Nevada aims to shake up U.S. presidential nominating calendar
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[June 02, 2021]
By Andy Sullivan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Nevada is poised to
challenge Iowa and New Hampshire to become the first state to vote in
the 2024 U.S. presidential nominating contests, a move that if
successful would shake up a political system that has been in place for
decades.
Both chambers of the state's Democratic-controlled state legislature
passed a bill over the weekend that would seek to make its primary the
nation's first, subject to the signature of Democratic Governor Steve
Sisolak and the approval of the national Republican and Democratic
parties.
The Democratic National Committee did not immediately endorse the idea,
with Chair Jaime Harrison saying in a statement it will decide its
primary calendar "at the appropriate time."
The Republican National Committee did not immediately respond to a
request for comment. Sisolak's office did not immediately reply to a
request for comment on whether he would sign the legislation.
It is far from the first time a U.S. state has sought to cut in front of
Iowa and New Hampshire, which for decades have held off challenges,
sometimes hosting their contests in early January to do so.
Advocates say fast-growing Nevada better reflects the racial and
economic diversity of the country than disproportionately white and
rural New Hampshire and Iowa.
Iowa's Democratic caucus was also marred by technical woes in 2020
that delayed official results by several weeks. Nevada was the third
state to hold a nominating contest last year.
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Election staff work in the Clark County Election Center in North Las
Vegas, Nevada, U.S. November 6, 2020. REUTERS/Steve Marcus/File
Photo
The Nevada bill would change the state's nominating
contest from party-run caucuses to a primary election administered
by the state, to be held on the first Tuesday in February.
Advocates, including several progressive groups, said that would
allow more voters to participate.
Nevada's Republican Party has warned that national political parties
could ignore the results if they decided that it violated their
rules. "Trying to play chicken with primary dates is not a battle we
will win," Nevada Republican Party Chairman Michael McDonald wrote
to state lawmakers in April.
Democratic Party officials in Iowa and New Hampshire said they would
fight to retain their status, arguing that their states' small
populations and inexpensive media markets allow lesser-known
candidates to build a following.
"We have successfully defended the primary for decades and believe
that we have a strong argument for New Hampshire to retain its
place," the state's Democratic Party chairman, Ray Buckley, said in
a statement.
(Reporting by Andy Sullivan; additional reporting by Jarrett Renshaw;
Editing by Peter Cooney)
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