The music has stopped, and the long game of musical chairs --- otherwise known as the 2011 Republican Iowa Caucuses --- has finally ended. Mostly.
Twitterer Steve King may have put it best when he said tonight: "By tomorrow morning Santorum will be on the lips of every American." And it's true. If you don't believe him, just Google it.
With 99.5% of the results reported, there are now just 4 votes said to separate Rick Santorum, a late comer, but one who finally surged from behind, from the current second-place Mitt Romney. 4 votes.
Romney, it seems, may have failed to reach even his own 2008 Iowa numbers. Then he had 30,021 votes. Tonight --- a full four years and who-knows-how-many millions of dollars later --- Romney's total is almost identical, at 29,964.
While we've been told how invigorated the Republican electorate is and how they're chomping at the bit to defeat President Barack Obama, the turnout tonight doesn't seem to suggest as much. Turnout was approximately 122,000 voters tonight --- just 3,000 more than in 2008.
In the meantime, Santorum reportedly "spent only $120,000 on direct mail and advertising in Iowa versus over $4.5 million by outside groups backing Romney alone." Former RNC Deputy Research Director Matt Moon reports that Romney will have paid $157 per Iowa caucus vote, while Santorum got a steal at just $21 a pop. Some businessman that Romney is.
But tonight, with the reported results as close as they are, we're reminded again that every single vote counts. Or at least it should. While every vote was cast on a hand-marked paper ballot (with Republicans requiring no Photo ID to vote), and those ballots supposedly counted publicly by hand at each caucus site, with results announced then and there before being phoned into Republican HQ, Bev Harris of BlackBoxVoting.org reports that at least one large caucus in Des Moines was unwilling to release their results to CNN before phoning them in to the GOP.
We'll try to learn more about that tomorrow and any other concerns. As ever, problems at the "polls" (or caucuses in this case) or concerns about reported results don't always emerge until days, weeks or sometimes even months later.
But for now, no matter who is ultimately named the winner of the 2012 Iowa Republican Caucuses, Santorum's "victory" in the Hawkeye State is no small thing. Just ask President Huckabee.