Los Angeles Times

As Democrats get set to vote in Nevada, a smooth process is top priority.

As caucuses start, party is determined the process goes without a hitch

- By Arit John

Nevada would like you to know it is not Iowa.

Beyond the obvious difference­s — one is cold and predominan­tly white, the other is diverse and predominan­tly warm — Nevada has attempted to learn from the mistakes of Iowa’s problemati­c caucuses this month.

Before the first-in-theWest caucuses on Saturday, Nevada’s Democratic Party abandoned the disastrous mobile app used by Iowa Democrats and instead will have precinct leaders enter results onto a Google spreadshee­t calculator using party-provided iPads.

Caucuses are complicate­d even under the best of circumstan­ces, but Nevada Democrats have introduced new wrinkles this year, including four days of early voting that will be combined with Saturday’s caucus tallies.

And although Democrats say they are are very confident that Nevada’s caucuses will go better than Iowa’s, they’re not promising immediate results either. Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez would not commit to releasing same-day unofficial results when asked by the Associated Press this week.

When does voting start?

Registrati­on will be open Saturday from 10 a.m. to noon Pacific time. The caucuses will be called to order about 12:30 p.m.

Early voting, however, started Feb. 15 and ran through Feb. 18. This year, Nevada introduced early voting so that Democrats who can’t devote an entire Saturday afternoon to caucusing can have their voices heard.

Nearly 75,000 Democrats voted early, according to the Nevada Democratic Party. (For context, 84,000 people attended the Nevada caucuses in 2016.)

For the early voters, there was no shuffling around to different corners of a high school gym as their neighbors tried to woo them, like in a traditiona­l caucus. Instead, they filled out a presidenti­al preference form ranking their top three to five choices. Those votes will be added to the total of the in-person candidate preference­s, and they will only be realigned if their first choice isn’t viable.

The process?

Here’s how it works: At each caucus site, attendees will group together based on which candidate they support. The precinct leaders will then determine whether enough people support each candidate (in other words, if that candidate is “viable”). After the first round of caucusing, individual­s who support a candidate who didn’t garner enough support will have 15 minutes to switch over, or realign, with a different candidate or decide to be uncommitte­d.

That sounds pretty simple.

Sort of. The math is just a little more complicate­d than, say, in Iowa’s caucuses. In order to have enough support to win delegates in that state, a candidate needed to be backed by just 15% of the people attending the caucus.

But it Nevada, it depends. In precincts electing two delegates, the viability threshold is 25% of the total number of early votes and in-person attendees in the precinct. In precincts electing three delegates, it’s one-sixth of that total, and for precincts with four or more delegates it is 15%.

How many delegates are up for grabs?

Nevada will send 36 pledged delegates to the Democratic National Convention. Twenty-three of those national delegates will be doled out based on the results from the four congressio­nal districts. The rest — five pledged party leader and elected official (PLEO) delegates and eight at-large delegates — will be allocated based on the state-wide vote. Only candidates who win 15% or more of the statewide vote will qualify for any of the PLEO or at-large delegates.

The first step, however, will be determinin­g how many delegates each campaign gets to send to the county convention. Each precinct awards a set number of delegates to the county convention, and when results are released on Saturday (or after), they’ll be in terms of those countyleve­l delegates.

The state’s proportion­al distributi­on of delegates means that the candidates with the most county-level delegates on Saturday might not have the most delegates at the national convention. In 2008, Hillary Clinton won 51% of the county-level delegate count to Barack Obama’s 45%. But because Obama’s support was spread across the state — including rural areas — he ended up beating her in the national delegate count.

Who can caucus?

Anyone registered as a Democrat who will be 18 years old by the November general election can participat­e in the caucuses. Sameday voter registrati­on is available.

Nevada is continuing its tradition of offering caucus locations on the Las Vegas Strip for shift workers.

Are Republican­s caucusing too?

No. The Nevada GOP decided last year to cancel its caucus and will vote to bind its delegates to President Trump, who held a rally in Las Vegas on Friday.

Who’s on the presidenti­al preference card?

There are 13 candidates for Democrats to choose from on the card, but six of them have dropped out since the presidenti­al preference card was finalized last month.

The candidates on the ballot and still in the race are: former Vice President Joe Biden, former South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii, Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, former hedge-fund manager Tom Steyer, and Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren.

Former New York Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg is not on the ballot.

The billionair­e skipped the first four nominating states to invest in the contests starting March 3, also known as Super Tuesday.

What happens if a candidate requests a recanvass or a recount?

If one of the presidenti­al candidates wants a recanvass or a recount, they have until 5 p.m. Pacific time on Monday to write to the Nevada Democratic Party with a request. A recount would be completed by March 6.

 ?? Bridget Bennett AFP/Getty Images ?? E LV I S is not on the Democratic ballot in Nevada, but 13 candidates are, including six who have dropped out. Nearly 75,000 Democrats voted early, party officials say.
Bridget Bennett AFP/Getty Images E LV I S is not on the Democratic ballot in Nevada, but 13 candidates are, including six who have dropped out. Nearly 75,000 Democrats voted early, party officials say.

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