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  1. A United States presidential nominating convention is a political convention held every four years in the United States by most of the political parties who will be fielding nominees in the upcoming U.S. presidential election.

  2. Some of the nominees (e.g. the Whigs before 1860 and Theodore Roosevelt in 1912) received very large votes, while others who received less than 1% of the total national popular vote are listed to show historical continuity or transition.

    Elec- Tion
    Democratic Convention
    Democratic Nominee
    Republican Convention
    Kamala Harris & Tim Walz
    Joe Biden & Kamala Harris
    Philadelphia
    Hillary Clinton & Tim Kaine
    Cleveland
    Barack Obama & Joe Biden
    • Introduction
    • What Is A Caucus?
    • What Is A Primary?
    • Why Have The Iowa Caucuses Become So Important?
    • How Does The Delegate Process Work?
    • Who Are The Delegates?
    • How Do Candidates Win Delegates?
    • How Is The Turnout?
    • How Many Delegates Are at Stake?
    • What Are Superdelegates?
    • GeneratedCaptionsTabForHeroSec

    The presidential nominating process in the United States is one of the most complex, lengthy, and expensive in the world. Every four years, presidential candidates compete in a series of state contests during the winter and spring before the general election to gain their party’s nomination. At stake in each contest—either a primary or caucus—is a ...

    Often held at school gyms, town halls, and other public venues, caucuses are local meetings that are financed and managed by the two major parties in which registered party members gather to discuss and express support for the various presidential candidates. The parties run their events a little differently. For instance, in Iowa in 2016, Republic...

    Unlike caucuses, primaries are conducted at regular polling stations, usually paid for by the state and run by state election officials. Voters generally cast a secret ballot for their preferred candidate. Generally, there are two types of primaries: closed, in which only voters registered with the party holding the primary can participate; and ope...

    A number of factors in the 1970s pushed the Iowa caucuses into the national political spotlight. First, the Democratic Party instituted reforms after its 1968 national convention in Chicago, where days of antiwar protests erupted into violence, to limit the power of party bosses and open the nomination process up to regular members. Among other thi...

    In recent decades, states have competed to hold primaries and caucuses earlier in the calendar—in a phenomenon known as front-loading—to draw the attention of candidates and the national media. However, the political parties have set rules in recent years to discourage front-loading and provide states that hold events later in the spring a greater ...

    Delegates are often party activists, local political leaders, or early supporters of a given candidate. Presidential campaigns court local and state politicians for their slate of delegates because they typically bring the support of their political constituencies. Delegates can also include members of a campaign’s steering committee or longtime ac...

    On the Democratic side, candidates are generally awarded delegates on a proportional basis. For instance, a candidate who receives one-third of the vote or support in a given primary or caucus receives roughly one-third of the delegates. The rules on the Republican side are more varied. Some states award delegates on a proportional basis, some are ...

    Generally the turnout in caucuses tends to be lower than in primaries. In 2012, when only the Republican nomination was contested, 6.5 percent of all eligible voters in Iowa—but approximately 20 percent of registered Republicans—participated in the state’s caucuses. (This number was 16 percent in 2016, when both parties had competitive campaigns.) ...

    In 2020, a Democratic candidate must secure at least 2,376 out of 4,750 delegates to become the party’s nominee. The number of delegates allocated to each state takes into account the state’s Democratic vote in the previous three presidential elections and its assigned number of Electoral College votes. A Republican candidatemust secure at least 1,...

    Each party also reserves a certain number of delegate slots for its high-ranking officials, who generally are not bound (or are unpledged) to a specific candidate heading into the national convention (unlike pledged delegates). On the Republican side, these include the three members of each state’s national committee, representing less than 5 perce...

    Learn how U.S. presidential candidates compete in state contests to gain their party’s nomination every four years. Find out the difference between primaries and caucuses, the role of delegates, and the importance of Iowa and New Hampshire.

  3. Aug 13, 2020 · Since then, every major party, with the exception of the Whigs in 1836, has held a national convention to nominate its presidential candidate. Still, nominating conventions in the 19th century...

    • Becky Little
  4. Aug 16, 2020 · WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States has held presidential nominating conventions for almost 200 years, and they have served in recent decades as an important televised introduction to each...

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  6. In the United States, a presidential nominating convention is held by each political party before a presidential election. They are held every four years, in the summer. At the convention, delegates (people who are selected to vote) choose the party's candidates for president and vice president. [1] They also agree on the party's platform, a ...

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