This story is from June 08, 2021
Early states' GOP opposes Nevada as first presidential primary
LAS VEGAS: Republicans in the four early presidential nominating states on Tuesday jointly opposed a Democratic push in
GOP chairs Jeff Kaufmann of Iowa, Stephen Stepanek of New Hampshire, Michael McDonald of Nevada and Drew McKissick of South Carolina said in a statement they want to preserve the historic schedule, which has led off with Iowa's caucus followed by
"As the GOP leaders of the four carve-out states, we want to make clear that we stand together in protecting the presidential nominating schedule as it has existed for many years," the Republicans said in the statement. "Our alliance is strong and we will continue to work together to preserve this historic process."
The move comes as a bill that would push Nevada up from from the third-in-line caucus state to the first-in-the-nation primary sits on Democratic Gov.
Nevada Democrats made the move with a behind-the-scenes lobbying campaign from former US Sen.
Sisolak has not said if he will sign the bill but is supportive of the effort. The national political parties would need to agree to changes in the calendar or state parties could risk losing their delegates at presidential nominating conventions.
Nevada
to make the Western state the first to hold a primary.New Hampshire
's primary."As the GOP leaders of the four carve-out states, we want to make clear that we stand together in protecting the presidential nominating schedule as it has existed for many years," the Republicans said in the statement. "Our alliance is strong and we will continue to work together to preserve this historic process."
The move comes as a bill that would push Nevada up from from the third-in-line caucus state to the first-in-the-nation primary sits on Democratic Gov.
Steve Sisolak
's desk.Nevada Democrats made the move with a behind-the-scenes lobbying campaign from former US Sen.
Harry Reid
after the 2020 nominating process left them discontent with Iowa's problem-plagued caucus and the two early states being overwhelmingly white. Nevada is much more racially diverse.Sisolak has not said if he will sign the bill but is supportive of the effort. The national political parties would need to agree to changes in the calendar or state parties could risk losing their delegates at presidential nominating conventions.
Popular from World
- Bill Gates admits he regrets divorcing Melinda the most: 'It was miserable for me...'
- Educational qualifications of richest people in the world including Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, and others
- US freezes foreign aid for almost all countries including Ukraine, except Israel and Turkey
- Elon Musk's mother uses three words to describe Usha Vance amid racist attacks
- Words matter, and it is back to US non-citizens being termed aliens
end of article
Trending Stories
- Just days after being dumped by Mark Zuckerberg, former Meta COO Sheryl Sandberg gets court notice for 'using Gmail' and deleting emails
- Elon Musk's ex-girlfriend Grimes: I would like to state that the father of my children was ...
- Bill Gates admits he regrets divorcing Melinda the most: 'It was miserable for me...'
- Kumbh Mela: Steve Jobs wife Laurene Powell's flight broke 93-year-old record
- Elon Musk's mother uses three words to describe Usha Vance amid racist attacks
- Derrick Henry’s NFL future takes a dramatic turn as girlfriend Adrianna Rivas and Ravens GM hint at what’s next
- US freezes foreign aid for almost all countries including Ukraine, except Israel and Turkey
Visual Stories
- 10 most beautiful sea animals
- 10 simple and practical ways to achieve internal happiness
- 10 ways to add fiber-rich cabbage in daily diet
- 10 South Indian dishes that are easy to make for breakfast
- From Lion to Butterfly: 10 animals and what do they symbolise
TOP TRENDS
UP NEXT
Start a Conversation
Post comment