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Donald Trump and GOP rivals Nikki Haley and Ron DeSantis are making their final appeals to New Hampshire voters ahead of the state’s pivotal 2024 primary contest. Follow here for the latest live news updates from the campaign trail.
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Donald Trump and GOP rivals Nikki Haley and Ron DeSantis are making their final appeals to New Hampshire voters ahead of the state’s pivotal 2024 primary contest. Follow here for the latest live news updates from the campaign trail.
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Former President Donald Trump and GOP rivals Ron DeSantis and Nikki Haley are making their final appeals to New Hampshire voters ahead of next week’s primary. Follow here for the latest updates from the campaign trail.
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GOP presidential candidates are racing to give their final pitch to Iowa voters ahead of tomorrow’s pivotal caucuses in the state. Follow here for the latest live news updates from the campaign trail.
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GOP presidential candidates are racing to give their final pitch to Iowa voters with just days until the state’s pivotal caucuses kick off the 2024 primary contests. Follow here for the latest live news updates from the campaign trail.
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GOP presidential candidates are racing to give their final pitch to Iowa voters with just days until the state’s pivotal caucuses kick off the 2024 primary contests. Follow here for the latest live news updates from the campaign trail.
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Before Americans pick a president in November, they get to pick the candidates in a series of primaries and caucuses. It’s a wonky process that has evolved over the course of the country’s history and continues to evolve today.
Here’s what to know:
What is a primary? It’s an election to select candidates, usually for a particular political party, to appear on the general election ballot.
Who is running in the primaries? For Democrats, Joe Biden is the sitting president and he’s running for reelection, which makes him the incumbent candidate.
Incumbents rarely face serious competition. There are some Democrats challenging him in the Democratic primaries, including Rep. Dean Phillips of Minnesota and author Marianne Williamson. But they have not yet generated much support, at least in opinion polls.
For Republicans, former President Donald Trump has long been the front-runner, meaning he appears in polling to have a lead over five other candidates who are still in the race.
Trump, as a former president, also projects some of the power of an incumbent, although he lost the last election. His is the first serious campaign by a former president for his party’s nomination since Teddy Roosevelt tried and failed to reclaim the Republican nomination in 1912.
Anti-Trump Republicans appear to be interested in two main options: former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. Haley has polled better in New Hampshire and DeSantis has focused on Iowa. Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy and former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson have had more trouble gaining support.
Who can vote in a presidential primary? It varies by state. Primaries are generally conducted in polling places like any other election.
But some states have “open primaries,” meaning any registered voter can vote in either the Democratic or Republican primary. Other states have “closed primaries,” meaning only people registered in a particular political party — usually Republicans or Democrats — can vote in that party’s primary.
Others offer voting day registration, which essentially opens the primaries to most registered voters.
When do the presidential primaries occur? The first date on the presidential primary calendar is January 15, although it is not technically for a primary.
On that day in Iowa, Republican Party members gather at events called caucuses, where they hear speeches from a campaign’s supporters and then vote for their preferred candidate. Unlike primaries in other states, these events are overseen by state parties and are not conducted like normal elections.
Democrats will also gather that day in Iowa, but their vote for president will be conducted by mail ending on March 5.
In some states, presidential primaries are conducted on one date and primaries for other offices are conducted later in the year. See the full calendar.
After Iowa, New Hampshire holds its “first-in-the-nation” primary on January 23, although Democrats are not sanctioning the event. Democrats want their first official primary to take place on February 3 in South Carolina, which is a more racially diverse state, and the first place Biden won a primary in 2020. That will then be followed by Nevada’s primary on February 6.
The calendar spreads out from there. Republicans compete in Nevada’s caucuses on February 8 and South Carolina on February 24.
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President Joe Biden cast the 2024 election as a battle for truth as he compared his predecessor to defeated confederate soldiers in remarks at the historic site of a deadly 2015 shooting fueled by White supremacy.
“The truth is under assault in America. As a consequence, so is our freedom, our democracy, our very country,” Biden said in a speech in Charleston, South Carolina, Monday.
Biden, who has kicked off the election year starkly framing the choice as critical to the future of democracy, used his remarks to explicitly compare former President Donald Trump and his most ardent supporters to “defeated confederates” after the Civil War.
“After the Civil War, the defeated confederates couldn’t accept the verdict of the war, they lost. So they say they embraced what is known as the lost cause, the self-serving lie that the civil war was not about slavery but about states’ rights. They call that the noble cause. That was a lie,” he said.
“Now, we’re living in an era of a second lost cause. Once again, there are some in this country trying to turn a loss into a lie. A lie which if allowed to live will once again bring terrible damage to this country. This time the lie is about the 2020 election,” he continued.
In contrast, Biden highlighted some of his key accomplishments: record low Black unemployment, record high Black health insurance signups, funding for HBCUs, efforts to replace lead pipes, and the appointment of diverse judicial candidates.
Biden also detailed the events of January 6, 2021, describing a “violent mob” that was “whipped up by lies from a defeated former president.” He criticized Trump’s inaction.
“For hours, the defeated former president sat in the private dining room off of the Oval Office and did nothing. Absolutely nothing. His actions were among the worst derelictions of duty by any president in American history,” Biden said, echoing similar comments he made during a speech Friday in Pennsylvania.
Biden said “we must reject political violence in America. Always, not sometimes, always. It is never appropriate.”
He warned broadly that Trump’s movement – “the same movement” of January 6 – “Isn’t just trying to rewrite history on January 6th, they were trying to determine to erase history and your future,” he said, pointing to efforts to ban books, deny the right to vote, and “destroying diversity, equality and inclusion all across America. Harboring hate and replacing hope with anger and resentment.”
“It’s a dangerous view of America. A narrow view of America. A zero-sum view of America that says if you win I lose, if you succeed it must be I failed. If you get ahead I fall behind. May be worst of all, if I hold you down, I lift myself up,” he warned.
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