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2020 Nevada Democratic presidential caucuses

The 2020 Nevada Democratic presidential caucuses took place on February 22, 2020, with early voting on February 14–18, and was the third nominating contest in the Democratic Party primaries for the 2020 presidential election, following the New Hampshire primary the week before. The Nevada caucuses were a closed caucus, meaning that only registered Democrats could vote in this caucus. The state awarded 49 delegates towards the national convention, of which 36 were pledged delegates allocated on the basis of the results of the caucuses.

2020 Nevada Democratic presidential caucuses

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SC →

49 delegates (36 pledged, 13 unpledged)
to the Democratic National Convention
The number of pledged delegates won is determined by the number of county convention delegates (CCDs)[a]
 
Candidate Bernie Sanders Joe Biden Pete Buttigieg
Home state Vermont Delaware Indiana
Delegate count 24 9 3
First vote 35,652
(34.0%)
18,424
(17.6%)
16,102
(15.4%)
Final vote[b] 41,075
(40.5%)
19,179
(18.9%)
17,598
(17.3%)
CCDs[c] 6,788
(46.8%)
2,927
(20.2%)
2,073
(14.3%)

 
Candidate Elizabeth Warren Tom Steyer Amy Klobuchar
Home state Massachusetts California Minnesota
Delegate count 0 0 0
First vote 13,438
(12.8%)
9,503
(9.06%)
10,100
(9.63%)
Final vote[b] 11,703
(11.5%)
4,120
(4.06%)
7,376
(7.26%)
CCDs[c] 1,406
(9.7%)
682
(4.71%)
603
(4.16%)

  Pete Buttigieg
  Bernie Sanders
  Tom Steyer
  Tie
Pledged national
convention
delegates[1][2]
Type Del.
CD1 5
CD2 6
CD3 6
CD4 6
PLEO 5
At-large 8
Total pledged delegates 36

Senator Bernie Sanders won the caucuses in a landslide,[3] with 46.8% of county convention delegates (CCDs) and 40.5% of the final popular vote alignment, with former vice president Joe Biden coming in second. Former mayor Pete Buttigieg[4] and senator Elizabeth Warren failed to cross the 15% threshold of county convention delegates (CCDs) required to earn statewide delegates. (Buttigieg did earn three delegates due to the fact that he received at least 15% of CCDs in at least one congressional district, despite falling short of the statewide threshold.)[5] This was the third presidential nominating contest in a row that Sanders topped the popular vote in, after the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary. Of the 104,883 votes, more than 70,000 were cast early with ranked choice voting ballots.[6]

Procedure edit

Caucus votes were initially slated to be counted on the Shadow app that caused significant problems during the counting of 2020 Iowa Democratic caucuses. As a consequence of those difficulties, the caucuses instead used Google Forms running on 2,000 iPads to send in results.[7] Some volunteers believed there was a lack of training on the iPads, which could result in malfunctions.[8] Early voting for the caucuses took place from February 15 to 18. In addition to Google Forms, early voters filled out a paper ballot that required them to rank candidates according to preference.[9] Early voting ballots were only counted if voters ranked at least three candidates, and were transmitted to voter's home precincts to be counted alongside election day votes.[10]

Precinct caucuses were held starting at 10:00 a.m. local time (PST), with voting starting at noon on February 22. In the closed caucuses, candidates had to meet a 15% viability threshold within an individual precinct in order to be considered viable and 15% at the congressional district or statewide level to win delegates, with supporters of non-viable candidates at precinct caucuses then allowed to support one of the remaining viable candidates. Of the 36 pledged delegates to the 2020 Democratic National Convention, 23 were allocated on the basis of the district results made up of the precinct caucuses, with between 5 and 6 allocated to each of the state's four congressional districts. In the same step the precinct caucuses also elected delegates to county conventions based on the results of the vote in each precinct. Of the remaining 13 pledged delegates, 5 were allocated to party leaders and elected officials (PLEO delegates) in addition to 8 at-large delegates, and these were distributed proportionally based on the number of county delegates for presidential contenders.[2]

