Primary
From Wikiality
A primary is a dress rehearsal for a real election. And like a real election, the votes might count.
Contents |
NOTES
(as of August 31, 2007)
January
- Jan. 5: Wyoming GOP caucuses
- Jan. 14: Iowa caucuses (tentative, may move up)
- Jan. 15: Michigan primary (tentative)
- Jan. 19: South Carolina GOP (tentative), Nevada caucuses
- Jan. 22: New Hampshire (tentative, may move up)
- Jan. 29: South Carolina Democrats
- Florida
- Ohio is considering a proposal to move up its primary to this date from March 4
February
- Feb. 1: Maine GOP caucuses
- Feb. 5: Alabama
- Alaska caucuses
- Arkansas
- Arizona
- California
- Colorado (Democratic caucuses; GOP likely to move its caucuses to this date also)
- Connecticut
- Delaware
- Georgia
- Idaho (Democratic caucuses)
- Illinois
- Kansas (Democratic caucuses)
- Minnesota caucuses
- Missouri
- New Jersey
- New Mexico (Democratic caucuses)
- New York
- North Dakota caucuses
- Oklahoma
- Tennessee
- Utah
- West Virginia (GOP state convention only)
- Feb. 7: Hawaii GOP (tentative)
- Feb. 9: Kansas GOP caucuses, Louisiana
- Feb. 10: Maine Democrats
- Feb. 12: Maryland
- Virginia
- District of Columbia
- Feb. 19: Hawaii Democrats
- Washington (nonbinding "beauty contest")
- Wisconsin
March
- March 4: Massachusetts
- Ohio
- Rhode Island
- Texas
- Vermont
- March 8: Wyoming Democrats
- March 11: Mississippi
April
- April 22: Pennsylvania
May
- May 6: Indiana
- North Carolina
- May 13: Nebraska
- West Virginia
- May 20: Kentucky
- Oregon
- May 27: Idaho
June
- June 3: Montana
- South Dakota
August
- Aug. 25-28: Democratic National Convention in Denver
September
- Sept. 1-4: Republican National Convention in Minneapolis


