Briefly alluded to in the last post, but this really merits a second take: The possibility that the Iowa results could actually impact on Idaho politics. Most particularly, that Idaho Democrats may have particularized cause for smiling.
Two components to this.
First, on their own side of the fence, more than a few Idaho Democrats had to be concerned - terrified might be a stretch but not by a lot - at the prospect of Hillary Clinton atop their ticket this fall. The whole idea of Clinton redux took them into a nightmarish place few would even want to contemplate; so the rapid growth of a Barack Obama base in Idaho in recent months has been no shock. Those Idaho Obama corps has become large and active and energetic, and probably will deliver the state to their man at next month's caucuses. And there's basis for thinking that Obama could be the least-disliked Democratic presidential candidate in Idaho in decades. You might actually see the spectacle of Idaho Democrats running for office and mentioning their presidential candidate. A startling concept. (Disclaimer, of course: No one yet knows who will be the Democratic presidential candidate, or Republican either. Of course.)
Second, across the fence, the odds of an especially popular Republican nominee just dropped a bit. Idaho Republicans have locked in behind former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney - practically every notable Idaho Republican who has endorsed has signed up with him. And the religious linkage, the big overlap between Idaho's Republican and Mormon community on one hand and Romney's very public Mormon affiliation on the other, means that many Idahoans are unusually invested in how well Romney does. If the Iowa results turn out to be predictive of Republicans elsewhere around the country, that may mean, "not well" - and how will all those Idaho Mormon Republicans take that?
Of course, things can run in many different directions in the months ahead; if the Iowa results conclusively mean anything, it's that the races in both parties are far from over. But Iowa certainly does open some lines of thought.

A shrewd quick comment from one of the quickest political wits in the area, Oregon Democratic Senate candidate Steve Novick: "The voters of Iowa, both Democrats and Republicans, have sent the same message I have been hearing from Oregon voters: people want change and they want authenticity. It's not about money. It's not about endorsements. It's not about so-called 'inevitability.' People aren't going to take their instructions from Washington insiders. They're tired of politics as usual. In the last few weeks the three leading Democrats have been seen as expressing three different themes. Obama's about hope. Edwards is about anger. Clinton's about hard work, or 'perspiration' - but some see her as the candidate of calculation. What we're going to prove in this campaign is that be hopeful without being naïve. You can be angry without being bitter. And if you work hard enough, you can win by saying what you believe."