Hillary and Bill Clinton are headlining a major fundraiser in Iowa this fall, marking the potential presidential candidate’s first return to the early primary state in over five years, spokespeople for both confirmed.
The annual Steak Fry, hosted every September by long-term Democratic Sen. Tom Harkin, who is retiring this year, is considered one of the most important events of the year in Democratic politics in the state. This will be its final year.
Clinton’s return will be widely read as the most clear indication yet that is she is planning to run for president in 2016.
Clinton has steered clear of the state since 2008, when it dealt the perceived front-runner a humiliating blow with a third place finish in the state’s caucus behind President Barack Obama and former North Carolina Senator John Edwards.
The then-senator’s campaign had struggled in a state that prizes grassroots organizing, but was severely damaged when an internal memo suggesting the campaign skip the state altogether was leaked to the press. In a state that prides itself on its first-in-the-nation status and values retail politicking, voters took even the idea of passing on Iowa as an insult.









