http://www.votewithavengeance.com/articles/funnything.html So there I was, sitting in my living room in rural Wisconsin - - drenched in absolute shock.
Much to my astonishment, John Kerry had won the Iowa Caucuses, with 38% of the vote. Perhaps even more surprising, John Edwards placed second, garnering 32% of the vote. Meanwhile, Howard Dean, whom the media had been touting as the "frontrunner" for the past few months, came in at a distant third, with 18% (half of what Kerry received, and almost half of what Edwards received). Dick Gephardt, who placed fourth, is officially dropping out of the race today.
Conventional wisdom had long been that Gephardt was the one to beat in Iowa. Then, as Dean recently began to surge, it appeared as though Iowa might become a grudge match between Dean and Gephardt.
All of a sudden, Kerry seemingly came out of nowhere, making Iowa into a competitive three-way battle. Kerry's victory isn't completely without logic: the Massachusetts senator had been working away at Iowa voters for quite some time. But in the most recent months, who would have ever imagined that John Edwards would place second in Iowa, beating out both Gephardt and Dean?
I certainly didn't.
Like many race-handicappers, I had assumed that first-place honors would go to either Dean or Gephardt (with the other possibly coming in a close second), and John Kerry would most likely get third. Edwards, I'd predicted, would place no higher than fourth.
Instead, in the course of less than a month, John Kerry and John Edwards managed to turn the entire Iowa Caucus upside-down.
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