The county conventions were planned for April 18, 2020, to choose delegates for the state convention. On May 30, 2020, the state convention met to vote on the 36 pledged delegates for the Democratic National Convention. The delegation also included 13 unpledged PLEO delegates: 6 members of the Democratic National Committee, 5 members of Congress (both senators and 3 representatives), the governor Steve Sisolak, and former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. This meant that presumptive nominee Joe Biden together with the delegates he received from Buttigieg was able to get 25 votes on the national convention, one more than Sanders' 24.[11]

On March 20, 2019, the Nevada Democratic Party had released its 2020 delegate selection plan, introducing four days for early voting from February 15 to 18, 2020, and, like the Iowa caucuses, "virtual caucuses" on February 16 and 17 to allow those unable to physically attend to vote in addition to releasing raw vote totals. In both cases, caucusgoers' ranked presidential preferences would be sent to their precinct and counted on the day of the physical caucus, but in late August 2019, the Democratic National Committee ordered both the Iowa and Nevada Democratic state parties to scrap their plans for "virtual caucuses" because of security concerns.[12] After county conventions following the previous caucuses had left open the risk of a candidate winning a majority of delegates at the state conventions despite trailing among district delegates, even all unpledged delegates had to be allocated on the basis of the results of the precinct caucuses on February 22.[13]

Candidates edit

In order to get on the "caucus preference card" (ballot), candidates had to file with the State committee and pay a $2,500 fee by New Year's Day 2020. The following candidates qualified:[14]

Cory Booker, John Delaney and Marianne Williamson were accepted onto the ballot, but withdrew soon enough that they did not appear on it.[14][15] Although Delaney had not been on the ballot, he received one vote in the first caucus alignment. There was also an uncommitted option on the ballot.[15]

Campaign edit

Twenty-three candidates visited the state during 2019. The largest event of that year was the November 17 "First in the West" "cattle call", which was attended by fourteen candidates.[16]

For a second caucus in a row, the Culinary Workers Union declined to endorse a candidate.[17] This came after it circulated a flyer among members criticizing Sanders and Warren's support for single-payer healthcare, which it argued would leave members with worse benefits.[18] The Las Vegas Sun endorsed both Klobuchar and Biden, saying that they think nominating Sanders "guarantees a Trump second term."[19]

The following was spent on television advertising:[20]

  • Tom Steyer: $13.55 million
  • Bernie Sanders: $1.54 million
  • Elizabeth Warren: $1.51 million
  • Pete Buttigieg: $1.26 million
  • Joe Biden: $1.16 million
  • Amy Klobuchar: $838,740

Even though the Republican caucus had been canceled, President Trump held several campaign events in Nevada.[21][22]

February 14–18 primary edit

With encouragement from the remaining campaigns, the five-day early voting began on February 14. Hundreds of polling places were open throughout the state, with candidate events taking place near to them.[23][24] Turnout was large, with close to 12,000 showing up the first day[25] and greater numbers over the weekend, February 15–16. It was estimated that up to 60% of all participants would vote early[26] and 77,000 voters took the opportunity to do so.[27] As approximately 84,000 voters voted in the caucus in 2016, and approximately 110,000 voters voted in 2008, this put the trajectory for voter turn out in the 2020 caucus above 2016 and near 2008.[28]

Early voters who did not fill out at least a first-choice, second-choice and third-choice ballot oval would not have their votes counted, creating concerns of lost votes, but this rule ultimately affected few voters.[29][30]

February 19–22 caucus edit

With the early voting phase over, the ninth official debate between the candidates on the ballot took place on February 19.[31] Steyer, who was in double digits in several polls in Nevada, did not qualify for the debate,[32] while Michael Bloomberg, who was not on the ballot, did.[33]

The doors opened for the caucus at 9 AM PST and the caucus itself an hour later. There was controversy about the NDAs that the people working at the caucuses were made to sign.[34] Nevada State Democratic Party Chairman William McCurdy stated that signing the non-disclosure agreements was voluntary, but this was disputed. Several people quit rather than doing so.[35]

