Go figure.

So why is the party updating the results at all? What new information might a new dispatch contain? If the final number (right or wrong) on the worksheets was incorrectly reported on the precinct level, that discrepancy would be reconciled.

Still, when the party delivers updated results on Monday — as it has promised to do — it will not be a surprise if observers still have doubts about their validity.

Speaking on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday, the Democratic National Committee chairman, Tom Perez, said he was “mad as hell” about the Iowa debacle, and promised a thorough examination of the caucus process after the 2020 campaign. But he said he was “absolutely not” considering resigning, as some have called on him to do.

Trump’s going to New Hampshire, too

President Trump is expected to easily win New Hampshire’s Republican primary on Tuesday — but that doesn’t mean he’s going to pass up an opportunity for a raucous rally.

The president will be in Manchester on Monday to deliver a speech to supporters at S.N.H.U. Arena. A Trump rally there last year broke the arena’s previous attendance record.

In reality, Monday’s event probably has more to do with the general election than it does with the primary. In 2016, Trump lost the state to Hillary Clinton by 0.3 percentage points. This year, the White House says, Trump hopes that a thriving economy will help him win over the kinds of suburban voters who helped Clinton squeak out her victory there.