The other four candidates, which include a senator, a former president of the Iowa Farm Bureau, a member of President Trump’s ag advisory committee and a former Iowa State Extension watershed specialist, also failed to break the 35 percent support threshold.
The nominees aren’t surprised by the results given the crowded field.
“With five candidates in the race, we all knew it would be difficult to win outright by reaching the 35 percent threshold,” Craig Lang, past president of the Iowa Farm Bureau, said in a statement after Tuesday’s results.
Naig, who served as under secretary to Bill Northey before taking a position within the USDA, is optimistic he can earn the support of his peers next week.
“Iowa Republicans sent a clear message, and that’s that they’re pleased with the direction we’re headed and the job we’re doing,” he told the Des Moines Register Wednesday. “We won 60 counties and topped 30,000 votes. That far outpaces the other candidates.”
Whoever earns the Republican nomination will run against Democratic candidate Tim Gannon, a former USDA administrator, in November.