UPDATE (6:44 PM Central Time): So here’s the deal. A December caucus date is seeming a bit less likely. At least that’s according to the calculations that Chris Bowers over at Open Left has provided to readers. His calendar shapes out like this:
- Friday, January 4th: Iowa caucuses
- Saturday, January 12th: New Hampshire primary Saturday, January 19th: Nevada Democratic caucus, South Carolina Republican primary
- Tuesday, January 29th: Florida primary, South Carolina Democratic primary
- Tuesday, February 5th: Super Tuesday
His reasoning, again, is here and worth a read.
And one more thing. Gov. Culver talked with Kay Henderson and others today emphasizing his support for Iowa as first-in-the-nation state. And he says that Iowa will be first, no matter what.
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Oh holy hell. I really wish I could confirm with any ease the exact date of the Iowa Caucuses but it seems likely not to count on January 14th, 2008, anymore.
First, I’ll let you read what my friend John Deeth reported: That the South Carolina GOP Chair will announce in New Hampshire that he’s moving his primary date earlier than their scheduled February 2nd, 2008, primary.
Now, according to Marc Ambinder and others, it looks like the South Carolina GOP will announce in NH that they’re moving their primary to January 19th, a full three days before the NH primary. By announcing the move in NH, it seems likely that the NH Secretary of State will move his state’s primary up to Monday, January 7th, or Tuesday, January 9th. That would almost guarantee an Iowa Caucus date in December of 2007, unless both the IDP and the RPI decide to hold the Iowa Caucuses on Friday, January 4th. That doesn’t seem likely as its right after the new year.
Other complications still exist. On August 25th, the DNC Rules and Bylaws Committee will meet to decide whether or not to sanction Florida Democrats because their state’s primary is now on January 29th (thanks to a Republican Florida legislature and governor). Florida Democrats are seeking an exemption, but it is likely that Iowa Democrats will fight hard for sanctions to Florida’s delegation to the Democratic National Convention next summer in Denver. The outcome of the Rules and Bylaws meeting is still quite up in the air.
Also, South Carolina Democrats are still planning their primary for January 29th, which means they’ll still actually be on schedule.
Michigan is still considering moving its primary to January 29th as well, but Gov. Jennifer Granholm is facing pressure not to sign a bill that would move the primary earlier (but also faces pressure from in-state Democrats like Sen. Carl Levin to move the date earlier–as a sidenote, Levin is crybaby who is just pissed that Nevada and South Carolina were the states that the DNC picked to insert into the IA-NH domination).
Summary: If you’re planning to caucus, keep the months of December and January open.
And if you want to keep track of the best news on the primary/caucus schedule, try Ballot Access News.
5 Comments
Maybe no one will move after all
Jonathan Martin at The Politico says that by making the announcement with the NH SoS, the SC GOP Chair might be signaling that both NH and SC Republicans will have their primaries on the same day with SC still being the first southern primary. The SC Dems would still be going on Jan. 29th, however.
My brain hurts.
chris-woods Wed 8 Aug 6:02 PM
I really don't want to do GOTV
between Thanksgiving and Christmas.
But January 7 would almost be worse–hardly any time after New Year’s to do voter contact.
desmoinesdem Wed 8 Aug 6:39 PM
on a different subject
Could we change the poll on the front page of this blog? It’s been up for a long time, and it doesn’t include all of the candidates.
How about a poll on something different, such as likely turnout for the caucuses? (less than 100,000, between 100K and 125K, between 125K and 150K, between 150K and 200K, or over 200K)?
Or something else–I just thought it was a good time to change the poll.
desmoinesdem Wed 8 Aug 11:33 PM
It is official
Go check out the most recent news and speculation over at my site, Political Forecast.
chris-woods Thu 9 Aug 1:23 PM