Sen. Amy Klobuchar emerged from the Iowa caucuses Tuesday on track to finish in fifth place, a showing that keeps her in contention for the next contest in New Hampshire even as it casts doubt on her ongoing viability in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination.
With less than a third of the precincts still not counted, Klobuchar trailed a quartet of race leaders led by former South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg, a Midwestern rival vying for the same slice of moderate Democrats.
But the numbers — delayed because of technical issues in the counting — showed Klobuchar not far behind former Vice President Joe Biden, a national poll leader who showed worrying signs of weakness in the Hawkeye State.
With more than 70% reporting after a second batch of results was released Tuesday night, Klobuchar logged 12.6% of the delegate count, trailing Biden, with 15.4%. Buttigieg topped the field with 26.8%, followed by Sens. Bernie Sanders, at 25.2%, and Elizabeth Warren, at 18.4%.
Aides to Klobuchar, who was campaigning Tuesday in New Hampshire, cautioned against drawing hard conclusions from an incomplete count, even as they expressed satisfaction with her apparent standing in the race.
"What these results make clear is that this is a five-person race," her campaign manager, Justin Buoen, posted Tuesday on Twitter. "Some of Amy's strongest counties haven't been fully reported and the current data doesn't tell the full story."
Klobuchar also emphasized the narrow margin in an interview with CNN on Tuesday night, saying she's "800 votes from the vice president."
However some analysts outside her campaign portrayed a fifth-place finish — if it holds — as less than optimal for a senator from a neighboring state who had always seen Iowa as her most favorable ground.