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To: Reno89519
It's the other way around:

Nevada has held a caucus for decades, but in 2021, the state passed a law replacing the caucus with a primary due to flaws in the reporting process for the 2020 Democratic caucus. This year, the state will hold both a Republican primary and a Republican caucus. Voters can participate in both, but not the candidates. The Nevada Republican Party has chosen to hold a party-run caucus on Thursday, Feb. 8, from 5 to 7:30 p.m. Republicans can look up their precinct locations online, but the caucus itself is entirely in-person. A valid government ID is required to vote.0 The Nevada presidential preference primary is a closed election, meaning only voters who are registered with the Democratic or Republican party are allowed to vote. In 2023, the Nevada Republican Party approved a party-run caucus that excludes candidates who run in primary elections, but must still hold a presidential preference primary due to the 2021 Nevada law.

The primary is not what will be used at all for the Republican Party

5 posted on 01/30/2024 7:09:13 PM PST by Robert DeLong
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To: Robert DeLong

It is BS argument. I guarantee you more primary votes than idiotic caucus. There is a reason only four states still have caucus and why Nevada was not to have them any further. After next month, hopefully it will be over forever. The Republican party picks losers, is run by losers, and needs more input from Republican voters not the few party fanatics that may or may not be aligned the actual voters.


8 posted on 01/30/2024 8:53:35 PM PST by Reno89519 (Biden, Democrats, and Some Republicans may have surrendered, but I have not. Defend America!)
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