Statewide Iowa — The 2022 election may have just concluded, but the presidential politicking for the Iowa Republican Party’s 2024 Caucuses is well underway. During a rally a week ago in Sioux City, former President Donald Trump said he will very probably run again.
Trump easily carried Iowa as the GOP’s presidential nominee in 2016 and 2020, but Trump called for a recount after he finished second in the 2016 Iowa Caucuses. Despite that rocky period, Trump says he’s rejected calls from national GOP leaders to dethrone the caucuses from first-in-the-nation status.
Trump’s presence in the race may prompt other potential candidates to scuttle their presidential campaign plans. Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton, a frequent Iowa visitor, has already said he will not run in 2024, while others have publicly said if Trump launches another bid for the White House, they won’t run against him.
The first potential GOP candidate scheduled to be in Iowa after the midterm election appears to be Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson. He will speak next Wednesday to a central Iowa group that’s been host to many GOP presidential hopefuls of the past.
Iowa Democrats, meanwhile, await a decision in December from national party leaders who may move the Democratic Party’s Caucuses out of the first spot on their party’s presidential nominating calendar.