Current:Home > InvestIowa Democrats announce plan for January caucus with delayed results in attempt to keep leadoff spot -Elevate Profit Vision
Iowa Democrats announce plan for January caucus with delayed results in attempt to keep leadoff spot
Robert Brown View
Date:2025-04-10 12:14:49
WASHINGTON (AP) — Iowa’s Democratic Party announced Friday it will hold a caucus on Jan. 15 but won’t release the results until early March, attempting to retain their state’s leadoff spot on the presidential nominating calendar without violating a new national party lineup that has South Carolina going first for 2024.
Iowa Republicans have already scheduled their caucus for that day, which falls on the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday. But while the GOP’s caucus will kick off voting in the party’s competitive presidential primary, Democrats will only meet in person then to participate in down-ballot races and deal with nonpresidential party business.
Democrats’ presidential contest will instead be held by mail throughout January and February, with party officials not releasing the results until Super Tuesday on March 5.
“We believe this delegate selection plan is definitely a compromise,” Rita Hart, chair of the Iowa Democratic Party, said on a conference call with reporters.
Iowa’s plans haven’t yet been approved by the Democratic National Committee, but its rule-making panel was planning to discuss the proposed changes later Friday during its meeting in St. Louis.
Final logistical details are still being hammered out, but the change is part of a larger overhaul to revamp the state’s Democratic caucus after 2020 when technical glitches sparked a meltdown that left The Associated Press unable to declare a winner.
Iowa Democrats’ new plan comes after President Joe Biden asked the national Democratic Party to change the traditional order of its primary and let South Carolina go first.
He sought to empower Black and other minority voters critical to the party’s support base while suggesting that in-person caucusing, which requires participants to gather for hours on election night, discouraged turnout among low-propensity voters and should be abandoned.
The DNC subsequently approved a new primary calendar for 2024 with South Carolina’s primary kicking off voting on Feb. 3, followed three days later by New Hampshire and Nevada, the latter of which plans to swap its caucus in favor of a primary. Georgia would vote fourth on Feb. 13, according to the plan, with Michigan going fifth on Feb. 27 — before most of the rest of the nation votes on Super Tuesday.
The issue is largely moot for 2024 since Biden is seeking reelection and faces no major primary challengers. But the DNC is again planning to examine revising its primary calendar for 2028, meaning what happens next year could shape which states vote early in the presidential nominating process for years to come.
States with early contests play a major role in determining the nominee because White House hopefuls struggling to raise money or gain political traction often drop out before visiting places outside the first five. Media attention and policy debates concentrate on those states, too.
Since the new calendar was approved in February, New Hampshire has rejected it, saying its state law mandates that it hold the nation’s first primary — a rule that Iowa got around in previous years by holding a caucus. Georgia also won’t follow the new order after the state’s Republicans declined to move their primary date to comply with Democratic plans.
Democratic officials in Iowa, by contrast, have said for months that they were working on creative ways to preserve a first-in-the-nation caucus without violating new party rules.
Hart said that the national party has assured state Democrats that the new plan means Iowa could again be among the first states on the 2028 presidential calendar — when the Democratic primary will be competitive and states going first will receive far more attention from candidates and the rest of the political world.
“We know who our nominee is here in 2024. We know that President Biden is going to be our presidential nominee,” Hart said. “What’s really important is that we put ourselves in a good position for 2028.”
veryGood! (71)
Related
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Bernhard Langer, 66, set to return to PGA Tour 3 months after tearing Achilles
- Hailey Bieber Has Surprising Reaction to Tearful Photo of Husband Justin Bieber
- Tractor-trailers with no one aboard? The future is near for self-driving trucks on US roads
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- Clayton MacRae: FED Rate Cut and the Stock Market
- State Department weighing new information from Israel in determining whether IDF unit violated U.S. law
- Upstate NY district attorney ‘so sorry’ for cursing at officer who tried to ticket her for speeding
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- The Best Mother-in-Law Gifts That Will Keep You on Her Good Side & Make Her Love You Even More
Ranking
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Jalen Brunson, Knicks put 76ers on brink of elimination with Game 4 win
- Clayton MacRae: What can AI do for us
- Hailey Bieber Has Surprising Reaction to Tearful Photo of Husband Justin Bieber
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Upstate NY district attorney ‘so sorry’ for cursing at officer who tried to ticket her for speeding
- CBS Sports announces Matt Ryan will join NFL studio show. Longtime analysts Simms and Esiason depart
- Republicans seeking Georgia congressional seat debate limits on abortion and immigration
Recommendation
'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
California Community Organizer Wins Prestigious Goldman Environmental Prize
Jalen Brunson, Knicks put 76ers on brink of elimination with Game 4 win
Megan Fox and Machine Gun Kelly Slow Dance at Stagecoach Festival
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
The Rolling Stones setlist: Here are all the songs on their Hackney Diamonds Tour
University of Arizona student shot to death at off-campus house party
Who wants to be a millionaire? How your IRA can help you get there