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Presidential elections traditionally speak to future aspirations, offering a vision of a better tomorrow, the hope and change of Barack Obama or the compassionate conservatism of George W. Bush. Yet this year, even before a single vote has been cast, a far darker sentiment has taken hold.<\/p>\n
Across Iowa, as the first nominating contest approaches on Monday, voters plow through snowy streets to hear from candidates, mingle at campaign events and casually talk of the prospect of World War III, civil unrest and a nation coming apart at the seams.<\/p>\n
Four years ago, voters worried about a spiraling pandemic, economic uncertainty and national protests. Now, in the first presidential election since the siege on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, those anxieties have metastasized into a grimmer, more existential dread about the very foundations of the American experiment.<\/p>\n
\u201cYou get the feeling in Iowa right now that we\u2019re sleepwalking into a nightmare and there\u2019s nothing we can do about it,\u201d said Doug Gross, a Republican lawyer who has been involved in Iowa politics for nearly four decades, ran for governor in 2002 and plans to support Nikki Haley in the state\u2019s caucuses on Monday. \u201cIn Iowa, life isn\u2019t lived in extremes, except the weather, and yet they still feel this dramatic sense of inevitable doom.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n