Early voting for Nevada’s Democratic presidential caucus will take place Saturday through Tuesday.
Election 2020
Most of the remaining Democratic presidential contenders are heading to Las Vegas to campaign in advance of the Feb. 22 presidential caucuses.
The Culinary Union Local 226 denounced “vicious attacks,” after supporters of Sen. Bernie Sanders objected to a union flyer that declared the senator wants to “end Culinary health care” in favor of his Medicare for All proposal.
With New Hampshire’s primary in the history books, most candidates are headed to Nevada, where they face uncertainty about hwo votes will be tabulated and winners selected.
Supporters of top candidates are busy training volunteers how to run Nevada’s caucuses, including the mathematical formulas involved in awarding delegates.
Nevada Democrats had originally planned to use an app for the caucus. But after a similar app failed miserably in Iowa, the party scrapped it.
Health care is the top issue for many Nevada women who are 50 years old and older, according to a new poll commissioned by the American Association of Retired Persons.
Unlike the secret ballots cast in states that use primary elections, Nevada residents declare their presidential preferences in public meetings known as caucuses.
The Nevada Democratic Party’s digital director said Monday the party is working hard to ensure a smooth caucus later this month, but details about how early votes will be tabulated and counted on caucus day remained scarce.
The hiring of a top presidential candidate’s staff member to a position within the Nevada Democratic Party has increased scrutiny of the party.
A flyer circulated by Culinary Union Local 226 appears to attack the Medicare for All policy advocated by Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren.
The Nevada Democratic Party will convene the nation’s first-ever early caucus in just one week, but what it will look like and how it will work remain a mystery.
A poll of nonpartisan voters in Nevada finds that three Democratic presidential candidates beat President Donald Trump in a hypothetical general-election matchup.
From lawsuits over polling sites to hand recounts of ballots that stretched into the next day, Nevada’s caucus has had plenty of drama since the state took an early spot on the nominating calendar in 2008.
The Nevada Democratic Party may abandon an app similar to the one used in Iowa that failed, delaying caucus results in that state by nearly a full day.