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Republican Party of Iowa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Iowa affiliate of the Republican Party

Republican Party of Iowa
ChairpersonJeff Kaufmann
Senate leaderJack Whitver
House leaderPat Grassley
FounderSamuel J. Kirkwood
Edward Russell
Founded1856; 169 years ago (1856)
Headquarters621 East Ninth Street
Des Moines, Iowa 50309
Membership724,939 (2021est.)[1]
IdeologyConservatism
National affiliationRepublican Party
Colors Red
Slogan"First in the Nation"
Seats in the
U.S. Senate
2 / 2
Seats in the
U.S. House
4 / 4
Seats in the
Iowa Senate
33 / 50
Seats in the
Iowa House
67 / 100
Statewide Executive Offices
6 / 7
Election symbol
Website
www.iowagop.org

TheRepublican Party of Iowa (RPI) is the affiliate of theUnited States Republican Party inIowa. The State Central Committee is chaired byJeff Kaufmann. The RPI operates the Republican side of theIowa caucuses and previously sponsored theIowa Straw Poll.

The RPI has rapidly gained ground in Iowa in recent years. It is currently the dominant party in the state,controlling all but one statewide executive office, both of the state'sU.S. Senate seats, all four of itsU.S. House seats, and supermajorities in both chambers of thestate legislature. Its main rival is theIowa Democratic Party.

Officeholders

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As of 2023, the Republican Party controls six of the seven statewide offices in Iowa and a majority in theIowa House of Representatives andIowa Senate. Republicans also hold both of the state'sU.S. Senate seats and all fourU.S. House seats.

Members of Congress

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The RPI has held both of Iowa's U.S. Senate seats since 2015. Since 2023, the RPI has controlled all of Iowa's congressional seats.

U.S. Senate

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Chuck Grassley, Senior United States senator from Iowa

U.S. House of Representatives

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DistrictMemberPhoto
1stMariannette Miller-Meeks
2ndAshley Hinson
3rdZach Nunn
4thRandy Feenstra

Statewide offices

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Municipal

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The following Republicans hold prominent mayoralties in Iowa:

State Central Committee

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The State Central Committee of the Republican Party of Iowa is composed of the National Committeeman and National Committeewoman, and representatives elected by the District Caucus from each congressional district.[2]

Executive officers

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The Republican Party of Iowa's State Central Committee also consists of several executive officers, including chairman, Co-chairman, State Finance Chair, and State Co-Finance Chair. These executive members do not need to be seated members of the state central committee. These members also do not have a vote on standard proceedings. The State Chairman may vote only in the case of a tie or to create a tie during a meeting which he is presiding over.[2][3]

Committees

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The Republican Party of Iowa is unique in that it has committees of the state party that can conduct local business. In particular, the party can have a Legislative Campaign Committee in each Congressional District with the purpose of helping Republicans win legislative races. In addition to the Legislative Campaign Committee there are several other standing committees of the Republican Party of Iowa they include: the Budget Committee, the Campaign Committee, the Organization Committee, and the Personnel Committee.[2]

County level

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Each county in Iowa may form a County Central Committee. These committees include two members elected by each precinct in the county, though additional members may be elected based on the number of votes for Republican candidates in the previous general election from each precinct. Additionally, the county central committee elects a: Chairman, Co-chairman, Treasurer, and Secretary from either seated members of the county central committee or from Republicans within the county.[2]

Platform

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The Republican Party of Iowa also develops an in-depth platform about what the state party stands for. In general this statement is a general document cementing the principle of the Republican Party while leaving some issues up to individual party voters.[4][5]

History

[edit]
Samuel J. Kirkwood, founder of the Republican Party of Iowa, abolitionist, and Iowa's Civil War governor

The RPI was founded on ananti-slavery platform in 1856 by citizens dissatisfied with the existingWhig andDemocratic Parties.Samuel J. Kirkwood, abolitionist and later Iowa's Civil War governor, is credited as one of the principal founders. Summoned from his mill atCoralville and still coated in flour dust, Kirkwood gave a rousing speech at the founding meeting of the Republican Party of Iowa in February 1856 inIowa City. Many people credited Kirkwood's speech and subsequent work with the success of the party in Iowa. Another principal founder was Edward Russell, an outspoken abolitionist editor who later turned theDavenport Gazette into an award-winning Republican newspaper and one of the largest dailies in Iowa.[6] At the Republican State Convention in 1865, Russell introduced the resolution declaring negro suffrage in Iowa and carried it by a decisive majority.[7] His more famous son,Charles Edward Russell, went on to found theNational Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).[8]

Pro-Union sentiment during and after theCivil War helped the party to expand in importance. Between 1858 and 1932 the Republicans won every Iowa gubernatorial election, with the exception of 1890, whenHorace Boies, a former Republican, was elected because of his opposition toProhibition. In 1932 electoral frustration with theGreat Depression and Prohibition led to the re-emergence of the Democratic Party in Iowa. Historically the party has held theGovernor's office – 30 of Iowa's 41 governors have been Republicans.