Polling edit

Polling aggregation
Source of poll aggregation Date
updated
Dates
polled
Bernie
Sanders
Joe
Biden
Pete
Buttigieg
Elizabeth
Warren
Tom
Steyer
Amy
Klobuchar
Others Undecided[d]
270 to Win Feb 21, 2020 Feb 14–21, 2020 30.0% 16.7% 14.0% 13.7% 9.7% 9.7% 1.3%[e] 4.9%
RealClear Politics Feb 21, 2020 Feb 19–21, 2020 32.5% 16.0% 16.0% 14.0% 9.0% 9.5% 2.0%[f] 1.0%
FiveThirtyEight Feb 21, 2020 until Feb 21, 2020[g] 30.5% 14.4% 15.3% 11.8% 10.2% 8.9% 11.0%[h] [i]
Average 31.0% 15.7% 15.1% 13.2% 9.6% 9.4% 4.7%[j] 2.0%
Nevada caucus results, first alignment (February 22, 2020) 34.0% 17.6% 15.4% 12.8% 9.1% 9.6% 1.5%[k]
   – Debate qualifying poll as designated by the Democratic National Committee
Tabulation of individual polls of the 2020 Nevada Democratic Caucus
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[l]
Margin
of error
Joe
Biden
Cory
Booker
Pete
Buttigieg
Kamala
Harris
Amy
Klobuchar
Beto
O'Rourke
Bernie
Sanders
Tom
Steyer
Elizabeth
Warren
Andrew
Yang
Other Undecided
Nevada caucuses (first alignment vote) Feb 22, 2020 17.6% 15.4% 9.6% 34% 9.1% 12.8% 0.6% 1%[m]
Data for Progress[1][n] Feb 19–21, 2020 1010 (LV) ± 2.8% 16% 15% 8% 35% 8% 16% 2%[o]
AtlasIntel Feb 19–21, 2020 517 (LV) ± 4.0% 11% 14% 5% 38% 11% 9% 7%[p] 5%
Emerson College Feb 19–20, 2020 425 (LV) ± 4.7% 16% 17% 11% 30% 10% 12% 4%[q]
Feb 15–18, 2020 Early voting occurred in the Nevada caucuses[36]
Point Blank Political Feb 13–15, 2020 256 (LV) ± 5.6% 14.3% 12.6% 15.6% 13% 18.6% 7.1% 1.7%[r] 17.1%
Beacon Research/Tom Steyer Feb 12–15, 2020 600 (LV) 19% 13% 7% 24% 18% 10% 4%[s] 6%
Data for Progress[2][t] Feb 12–15, 2020 766 (LV) ± 3.4% 14% 15% 9% 35% 10% 16% 2%[u]
WPA Intelligence/Las Vegas Review-Journal/AARP Nevada Feb 11–13, 2020 413 (LV) ± 4.8% 18% 10% 10% 25% 11% 13% 5%[v] 8%
Feb 11, 2020 New Hampshire primary; Yang withdraws from the race after close of polls
Jan 13, 2020 Booker withdraws from the race
Suffolk University/USA Today[3] Jan 8–11, 2020 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 19% 2% 8% 4% 18% 8% 11% 4% 4%[w] 22%
https://www.yang2020.com/wp-content/uploads/Myers-Research-Nevada.pdf January 11, 2020, at the Wayback Machine Jan 5–8, 2020 635 ± 4.0% 23% 3% 6% 2% 17% 12% 12% 4% 13%[x] 6%
Dec 3, 2019 Harris withdraws from the race
YouGov/CBS News Nov 6–13, 2019 708 (RV) ± 4.7% 33% 2% 9% 4% 2% 23% 2% 21% 1% 2%[y]
Fox News Nov 10–13, 2019 627 ± 4.0% 24% 1% 8% 4% 2% 18% 5% 18% 3% 4%[z] 10%
Emerson Polling Oct 31 – Nov 2, 2019 451 (LV) ± 4.6% 30% 1% 5% 5% 1% 19% 3% 22% 5% 10%[aa]
Mellman Group/The Nevada Independent Oct 28 – Nov 2, 2019 600 (LV) ± 4.0% 29% 1% 7% 3% 3% 0% 19% 4% 19% 3% 3%[ab] 9%
Nov 1, 2019 O'Rourke withdraws from the race
CNN/SSRS Sep 22–26, 2019 324 (LV) ± 7.1% 22% 2% 4% 5% 1% 0% 22% 4% 18% 3% 3%[ac] 13%
Suffolk University/USA Today Sep 19–23, 2019 500 (LV) 23% 2% 3% 4% 0% 1% 14% 3% 19% 3% 4%[ad] 21%
YouGov/CBS News Aug 28 – Sep 4, 2019 563 (LV) ± 4.9% 27% 1% 4% 6% 0% 3% 29% 2% 18% 1% 9%[ae]
Gravis Marketing Aug 14–16, 2019 382 (RV) ± 5.0% 25% 3% 5% 9% 2% 0% 10% 6% 15% 2% 13%[af] 9%
Change Research Aug 2–8, 2019 439 (LV) ± 4.7% 26% 0% 7% 10% 1% 2% 22% 3% 23% 1% 5%[ag]
Morning Consult Jul 1–21, 2019 749 (RV) ± 4.0% 29% 3% 6% 11% 1% 3% 23% 1% 12% 3% 10%[ah]
Jul 9, 2019 Steyer announces his candidacy
Monmouth University Jun 6–11, 2019 370 (LV) ± 5.1% 36% 2% 7% 6% 1% 2% 13% 19% 2% 3%[ai] 8%
Change Research May 9–12, 2019 389 (LV) 29% 2% 13% 11% 1% 4% 24% 12% 1% 4%[aj]
Apr 25, 2019 Biden announces his candidacy
Apr 14, 2019 Buttigieg announces his candidacy
Emerson College April 20, 2019, at the Wayback Machine Mar 28–30, 2019 310 (LV) ± 5.5% 26% 2% 5% 9% 2% 10% 23% 10% 3% 9%[ak]

