Schedule for 2000 Presidential Primaries and Caucuses [accurate as of 24 Dec. 1999]*

 

 

DATE

EVENT

 

 

January 24

Iowa Caucus; Alaska GOP caucus

February 1

New Hampshire primary

February 7-13

Hawaii GOP caucus

February 8

Delaware GOP primary

February 19

South Carolina GOP primary

February 22

Arizona GOP primary; Michigan GOP primary

February 23

Nevada GOP caucus (Clark County/Las Vegas only; see 3/21)

February 29

North Dakota GOP caucus; Virginia GOP primary; Washington GOP primary

March 7

California primary; Connecticut primary; Georgia primary; Hawaii Democratic caucus; Idaho Democratic caucus; Maine primary, Maryland primary; Massachusetts primary; New York primary; North Dakota Democratic caucus; Ohio primary; Rhode Island primary; Vermont primary; Washington caucus

March 9

South Carolina Democratic primary

March 10

Colorado primary; Utah primary; Wyoming GOP caucus

March 11

Arizona Democratic primary; Michigan Democratic primary; Minnesota Democratic caucus

March 12

Nevada Democratic caucus

March 14

Florida primary; Louisiana primary; Mississippi primary; Oklahoma primary; Tennessee primary; Texas primary

March 21

Illinois primary; Nevada GOP caucus (rest of state; see 2/23)

March 27

Delaware Democratic caucus

March 28

Wyoming Democratic caucus

April 4

Kansas primary; Pennsylvania primary; Wisconsin primary

April 15, 17

Virginia Democratic caucus

April 22

Alaska Democratic caucus

May 2

D.C. primary; Indiana primary; North Carolina Primary

May 9

Nebraska primary; West Virginia primary

May 16

Oregon primary

May 23

Arkansas primary; Idaho GOP primary; Kentucky primary

June 6

Alabama primary; Montana primary; New Jersey primary; New Mexico primary; South Dakota primary

 

NOTE: Independents can vote in either party’s primary in New Hampshire (where Independents comprise 37% of the electorate) and Utah; they can vote in the GOP primary in Maryland, but not the Democratic. In addition, any registered voter may participate in either primary in: Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, and Wisconsin. [In some of these states, laws require that voters declare their party preference when they request a party ballot, but they may still vote in either primary.]

 

            *Information is from Ken Rudin’s “Political Junkie” column in the Washington Post (December 24, 1999): http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/campaigns/junkie/archive/junkie122499.htm