The Atlantic

Cory Booker’s Four Standing Ovations in Des Moines

The New Jersey senator became the first top-tier presidential candidate to go to the primary state, and immediately confronted what running against Trump will be like.
Source: CHARLIE NEIBERGAL / AP

DES MOINES, Iowa—Cory Booker was supposed to get here on Thursday. Then it was moved to Friday. Then Saturday. He ended up on the ground about an hour before he was due onstage, straight from the Kavanaugh vote to the Iowa Democratic Party dinner, courtesy of a fast flight on a private plane that his aides were exhausted from working out logistics for and not at all eager to give details about.

Welcome to presidential campaigning in Donald Trump’s America. It’s going to be on Trump’s terms, on Trump’s schedule. “He makes the weather,” as an operative working for one of the other likely candidates put it. Everyone else has to deal with the cost, the stress, the change-ups, the absolute inability to define what the topic of conversation is.

“There’s nothing I can affect tomorrow. And in the Trump world, I hate to say this, we don’t know what next week will look like. I’m staying focused the best I can,” Booker told me, the next morning, at the almost cliché local hot spot Java Joe’s, a few minutes before heading to a three-hour church service at the old congregation where his grandmother, a bona fide Des Moines native whose family had come from Alabama to mine coal in nearby Buxton, once belonged.  

“He’s a variable in this

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Atlantic

The Atlantic7 min read
Do Navigation Apps Think We’re Stupid?
As a hamburger enthusiast, I often need directions to some burger joint I’ve never tried. Recently, my phone’s instructions sent me toward the on-ramp for the interstate. Then the app urged me, in 500 feet, to merge onto the freeway. By that time, th
The Atlantic5 min read
Who Really Benefits From Remote Work?
The prevailing narrative of remote work has often been boiled down to: Workers love it, and bosses hate it. But according to Natalia Emanuel, a labor economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, it may not be that simple. Emanuel co-authored a
The Atlantic7 min read
The Cases Against Trump: A Guide
Not long ago, the idea that a former president—or major-party presidential nominee—would face serious legal jeopardy was nearly unthinkable. Today, merely keeping track of the many cases against Donald Trump requires a law degree, a great deal of att

Related Books & Audiobooks