Results edit

Bernie Sanders won the Nevada caucuses, with Joe Biden coming in second and Pete Buttigieg in third.

 
Final alignment popular vote share by county
  Sanders—30–40%
  Sanders—40–50%
  Sanders—60–70%
  Sanders—70–80%
  Buttigieg—<30%
  Buttigieg—30–40%
  Buttigieg—40–50%
 
County convention delegates won by county
  Sanders—30–40%
  Sanders—40–50%
  Sanders—50–60%
  Sanders—70–80%
  Buttigieg—<30%
  Buttigieg—30–40%
  Buttigieg—40–50%
  Steyer—<30%
 
Final alignment popular vote share by congressional district
  Sanders—30–40%
  Sanders—40–50%
2020 Nevada Democratic presidential caucuses[37][38][39][40]
Candidate First
alignment
Final
alignment[b]
County
convention
delegates[c]
Pledged
national
convention

delegates[a]
Votes % Votes % Number %
Bernie Sanders 35,652 33.99 41,075 40.45 6,788 46.84 24
Joe Biden 18,424 17.57 19,179 18.89 2,927 20.20 9
Pete Buttigieg 16,102 15.35 17,598 17.33 2,073 14.31 3
Elizabeth Warren 13,438 12.81 11,703 11.53 1,406 9.70
Tom Steyer 9,503 9.06 4,120 4.06 682 4.71
Amy Klobuchar 10,100 9.63 7,376 7.26 603 4.16
Tulsi Gabbard 353 0.34 32 0.03 4 0.03
Andrew Yang (withdrawn) 612 0.58 49 0.05 1 0.01
Michael Bennet (withdrawn) 140 0.13 36 0.04 0 0.00
Deval Patrick (withdrawn) 86 0.08 8 0.01 0 0.00
John Delaney (withdrawn; not on the ballot) 1 0.00 0 0.00 0 0.00
Uncommitted 472 0.45 367 0.36 7 0.05
Totals 104,883 100% 101,543 100% 14,491 100% 36

