Caucus-Generally speaking, it is a meeting of members of a political party or subgroup to coordinate members' actions, choose group policy, or nominate candidates for various offices.
The term is frequently used in the media to discuss the caucuses used by some states to select presidential nominees, such as the Iowa caucuses. Along these same lines, in early American history, the Congressional nominating caucus and legislative caucus were influential meetings of congressmen to decide the party's nominee for President and party platforms. Similar caucuses were held by the parties at state level.
Primary-A primary election is an election in which voters in a jurisdiction select candidates for a subsequent election (nominating primary). In other words, primary elections are generally when each political party decides its nominee for the upcoming general election.
-The New Hampshire primary is the first of a number of statewide political party primary elections held in the United States every four years, as part of the process of the Democratic and Republican parties choosing their candidate for the presidential elections on the subsequent November. Held in the small New England state of New Hampshire, it traditionally marks the opening of the quadrennial U.S. presidential election, although that status is threatened in 2007 by other states seeking a bigger role in the selection of party nominees. [1]
Since 1952, the primary has been a major testing ground for candidates for the Republican and Democratic nominations. Candidates who do poorly usually have to drop out, while lesser-known, underfunded candidates who do well suddenly become contenders, gaining huge amounts of media attention and money. The media gives New Hampshire - and Iowa, the first state to hold a party caucus, usually a week before the New Hampshire primary - about half of all the attention paid to all states in the primary process, magnifying the state's decision power.[2] This has spurred repeated efforts by out-of-state Democrats to change the rules and by other states to try to attain the status of being the first primary in the nation.[3]
The Iowa caucus is commonly recognized as the first step in the United States Presidential nomination process for both the Democrats and the Republicans. It came to national attention in 1972, with a series of articles in the New York Times on how non-primary states would choose their delegates for the national conventions. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primary_ele...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caucus
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Hampshi...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iowa_caucus http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primary_election
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caucus
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Hampshire_primary
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iowa_caucus
Primary is where you go into a booth and vote for who you want. A caucus is when the candidates speak and the room is divided by who is voting for who, and as the candidates speak people are moving around depending on who they like the most at the time.
what is the difference between a direct primary election an caucus
A PAC is not formally related to a political party.
A PAC is not formally related to a political party.
Iowa holds the first caucus and New Hampshire holds the first primary.
New Hampshire is the first state to hold a primary while Iowa is the first state to hold a caucus. New Hampshire had its primary on January 10, 2012. The Iowa caucus was held on January 3, 2012.
New Hampshire. Iowa holds the first election, but it is a Caucus.
Yes, caucuses pick a candidate for office. The difference between a caucus and a primary is that caucuses are held in public and voting is done in public. In primaries, the voting is done privately.
The Iowa caucuses come first. Next is the New Hampshire primary, followed by South Carolina.
First of all Caucus is spelled incorrectly in the question. No there are seven caucus states for 2008. The number can change from year to year. A state can either have a caucus or a primary election, they are two different methods for selecting a candidate for each party. Some states traditionally have a caucus from year to year, New Hampshire and Iowa being two great examples. For 2008, Five of the Seven Caucus states are: Minnesota North Dakota Iowa New Hampshire Nevada
Ten States will hold a primary or caucus on March 6.
Texas does not call there primary a caucus. They actually have both, held on the same day. Some of the delegates are awarded through the primary process, and some of the delegates are determined through the caucus.