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The Iowa Straw Poll (also known as the Ames Straw Poll) [1] was a presidential straw poll and fundraising event for the Republican Party of Iowa.It was held six times, traditionally in late summer approximately six months in advance of contested presidential Iowa caucuses, from 1979 until 2011, on the campus of Iowa State University in Ames.
The Florida Republican Party held a straw poll at the end of September 2011, [31] which was won by Herman Cain. Political analysts attributed Cain's win to Perry's poor debate performances, but others pointed to the fact that Cain won the Florida straw poll after campaigning in-person throughout the state more than Perry. [32] The full results ...
Iowa Straw Poll may refer to: Iowa State Fair Straw Poll , also sometimes referred to as Iowa Straw Poll ; first conducted in 2015 Iowa Straw Poll (1979–2011) , sponsored by the Iowa Republican Party and conducted from 1979 to 2011
The 1996 Ames straw poll was held at Iowa State University (Ames)'s Hilton Coliseum on August 19, 1995. This was primarily a fundraising event for the state's Republican Party, and only Iowa residents who paid the $25 [1] price for a ticket were eligible to vote. Tickets were available through the various presidential campaigns and the Iowa ...
The 2007 Ames straw poll was held at Iowa State University (Ames)'s Hilton Coliseum on August 11, 2007. [7] This was primarily a fundraising event for the state's Republican Party, and only Iowa residents who paid the $35 price for a ticket were eligible to vote. Tickets were available through the various presidential campaigns and the Iowa ...
The 2000 Ames straw poll was held at Iowa State University's Hilton Coliseum on August 14, 1999. The event served as a major fundraiser for the Iowa Republican Party, with participants required to purchase $25 tickets to participate. [11]
She received 22,848 votes and 59% of the poll, ahead of teammate Gianna Rosa (15,780 votes, 40.76%). In a 3-1 win over Sandwich, Lovell contributed on two goals, scoring one and assisting on another.
The 2011–2012 pre-caucus poll results for Iowa had highly volatile results; Gallup polls showed the leading candidate in Iowa change seven times from May 2011 until the caucuses. [13] The 2012 caucuses also set a new record for political expenditures, with $12 million being spent, two-thirds of it from " super PACs " which dominated the ...