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What is going on in Iowa? Local officials raise concerns about vote reporting

Shawn Sebastian, a precinct secretary in Story County, told CNN's Wolf Blitzer, "I have been on hold for over an hour with the Iowa Democratic Party. They tried to, I think, promote an app to report the results. The app by all accounts just like doesn't work, so we've been recommended to call into the hot line, and the hot line has not been responsive."
Sebastian's call was picked up as he was speaking on-air to Blitzer, but moments later Sebastian said he was hung up on.
Drew Kelley, a vice chair of the Clinton County Democratic Central Committee, told CNN, "I can't tell you anything about the why, just that I had a busy signal for about 15 minutes, then finally got through and was on hold another hour. Finally through, the worker on the line was extremely helpful."
Iowa Democratic Party officials hunkered down Monday night in their war room, initially leaving campaigns in the dark over the delay in the reporting of caucus results.
Officials from two Democratic campaigns tell CNN they were told the app to tabulate results had crashed. They said they had not been given any other information.
Representatives of presidential campaigns were not invited into the state party's war room, which is standard practice. But as the night wore on without word, one said: "It's clear that something has gone wrong."
A state Democratic official who was in the war room said the mood was calm and the officials were committed to get the count right.
"More data takes more time," the official said.
Iowa Democratic Party Communications Director Mandy McClure said in a statement late Monday that there were no issues about the integrity of the vote despite the delays.
"We found inconsistencies in the reporting of three sets of results," she said.
"In addition to the tech systems being used to tabulate results, we are also using photos of results and a paper trail to validate that all results match and ensure that we have confidence and accuracy in the numbers we report," the statement reads.
"This is simply a reporting issue, the app did not go down and this is not a hack or an intrusion. The underlying data and paper trail is sound and will simply take time to further report the results," the statement reads.
Iowa Democrats planned to release more information about caucus results than usual this year. The three sets of numbers expected are the state delegates won, the first alignment, and the second alignment.
Each precinct sends delegates to county conventions, who then send delegates to the state convention. The "state delegate equivalents" are the estimated number of delegates candidates have won to the state convention based on their results in each precinct.
Voting issues aren't new when it comes to the Iowa caucuses, the state in the last Presidential election in 2016 faced a controversy surrounding apparent confusion about the voting process.
Unlike a traditional primary, in which voters cast ballots, caucuses all take place out in the open: People show up to their precinct and physically move into designated parts of a room to show their preference for a certain candidate. Delegates are awarded based on those who reach a certain threshold of support by the end of the night.
In 2016, the state Democratic Party was forced to review the caucuses after the campaigns of Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders flagged issues with the process specifically the way in which a winner is declared and coin flips.
The winner of the caucuses is decided by state delegate equivalents, tied to a math formula, not head counts. While, the coin flips or "games of chance" are used in rare circumstances at precinct caucuses to adjudicate ties or resolve issues created by rounding errors. At stake at these precinct-level coin flips is the one remaining slot in that precinct for a campaign to send a delegate to attend that precinct's county convention. Coin flips are not used to decide which candidate wins a state convention delegate or national convention delegate.
The 2020 caucuses proceeded under new rules and procedures, including the addition of 87 "satellite caucuses" sites part of the state's effort make the process more accessible.

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