowa on her first day of campaigning, what many did not report was that the “ordinary Americans” with whom she met for purportedly spontaneous discussions were actually plants. The meetings were scripted, pre-arranged affairs filled with people transported to the events by Hillary staffers.

Here’s the thing, reporters: it’s your job to remind Americans that Hillary’s under a thick cloud of scandal, and may end up under indictment, for running the off-the-books email server she was plugged into with that BlackBerry. It’s your job to remind American voters, over and over again, that Clinton jeopardized national security and deliberately violated transparency laws by doing this.

Hillary Clinton is on the road again. The Democratic candidate, who doesn’t drive, is riding in a van to Iowa.

Hillary finished third in Iowa the last time around, trailing a then-obscure senator named Barack Obama and a soon-to-be-disgraced former senator named John Edwards. This time, whether or not she faces any real competition, she’s prepared to pander properly to Iowans.

As Hillary Clinton prepares for her big announcement and her first trip to Iowa as a candidate, some of her rivals are already ahead of her in the Hawkeye State.

Donald J. Trump announced Tuesday that he has made three new hires in Iowa to join Chuck Laudner, who is considered to be one of the top grassroots strategists in Iowa.

Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) will be visiting Iowa and South Carolina this week, for a series of receptions and town halls as he seeks to connect with Republican primary voters in these critical early primary states.

Hillary Rodham Clinton’s campaign manager-in-waiting is traveling to the early voting states of New Hampshire and Iowa this week for meetings with Democratic activists as the former secretary of state prepares for a likely presidential campaign.