I couldn't agree more, Gilly. I don't believe this man is presidential material for this country at all. I'm surprised at the results, but I think in part it speaks to the weaknesses of other candidates in the Republican field.
I'm a proud native Iowan, now living in NYC, and have spent time in Iowa over the holidays, where I followed the campaign activities of the presidential candidates very enthusiastically. (I got to meet Obama in Fort Madison, Iowa!!)
I heard that about 330,000 people attended caucuses tonight in Iowa; there are 2.3 million or so eligible voters out of a state population of almost 3 million. It's a small segment of the population that will eventually vote in November '08. What I would point out is that this is the result of 114,000 or so Republican caucus-goers, not necessarily all Iowa Republicans, and the most active Republicans are disproportionately conservative and evangelical. Iowa is not really that much of a Bible belt state, though it certainly has a considerable strand of the population who fit that description. However -- the Republican party in Iowa, which used to be fairly moderate a generation or so ago, has become heavily influenced by the Christian right, beginning around the early '90s, when Pat Robertson came in second in the Republican caucus. That's the backbone of the Iowan Republican party to this day, and it's fortunately not really in step with the rest of the state, nor most of the rest of the country.
I don't think this fact has really been fully acknowledged by media coverage of the Iowa caucuses. I'd suggest that this result is fairly skewed, and not just because the demographics of Iowa are what they are, overwhelmingly white and older than the national average. I'd suggest that it's skewed because of who the most active Republicans in Iowa are in 2008. I also believe that it leaves the Republican presidential field pretty much open, and I'd look to New Hampshire and the "super-duper-Tuesday" states to see which candidate emerges as the front runner. If it's Huckabee, I'd say that Republicans are making a huge mistake.
By the way Gilly, which state are you from? It's great to hear from fellow Midwestern FOTs -- should we start a Midwest FOT caucus? (pardon the expression)