Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.
Inside the complex process that has incredible influence over the presidential race
hillary clinton iowa caucus
hillary clinton iowa caucus

(AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)
Hillary Clinton holds a "commit-to-caucus" card during a campaign event.

With less than two months to go until the Iowa caucuses, presidential candidates from both parties have descended on the Hawkeye state.

They cook pork chops with state lawmakers. Blanket the airwaves with advertisements. And make a few ideological concessions that happen to appease in-state voters.

But behind the scenes, the campaigns understand that Iowa's complex nominating process means that simply winning a voter's support before the caucus is only the first step.

That's because Iowa's caucus system, the first nominating contest in the nation, is a fairly complicated process. The state will be followed by Nevada, Alaska, Maine, and Wyoming, among others, which all hold closed caucuses within the first six weeks of voting next year.

But in the minds of many, the system is not particularly democratic.

"This event is a party run, party administered affair. No voting equipment is being used, and professional election administration officials are not managing the process," The Associated Press said in a disclaimer about its 2012 coverage.

In Iowa's case, the state allows anyone who will be at least 18 years old on Election Day to caucus in February at one of Iowa's 1,682 precincts, starting at 7 p.m. The vast majority will caucus with either the Democratic and Republican parties, which run quite different processes.

Democrats have a much more complicated caucus that focuses on a concept called "viability."

Once caucus-goers have arrived, precinct chairs determine a threshold for the amount of support that a candidate needs to be considered "viable." Viability is calculated based on a formula that considers how many delegates that precinct awards.

For example, viability for a caucus with two delegates is the number of attendees multiplied by 25%. Caucuses with a single delegate award the delegate based on which candidate achieves a majority support.

Attendees then divide themselves into "presidential preference groups." If a candidate doesn't meet the viability threshold, supporters can then join another group or attempt to lobby supporters from viable candidates to defect. Once the groups are solidified, the precinct awards its delegates proportionally.

The Republican process is somewhat more straightforward.

After campaign surrogates are given the chance to speak briefly in support of their candidate, caucus-goers vote by paper ballot or by show of hands, and the tallies are sent to the state-party headquarters and relayed to the media.