San Diego Union-Tribune

IOWA CAUCUSES PULLED FROM FIRST-IN-NATION SPOT

Democrats OK plan to withhold results till Super Tuesday

- BY TYLER PAGER & MICHAEL SCHERER Pager and Scherer write for The Washington Post.

The Democratic Party officially dislodged Iowa from its prized status as the first state in the presidenti­al nominating process Friday, approving the state party’s plan to release their results on Super Tuesday next year.

The decision ends a nearly two-year fight over Iowa’s place in selecting a Democratic nominee, which resulted in a complete overhaul of the calendar. President

Joe Biden and his aides elevated South Carolina to the first spot, followed by New Hampshire and Nevada a week later, and then Michigan. The original plan called for Georgia holding a primary just before Michigan, but Democrats in that state were unable to move up their date because of Republican opposition.

The approval Friday moves Iowa out of the early window of the presidenti­al nominating process, but the Democratic National Committee’s rules and bylaws panel did not resolve outstandin­g issues with New Hampshire, which has a state law mandating that it hold the first presidenti­al primary.

New Hampshire has refused to relinquish its spot to South Carolina, setting up a conflict with the national party, and members of the DNC bylaws committee warned states Friday about potential sanctions should they not abide by the order adopted by the national party.

As part of Iowa’s new plan, Democratic voters can sign up to receive a presidenti­al preference card — to be mailed starting Jan. 12 — or participat­e in an in-person precinct caucus on Jan. 15, the same date as Republican­s. The party will not release the results of their mail-in caucus until Super Tuesday on March 5, and any cards postmarked on or before that day will be accepted.

That plan received conditiona­l compliance from the DNC bylaws committee Friday at the national party’s fall meeting in St. Louis. Iowa Democrats, however, are holding out hope that they can return to the early window for the 2028 presidenti­al nominating process.

“I am pleased to have repeated reassuranc­e from the co-chairs and this committee that the presidenti­al nominating calendar discussion­s will once again be opened up for 2028, where I expect Iowa to compete strongly for a significan­t voice in the selection of the Democratic nominee as we have for years,” Rita Hart, the chair of the Iowa Democratic Party, wrote in a letter to the committee.

Minyon Moore, the cochair of the rules and bylaws committee, confirmed the DNC intends to review the presidenti­al calendar again for 2028.

In New Hampshire, officials have long given Iowa significan­t leeway to go first because its caucus process differs in important ways from a primary election, though there were some concerns that Iowa’s revised plan could have triggered New Hampshire to jump earlier and create chaos in the coming months of the Republican primary campaign.

“While I am not yet ready to set the date of the New Hampshire Presidenti­al Primary, the news out of Iowa as to how the Democrats plan to conduct their presidenti­al nominating event is positive in terms of preserving the traditiona­l positions of the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire Presidenti­al Primary,” New Hampshire Secretary of State David Scanlan, a Republican, said in a statement.

The status of Iowa was imperiled in 2020 after a botched caucus process, which delayed reporting of results and infuriated party leaders.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States