"Most Iowa Democrats who responded to a state party survey want to be in the early voting window when it comes to presidential primaries, but they’re split over whether they should defy national Democrats to make it happen.
The Iowa Democratic Party’s State Central Committee voted Saturday, Dec. 6, to release the results of a survey the party conducted to gather feedback about the future of its presidential nominating caucuses.
The results offer insight but no clear consensus for a party that is continuing to grapple with the fallout of major shifts in the national presidential nominating calendar."
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Survey of 750 Iowa Democrats (results):
Timing of the Iowa caucusesIowa should go first:
44.7 percentIowa should go early:
20.6 percentIowa should go on Super Tuesday (or later):
12.6 percentDon't care (where Iowa is on the 2028 calendar):
22 percent
Following DNC timing rulesWork within the early state selection rules and accept the DNC's decision on timing (even if Iowa is not early):
51.1 percentWork within the rules but flout them if Iowa is not granted a waiver for an early contest:
34.4 percentGo rogue without regard for the decisions on Iowa's scheduling at the DNC level:
14.4 percent
...
Noteworthy: The state central committee also voted at its December 6 meeting to not surprisingly move forward in the DNC's early state selection process. Those waiver proposals -- state party cases for why their contest should be early in the 2028 Democratic presidential primary calendar -- are due to the Rules and Bylaws Committee by January 16.
The split results on the two questions above will not necessarily make it any easier for the Iowa Democratic Party (IDP) either in the state or with the national party. It is not the united, near-consensus front IDP Chair Rita Hart would otherwise like to present to the DNC and it means that no matter what the state party opts to do for 2028 with respect to the caucuses, that some sizable enough faction is going to be less than happy with the direction the party chooses.
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