The only Republican president from Iowa wasHerbert Hoover (a native ofWest Branch) who was in office from 1929 to 1933.

PresidentHerbert Hoover (1929–1933)

Presidential selection

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Straw poll

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Main article:Ames Straw Poll

Since 1979, the RPI has held a straw poll in Iowa in each year preceding a presidential election, except when there is a Republican incumbent. This straw poll is separate from the Republican caucuses. The straw poll includes a dinner, multiple speeches by candidates, and a variety of booths set up by various candidates and causes, in addition to an actualstraw poll of participants' presidential preferences.

Iowa Caucuses

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TheIowa Caucuses are the kickoff for the national presidential selection process. Iowa holds a powerful position in that process because it can serve as a sounding board for the strength of a candidate's campaign. A win in the Iowa Caucuses can validate a candidate or propel them from relative obscurity. In particular the Iowa Republican Caucuses hold the most power when either the GOP is not the party in the presidency or an incumbent is not on the ballot. As Iowa is the first state to cast its votes on the nominee the media often focus heavily on opinion polls from the state to determine which way Republican voters are leaning.

In 2008 former Arkansas GovernorMike Huckabee grew in name recognition because of his Iowa victory and grew his national profile. In 2000 with a potentially heated nomination fight between then Texas GovernorGeorge W. Bush and Arizona SenatorJohn McCain, Bush, who carried the state with 41% of the vote, set the tone for his campaign and set up a successful run for the Republican nomination and the presidency.[9]

During the2012 Republican primaries the Republican Party of Iowa partnered with various news organizations such asFox News to bring a series of debates that were nationally televised, but directed toward voters in Iowa. This national attention is a potential political boon for a small Midwestern state and attracts attention politically to a state that may otherwise not receive such attention. The caucuses also give power to the party members in the electorate. Traditionally, Iowa has been first and then followed by the state ofNew Hampshire, but states such asSouth Carolina,Nevada, andFlorida have been moving up the dates of their presidential primaries to try to capture some of the media and political attention that Iowa and New Hampshire receive.[10]

Electoral history

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Gubernatorial

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Iowa Republican Party gubernatorial election results
ElectionGubernatorial candidateVotesVote %Result
1994Terry Branstad566,39556.8%WonGreen tickY
1998Jim Ross Lightfoot444,78746.5%LostRed XN
2002Doug Gross456,61244.5%LostRed XN
2006Jim Nussle467,42544.4%LostRed XN
2010Terry Branstad592,49452.81%WonGreen tickY
2014Terry Branstad666,03258.99%WonGreen tickY
2018Kim Reynolds667,27550.26%WonGreen tickY
2022Kim Reynolds709,19858.04%WonGreen tickY

References

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  1. ^Winger, Richard."March 2021 Ballot Access News Print Edition".Ballot Access News. RetrievedMarch 15, 2021.
  2. ^abcd"The Republican Party of Iowa". Iowagop.org. RetrievedNovember 8, 2011.
  3. ^State Central Committee
  4. ^"Republican Party of Iowa". RetrievedMarch 15, 2016.
  5. ^Platform
  6. ^Miraldi, Robert (2003).The Pen is Mighter: The Muckracking Life ofCharles Edward Russell. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 20.ISBN 0-312-29292-9.
  7. ^Gue, Benjamin T. (1903).History of Iowa from the earliest times to the beginning of the twentieth century. The Century history company. p. 227.
  8. ^Library of Congress."NAACP Founder Charles Edward Russell". Library of Congress. Archived fromthe original on May 24, 2013.
  9. ^"2000 Republican Primary Election Timeline". Uselectionatlas.org. RetrievedNovember 8, 2011.
  10. ^Stephanie Condon (October 6, 2011)."Nevada the latest state to move up GOP primary calendar". CBS News. RetrievedDecember 14, 2011.

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†The Iowa Green Party was a political party from 2000 – 2002.
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