The Morning Call

Dems look to cast SC as 1st primary

Plan part of push to increase diversity in nominating process

- By Will Weissert

WASHINGTON — Democrats voted Friday to remove Iowa as the leadoff state on the presidenti­al nominating calendar and replace it with South Carolina starting in 2024, a dramatic shakeup championed by President Joe Biden to better reflect the party’s deeply diverse electorate.

The Democratic National Committee’s rule-making arm made the move to strip Iowa from the position it has held for five decades after technical meltdowns sparked chaos and marred results of the state’s 2020 caucus. The change also comes after a long push by some of the party’s top leaders to start choosing a president in states that are less white, especially given the importance of Black voters as Democrats’ most loyal electoral base.

Discussion on prioritizi­ng diversity drew such impassione­d reaction at the committee gathering in Washington that DNC chair Jaime Harrison wiped away tears as committee member Donna Brazile suggested that Democrats had spent years failing to fight for Black voters: “Do you know what it’s like to live on a dirt road? Do you know what it’s like to try to find running water that is clean?”

“Do you know what it’s like to wait and see if the storm is going to pass you by and your roof is still intact?” Brazile asked. “That’s what this is about.”

The committee approved moving South Carolina’s primary to Feb. 3 and having Nevada and New Hampshire vote three days later. Georgia would go the following week and Michigan

two weeks after that.

The move marks a dramatic shift from the current calendar, which has had Iowa holding the firstin-the-nation caucuses since 1972, followed by New Hampshire’s first-in-thenation primary since 1920. Nevada and South Carolina have gone next since the 2008 presidenti­al election, when Democrats last did a major overhaul of their primary calendar.

The changes still have to be approved by the full DNC in a vote expected early next year, but it will likely follow

the rule-making committee’s lead.

The revamped schedule could largely be moot for 2024 if Biden opts to seek a second term, but may remake Democratic presidenti­al cycles after that. The president has said for months that he intends to run again, and White House aides have begun making staffing discussion­s for his likely reelection campaign, even though no final decision has been made.

The DNC also plans to revisit the primary calendar again before 2028 — meaning

more changes could be coming before then.

Biden wrote in a letter to rules committee members on Thursday that the party should scrap “restrictiv­e” caucuses altogether because their rules on in-person participat­ion can sometimes exclude working-class and other voters. He also told party leaders privately that he’d like to see South Carolina go first to better ensure that voters of color aren’t marginaliz­ed as Democrats choose a presidenti­al nominee.

Four of the five states now

poised to start the party’s primary are presidenti­al battlegrou­nds, meaning the eventual Democratic winner would be able to lay groundwork in important general election locales. That’s especially true for Michigan and Georgia, which both voted for Donald Trump in 2016 before flipping to Biden in 2020. The exception is South Carolina, which hasn’t gone Democratic in a presidenti­al race since 1976.

The first five voting states would be positioned to cast ballots before Super Tuesday, the day when much of the rest of the country holds primaries. That gives the early states outsize influence, since White House hopefuls struggling to raise money or gain political traction often drop out before visiting much of the rest of the country.

Scott Brennan, a rules committee member from Iowa, said “small, rural states” like his “must have a voice in the presidenti­al nominating process.”

“Democrats cannot forget about entire groups of voters in the heart of the Midwest without doing significan­t damage to the party in newer generation­s,” Brennan said.

The Republican National Committee already decided to keep Iowa’s caucus as the first contest in its 2024 presidenti­al primary.

House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, South Carolina’s lone congressio­nal Democrat and one of Biden’s top supporters in Congress, said the president called him Thursday to inform him of his push to move his state up.

“I didn’t ask to be first,” Clyburn said. “It was his idea to be first.”

Clyburn’s endorsemen­t of Biden in 2020 boosted the candidate’s flagging presidenti­al campaign just ahead of South Carolina’s primary, which he won big. That helped Biden shake off early losses in Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada and eventually take the White House.

Still, the vote by the rules committee has faced serious pushback, with some states vowing to ignore the changes. That’s despite the panel approving language saying states could lose all of their delegates to the party’s national convention if they attempt to violate new rules.

Iowa and New Hampshire have said laws in their states mandate them going before others, and they intend to abide by those, not DNC decrees.

 ?? NATHAN HOWARD/AP ?? Scott Brennan of Iowa warned fellow Democrats against forgetting about “entire groups of voters in the heart of the Midwest” during a Democratic National Committee Rules and Bylaws Committee meeting Friday in Washington.
NATHAN HOWARD/AP Scott Brennan of Iowa warned fellow Democrats against forgetting about “entire groups of voters in the heart of the Midwest” during a Democratic National Committee Rules and Bylaws Committee meeting Friday in Washington.

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