DES MOINES, Iowa — Mark Dawson, 73, is so frustrated with politics that he hasn’t voted in his state’s quirky caucuses in years.
“It’s getting to me. The past few years, you know, it don’t matter what party they belong to — all they care about is enriching themselves,” he told msnbc on Friday, echoing a frustration many Iowans expressed in interviews this weekend.
Such voter frustration with politics as usual has made Iowa fertile ground for outsiders looking to secure momentum in the 2016 presidential contest. Iowans told msnbc they’re tired of how money influences politics and said they’re hungry for dramatic change. It’s why, they said, Donald Trump is dominating the Republican polls along with two other candidates who have never been elected to any office, and why Sen. Bernie Sanders, who is vowing “political revolution,” is surging on the left.
RELATED: How the GOP could face a big money problem
Trump has defied political expectations and dominated the polls for weeks as he cultivates a media circus, lambastes his opponents, and promises to speak truth to power while announcing very few tangible policy proposals. Supporters say they trust him because he’s not taking money from donors.
“People in America are sick and tired of politicians,” Dawson said. “That’s why Donald Trump, I think, is polling well, though I don’t think he will be able to sustain it.”
Dawson’s also got his eye on the former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina, who shot up from relative obscurity in the polls after a breakout performance in the nationally televised “happy hour” debate earlier this month.
“I turned to a couple people that were with me during that debate and said, ‘finally!’” Dawson recalls. He was waiting to hear Fiorina speak in a packed library in Mason City, Iowa, where the chairs filled quickly and many stood or sat on the ground to hear the hour-long Q&A session with the candidate.
“We’ve had politicians for so long and so many problems in this country that haven’t been fixed,” another Iowa voter, Ron Rachut, told msnbc after Fiorina spoke. “She’s seen the real world. I guess that’s the biggest thing — too many politicians have not seen the real world.”
In a poll taken after the first major candidates’ debate, Trump topped all his rival Republicans in Iowa. He was followed by Dr. Ben Carson, a well regarded pediatric neurosurgeon and sole African-American in the race, while Fiorina tied for fifth. Together, the three outsiders are besting a half dozen governors and senators alike.
RELATED: Trump supporters explain why they like ‘the Donald’
On the Democratic side, Sanders, the self-proclaimed socialist who vows to fundamentally rework the political system, is drawing the largest crowds of the election cycle so far, with more than a hundred thousand turning out in total so far.
People are “sick and tired” of “incompetent politicians,” Trump told msnbc’s “Morning Joe” earlier this month.
“I think people are looking for are real solutions that make sense as opposed to all this cronyism and entanglements,” Carson told msnbc on Sunday at the Iowa State Fair.
“People are tired of professional politicians, it’s a lot of talk and not a lot of action in Washington, D.C. People don’t see anything changing,” Fiorina told msnbc on Friday at a campaign event in this state.
A straw poll taken at the Iowa State Fair — ongoing at press time — signaled that she might be right.
After 4 days of #SOSStrawPoll at #IowaStateFair: GOP-@realDonaldTrump 29% @RealBenCarson 20%. DEM: @BernieSanders 50% @HillaryClinton 45%
— Iowa Sec. of State (@IowaSOS) August 17, 2015
Voters’ view of the traditional pipeline for politicians is pretty dim: just 14% of Americans approve of the job Congress is doing and neither party has a majority of voters’ approval, according to the Pew Research Center.
“It’s like trying to pick between the shiniest of two turds,” Lucas Figuera, 19, said. As a new voter, he said he leans Democrat but doesn’t really feel at home in either party. Early next year, he plans to caucus for Sanders.








