California moves presidential primary for
bigger say in candidate choice
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[September 28, 2017]
By Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - California
will move its presidential primary from June to March under a bill
signed on Wednesday by Democratic Governor Jerry Brown, a change aimed
at giving the liberal-leaning state more influence in choosing
candidates from either national party.
The most populous U.S. state, which voted heavily for Democrat Hillary
Clinton in November's presidential election, has traditionally held its
primary so late that Democratic and Republican voters in other states
had essentially already chosen their parties' candidates.
"The Golden State will no longer be relegated to last place in the
presidential nominating process," said Secretary of State Alex Padilla,
a Democrat who backed the change, in a statement. "Candidates will not
be able to ignore the largest, most diverse state in the nation as they
seek our country's highest office."
The bill was passed mostly along party lines in the majority-Democrat
legislature.
The new date will leave the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary
in place as the first and second contests of the presidential election
cycle, during which voters in each state choose the candidate they would
like their party to nominate for president.
Because California's primary has been in June while others were held
earlier, candidates have largely ignored the state, spending less on
outreach than elsewhere, making fewer visits, and failing to prioritize
California voters' concerns in their campaigns, supporters said.
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A poll worker places a mail-in ballot into a voting box as voters
drop off their ballot in the U.S. presidential primary election in
San Diego, California, United States, June 7, 2016. REUTERS/Mike
Blake/File Photo
In 2016, California Democrats chose Clinton and Republicans opted
for Donald Trump, the populist businessman who ultimately won the
presidency.
Backers in the legislature said the early primary would lead to less
divisive choices by members of both major parties in the 2020
election cycle, and establish California as a leading voice in the
choice of candidates.
Progressive Democrats also believe that moving the primary up could
result in their party's selection of more liberal candidates.
"California is the beating heart of the national resistance to
Trump, and California Democrats are defining the progressive agenda
for America," state Democratic Party Chairman Eric Bauman said in a
press release. "When it comes to deciding the Democratic nominee,
our voices need to be heard early in the process."
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by Richard Chang)
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