The Iowa Democratic Party released another 10% of the state's precincts' presidential caucus results late Tuesday night, showing former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) holding on to the lead with 71% reporting.

What are the details?

Politico reported at 11:45 p.m. ET that the numbers now show Buttigieg has 418 delegates, Sanders 393, and from there a gap exists as Sen. Elizabeth Warren (Mass.) has so far racked up 286. Former Vice President Joe Biden earned 241 delegates, and Sen. Amy Klobuchar (Minn.) has 196.

CBS translated the percentage breakdown as Buttigieg having 26.8%, Sanders 25.2%, Warren 18.4%, Biden 15.5%, and Klobuchar 12.6%. Businessmen Andrew Yang and Tom Steyer held 1.1 and 0.3% of State Delegate Equivalents, respectively.

Reporter Ed O'Keefe noted that Biden — originally considered the favorite in the race — is "barely making the 15% threshold for delegates."



The counts from late Tuesday showed little movement from numbers released by the IDP hours earlier, when 62% of the results were disclosed. At that point, Buttigieg was at 26.9%, Sanders was at 25.1%, Warren held 18.3%, and Biden was at 15.6%.

The latest results come a day after the IDP admitted that "irregularities" were found in its caucus reporting and announced that it would delay releasing results until officials could be sure of the numbers.

Multiple factors contributed to what has become a debacle. The Democratic National Committee imposed new caucus rules, and the state used a new app for precincts to submit results for this year's caucus. Both systems failed in Iowa — the first caucus held in the nation — leading to chaos and confusion on all fronts as the IDP scrambles to verify its numbers and has begun releasing results in increments.