Voters in Iowa finally have their say Monday in the first test of the US presidential race, with Republican frontrunner Donald Trump looking to capitalise on his stunning campaign success and Democrat Hillary Clinton defending her status as the favourite.
Across the Midwestern state, voters will head to caucuses - meetings to select candidates that take the place of primaries. At most, a few hundred thousand people are expected to attend, but a strong showing can nevertheless buoy a candidate's hopes. Trump and Clinton were leading in the polls, but not by enough to assure victory for either candidate. On the Republican side, the billionaire real estate tycoon - who has shredded the traditional campaign playbook with his savage take-down of his Republican rivals and controversial comments on immigration - is facing a stiff challenge from Ted Cruz.
The US senator from Texas, could get a boost in Iowa from core conservatives, his bread and butter, who are the state's most dedicated caucusers. But will an establishment Republican - Senator Marco Rubio, perhaps - outperform the polls and make it a three-way race?
For the Democrats, Clinton is looking to lay to rest the demons of 2008, when she lost here to now President Barack Obama, and pursue her quest for history by dealing a solid blow to her upstart challenger Bernie Sanders. "I know how to do this and I'm ready," a confident Clinton - who is vying to be America's first female president - told CNN on Monday. "There is just a lot of excitement and energy. I'm urging everybody to come out and caucus tonight to be part of this unique American process. I hope they will come out and caucus for me."
Iowa is up for grabs - along with the early momentum candidates are craving in the presidential race ahead of next week's primary in New Hampshire. Throwing a wrench in the works, forecasters say a major winter storm is brewing in the west, threatening to bring snow and a dangerous wintry mix to parts of Iowa just as residents are caucusing. Armies of volunteers fanned out through the Midwestern state Sunday, knocking on doors or manning phone banks to get out the vote, while candidates dominated the air waves with talk show appearances and a relentless barrage of campaign ads.
Most of the 12 Republicans and three Democrats in the race held several weekend events to press the flesh and win over voters. Clinton, seeking to stave off a surge by Sanders, was leaving nothing to chance, stumping in the heartland this weekend and warning that the policy proposals of her main rival were pie-in-the-sky idealism. "I don't think America can wait, I don't think it can wait for ideas that sound good on paper then can't go through the gridlock," Clinton told about 2,600 people at a rally in a Des Moines high school. Sanders, a senator from Vermont who has described himself as a democratic socialist, declared his race with Clinton a "toss-up."