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Past Event

A Governance Studies Event

""Front-loading"" the Primaries: The Wrong Approach to Presidential Politics?

U.S. Politics, Elections, Politics, Bureaucracy, Executive Branch


Event Summary

State primaries and caucuses, which were once held over three or four months, are today mostly crammed into a six-week period at the beginning of the delegate selection calendar commencing on January 19. This year the Democratic nominee could be identified as early as February 3, or at least by Super Tuesday on March 2.

Event Information

When

Wednesday, January 14, 2004
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Where

Falk Auditorium
Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20036
Map

Contact: Office of Communications

E-mail: communications@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

Critics of the system argue that this calendar denies most voters an opportunity to participate in selecting their party's nominee and weakens the ability of the parties to make considered choices.

On Wednesday, January 14, Brookings will convene a public forum with three experts on presidential elections to discuss the practice of front-loading the primaries and its impact on the 2004 presidential elections. One of the panelists, William G. Mayer, is co-author with Andrew E. Busch of a new Brookings book, The Front-loading Problem in Presidential Nominations (Brookings, 2003).

Transcript

WILLIAM G. MAYER: Compare that now to the primary schedule that the Democrats will use in 2004, which is going to be the other page of this handout. Now the action is all up front. It starts off again of course with New Hampshire and there are seven primaries in the week immediately after that.

There's a scattering of primaries in the next three weeks, and then there are nine primaries in week six and four more in week seven.

And as one way of kind of summarizing it, in 1976, of all of the delegates that were selected by primary, by the end of week six, just 19 percent had been selected by the end of week six.

In 2004, 58 percent will have been selected by the end of week six and 72 percent by the end of week seven.

So that in a nutshell is what front-loading is all about, where once the primary season started up rather slowly, now it begins very rapidly.

Read the full event transcript (PDF—105KB)

Participants

Moderators

Ron Nessen

Journalist in Residence, The Brookings Institution

Panelists

Anthony Corrado

Nonresident Senior Fellow, Governance Studies

Thomas E. Mann

Senior Fellow, Governance Studies

William G. Mayer

Associate Professor of Political Science, Northeastern University


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