San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

N.H. Dems plead to keep leadoff primary status

- By Will Weissert

WASHINGTON — New Hampshire Democrats have asked the national party not to “punish” them while overhaulin­g its 2024 presidenti­al primary calendar, arguing that implementi­ng the proposed shakeup may amount to a “poison pill” against their state’s traditiona­l role as among the first to vote.

In a letter to the Democratic National Committee’s rulemaking arm last week, New Hampshire Democratic Party Chairman Ray Buckley noted that state law mandates that New Hampshire hold the nation’s first presidenti­al primary. He said changing it would require the support of Republican Gov. Chris Sununu and GOP members of the state Legislatur­e, who oppose doing so.

“The DNC has handed New Hampshire Republican­s a salient political attack to use against both state and national Democrats,” Buckley wrote. “This is an unfortunat­e, reckless, and self-inflicted blow.”

A DNC rulemaking committee voted last month to remove Iowa’s caucus as the leadoff of the presidenti­al nominating calendar it has held since 1972 and replace it with South Carolina’s primary on Feb. 3, starting in 2024. Nevada and New Hampshire would go next, three days later, followed by Georgia the next week and then Michigan the week after that. Much of the rest of the country would subsequent­ly vote on Super Tuesday.

President Biden has championed a reordered primary calendar to better reflect the party’s deeply diverse electorate — especially the steadfast support of Black voters, who are prominent in South Carolina. The proposed changes also follow a technical meltdown that marred the results of Iowa’s 2020 caucus. They are set to be approved by the full DNC at a meeting in Philadelph­ia next month.

The new order may be moot for the next presidenti­al cycle since Biden has said he intends to seek re-election, meaning his party will have little appetite for building out a robust 2024 primary calendar that could allow for challenges from other Democratic

candidates. Still, what the national party decides for 2024 could influence primaries in 2028 and beyond, and Buckley’s letter lays bare how not all states are supportive of sweeping changes.

New Hampshire Democrats say that their state has held the nation’s first presidenti­al primary for more than a century and that Iowa only preceded it because of its caucus format. Some have vowed to simply hold the

New Hampshire primary first regardless of the calendar set by the national party, but the rules committee proposal says states doing so could face sanctions.

Sununu, sworn in for his fourth term as governor on Thursday, referenced Democrats’ efforts to move New Hampshire’s primary behind South Carolina’s: “I have a message for President Biden: You can come and try to take it, but it is Never. Going. To. Happen.”

“We are not going to be blackmaile­d,” the governor said. “We are not going be threatened, and we will not give up.”

In the past, states attempting to jump ahead have risked losing delegates to the national party convention, discouragi­ng presidenti­al candidates from spending time campaignin­g in them. Buckley’s letter decried the “DNC’s threat to punish New Hampshire if it complies with state law.”

 ?? Joe Raedle/Getty Images 2020 ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidates Joe Biden (left), Bernie Sanders, Amy Klobuchar and Tom Steyer participat­e in a primary debate in 2020 at St. Anselm College near Manchester, N.H.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images 2020 Democratic presidenti­al candidates Joe Biden (left), Bernie Sanders, Amy Klobuchar and Tom Steyer participat­e in a primary debate in 2020 at St. Anselm College near Manchester, N.H.

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