Delay edit

Similarly to the Iowa caucus, there were some controversies surrounding the outcome of the caucus. One day after voting, with forty percent of the precincts not reported, Pete Buttigieg questioned the results citing more than "200 reports of problems merging the early votes".[41][42] Full set of results were published two days after the caucus.[43]

Reports of "confusion, calculation glitches and delays in reporting" emerged once again, bringing into question the future of caucuses,[44] with former Nevada Senator Harry Reid calling for Nevada to switch to a primary system.[45]

Analysis edit

Participation in the 2020 caucuses (105,195 initial alignment votes in the official count)[46] was 25% higher compared to the approximately 84,000 people who participated in the 2016 caucuses, but 4% less compared to the approximately 110,000 voters who participated in the 2008 caucuses.[28]

Entrance polls by CNN indicated that Sanders won nearly every gender, race, age, and education demographic group, except for African-Americans and voters over 65, where Biden won 38–28 and 29–12 respectively. He performed extremely well among younger voters, capturing 65% of voters in the 17–29 demographic and 56% of voters under 45 overall, showcasing his overwhelming strength with the youth vote. In terms of ideological preference, Sanders won handily among voters who identified as liberal (50%) and somewhat liberal (29%), whereas Biden won over moderate voters (25%). Sanders also won the state's population center of Clark County, which constituted 70% of all caucusgoers, with 49% of the vote.[47] In a break with Culinary Workers Union leadership who had previously come out against Sanders's Medicare for All plan, Sanders won several caucus precincts along the Las Vegas Strip, home to many hotel and casino workers who are members of the union.[48]

Sanders's landslide victory has been attributed in part to his intentional outreach to Latino communities coordinated by staff member Chuck Rocha, resulting in winning 53% of Latino voters,[49] who make up about 30% of Nevada's population.[50] Under Rocha's direction, the Sanders campaign focused heavily on mobilizing Latino voters, a historically low-turnout demographic group, by hiring 76 Latino staffers and spending over $3 million on Spanish-language advertising specifically crafted to cater to Latino issues in Nevada.[51]

Sanders's substantial margin of victory in Nevada, the first early state with a diverse electorate, helped ease concerns that his campaign had limited appeal among voters of color, as was the case in 2016. These concerns would arise again for Sanders when Joe Biden went on to win South Carolina, a state where 60% of the Democratic electorate is African-American, by a large margin.[52]

