See the strengths and weaknesses of each candidate according to a statewide survey of Iowans as they entered Monday's caucuses.

Full results Republicans Key 1st 2nd 3rd Republicans Key 1st 2nd 3rd Sex Men 52% 29 25 25 8 5 Women 48% 27 24 21 11 5 Age Age 17-29 12% 27 19 24 10 13 Age 30-44 16% 31 22 22 6 9 Age 45-64 46% 28 25 24 10 3 Age 65+ 27% 27 26 22 10 2 Education High school or less 16% 28 32 18 10 4 Some college/Associates 33% 32 26 17 10 5 College graduate 33% 26 22 27 10 4 Postgraduate study 19% 23 20 29 8 5 Born-again or evangelical Christian Born-again Christian 64% 34 22 21 12 4 Not born-again Christian 36% 18 29 26 5 7 Party self-identification Republican 79% 30 25 23 9 3 Independent/Other 20% 19 22 22 11 10 Democrat 2% -- -- -- -- -- Attended previous caucus? First time caucus-goer 45% 23 30 22 9 6 Attended previous caucus 54% 32 19 24 9 4 When did you decide who to support? Decided within last week 45% 27 14 29 10 5 Decided earlier than last week' 55% 28 33 18 9 4 Contacted by candidate? Contacted by candidate 36% 31 23 20 10 3 Not contacted by candidate 62% 26 25 24 9 6 Most important candidate quality Can bring needed change 21% 25 33 17 8 5 Can win in November 21% 22 24 44 1 1 Shares my values 42% 38 5 21 15 7 Tells it like it is 14% 11 66 4 6 4 Nation's top issue Economy/Jobs 27% 18 24 30 9 4 Government spending 32% 27 19 21 11 9 Immigration 13% 34 44 10 7 1 Terrorism 25% 33 21 26 8 2 Want next president who Has experience in politics 46% 35 3 39 2 6 From outside political establishment 48% 20 46 7 17 4 Feelings on how federal government works Angry w/government 42% 32 30 18 8 5 Dissatisfied, not angry 49% 26 21 25 11 4 Satisfied, not enthusiastic 5% -- -- -- -- -- Enthusiastic 3% -- -- -- -- -- Democrats Key 1st 2nd Democrats Key 1st 2nd Sex Men 43% 44 50 3 Women 57% 53 42 3 Age Age 17-29 18% 14 84 2 Age 30-44 19% 37 58 2 Age 45-64 36% 58 35 4 Age 65+ 28% 69 26 3 Education High school or less 18% 58 39 0 Some college/Associates 32% 42 52 4 College graduate 27% 48 48 2 Postgraduate study 23% 53 39 4 Party self-identification Democrat 78% 56 39 3 Independent/Other 20% 26 69 1 Republican 2% -- -- -- Ideology Very liberal 28% 39 58 1 Somewhat liberal 40% 50 44 3 Moderate 28% 58 35 4 Conservative 4% -- -- -- Attended previous caucus? First time caucus-goer 44% 37 59 2 Attended previous caucus 56% 59 35 4 Most important candidate quality Can win in November 20% 77 17 2 Cares about people like me 26% 22 74 3 Has right experience 28% 88 9 2 Honest and trustworthy 24% 10 83 5 Nation's top issue Top issue: Economy 33% 51 42 4 Top issue: Health care 30% 59 38 1 Top issue: Income inequality 27% 34 61 3 Top issue: Terrorism 6% 65 28 5 When decide support? Decided in last week 22% 45 45 4 Decided earlier than last week 77% 51 46 3 Marriage/Sex Married men 27% 52 41 4 Married women 33% 60 34 3 Unmarried men 16% 30 66 2 Unmarried women 25% 43 53 2 Income Income <$50,000 41% 44 53 1 Income $50,000-$100,000 38% 50 44 4 Income $100,000+ 20% 55 37 4 Should next president continue Obama's policies? Change to more liberal policies 33% 21 76 2 Continue Obama's policies 55% 68 26 4 Change to less liberal policies 7% 43 50 3

Source: These are final results from a survey of voters as they entered randomly selected caucus voting places in Iowa on Feb. 1, 2016, including 1,794 interviews with Republican caucus-goers and 1,660 with Democratic caucus-goers. The poll was conducted by Edison Media Research for National Election Pool, The Washington Post and other media organizations. The results for typical characteristics have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus four percentage points.