The Iowa Democratic Party has released 100 percent of results from the caucuses. State delegate equivalent figures show how support from caucus-goers after realignment roughly translates into the number of delegates each candidate will get at the state convention. That figure then translates into how many of the 41 pledged national delegates each candidate will get. In previous years, the Iowa Democratic Party reported only state delegate equivalent figures.

The state Democratic Party created a few different rules for 2020’s first-in-the-nation caucuses, allowing satellite caucuses and decreasing some of the caucus-goers’ chances to candidate-switch. At caucus sites, Iowa Democrats stood in groups to show support for candidates; any candidate without 15 percent support at a site was considered not viable. Their supporters could leave; move to a viable candidate; or try to create a group that hit that level. But they got just one chance to realign this year.

The winners of the past three Democratic caucuses in Iowa have gone on to become the party’s nominee: John Kerry in 2004, Barack Obama in 2008 and Hillary Clinton in 2016. Voting in this year’s contest resumes Feb. 11, when New Hampshire holds its primary.