For Biden, his distant second-place finish in Nevada helped allay fears of a faltering campaign after two underwhelming results in Iowa and New Hampshire. With South Carolina being the next state to hold a primary, it would be this state that would make or break his campaign – or one that would cement Bernie Sanders' status as a frontrunner.[53]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b The number of pledged national convention delegates is determined by the number of CCDs won. However, a candidate must get both at least 15% of the total vote to get statewide delegates, and at least 15% of the vote in a congressional district to get delegates from that district. Each precinct has a certain number of CCDs and allocates them based on how many caucus goers there are for each candidate at that precinct.
  2. ^ a b Vote count after votes for candidates who did not get at least 15% of the vote in that precinct are reallocated to the voter's second choice.
  3. ^ a b County convention delegates (CCDs) are used to calculate how many pledged national convention delegates each candidate wins statewide and in the state's four congressional districts.
  4. ^ Calculated by taking the difference of 100% and all other candidates combined
  5. ^ Gabbard with 1.3%; Bloomberg not reported
  6. ^ Gabbard with 2.0%; Bloomberg not reported
  7. ^ FiveThirtyEight aggregates polls with a trendline regression of polls rather than a strict average of recent polls.
  8. ^ Bloomberg with 9.1%; Gabbard with 1.9%
  9. ^ Individual candidate numbers add up to more than 100%
  10. ^ Bloomberg with 3.0%; Gabbard with 1.7%
  11. ^ Uncommitted with 0.4%; Gabbard with 0.3%; Yang with 0.6%; Bennet and Patrick with 0.1%; Delaney with 0.0%
  12. ^ Key:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear
  13. ^ Uncomitted with 0.4%; Gabbard with 0.3%; Bennet and Delaney with 0.1%; Patrick with 0%
  14. ^ By the time of this poll, Data for Progress, which has worked with both the Sanders and Warren campaigns, had endorsed Warren
  15. ^ Gabbard with 2%
  16. ^ Gabbard with 3%; "other" with 4%
  17. ^ Gabbard with 2%; someone else with 2%
  18. ^ Gabbard with 1.7%
  19. ^ others with 4%
  20. ^ By the time of this poll, Data for Progress, which has worked with both the Sanders and Warren campaigns, had endorsed Warren
  21. ^ Gabbard with 2%
  22. ^ Gabbard with 0%; Other with 5%
  23. ^ Delaney and Gabbard with 1%; Patrick with 0%; Bennet and Williamson with no voters; other with 0%; refused with 2%
  24. ^ Bloomberg and Gabbard with 2%; Williamson with 1%; Bennet, Delaney, and Patrick with 0%; others with 0%; none with 8%
  25. ^ Castro with 1%; Bennet, Bullock, Delaney, Gabbard, Messam, Sestak, and Williamson with 0%; "Someone else" with 1%
  26. ^ Gabbard with 2%; Castro with 1%; Bennet, Bullock, Delaney, Messam, Sestak and Williamson with 0%; others with 1%; none with 2%
  27. ^ Bennet, Castro, and Gabbard with 1%; Bullock, Delaney, Sestak and Williamson with 0%; someone else with 7%
  28. ^ Castro, Gabbard and Williamson with 1%; Bennet, Bullock, Delaney and Sestak with 0%
  29. ^ Gabbard, Ryan, and Williamson with 1%; Bennet, Bullock, Castro, Delaney, and Sestak with 0%
  30. ^ Bennet, Bullock, Castro and Gabbard with 1%; de Blasio, Delaney, Messam, Ryan, Sestak and Williamson with 0%; "refused" with 1%
  31. ^ Castro with 2%; de Blasio, Delaney, Gabbard, Ryan, and Sestak with 1%; Bennet, Bullock, Messam, and Williamson with 0%; others with 2%
  32. ^ Bennet, de Blasio, and Gabbard with 2%; Bullock, Castro, Delaney, Gillibrand, Inslee, Ryan, and Williamson with 1%
  33. ^ Castro, Gabbard, Gillibrand, and Inslee with 1%; Bennet, Booker, Bullock, Hickenlooper, and Williamson with 0%
  34. ^ Castro with 2%; Bullock, de Blasio, and Ryan with 1%; others with 4%
  35. ^ Castro, Gabbard, and Williamson with 1%; Bullock, Hickenlooper, Inslee, Messam, and Ryan with <1%; Bennet, de Blasio, Delaney, Gillibrand, Gravel, Moulton, and Swalwell with 0%
  36. ^ Abrams, Castro, Gabbard, and Swalwell with 1%; Gillibrand, Hickenlooper, Inslee, and Ryan with 0%
  37. ^ Gabbard with 2%; Castro and Gillibrand with 1%; Hickenlooper and Inslee with 0%; others with 6%

References edit

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  43. ^ Epstein, Reid J. (February 23, 2020). "Why Are Nevada Caucus Results Coming in So Slowly?". The New York Times. Retrieved February 24, 2020.
  44. ^ Culliford, Elizabeth; Reid, Tim (February 23, 2020). "Slow results, confusion and complaints at Nevada caucus sites". Reuters. Retrieved February 24, 2020.
  45. ^ Epstein, Reid J. (February 24, 2020). "Harry Reid Says Nevada Should Have a Primary: 'All Caucuses Should Be a Thing of the Past'". The New York Times. Retrieved February 24, 2020.
  46. ^ "2020 Nevada Democratic Caucus Results". Nevada Democratic Party. Retrieved February 25, 2020.
  47. ^ . CNN. February 23, 2020. Archived from the original on March 5, 2020. Retrieved February 24, 2020.
  48. ^ Collins, Sean (February 22, 2020). "Culinary Union members seem to have broken from their leaders to back Sanders". Vox. Retrieved February 28, 2020.
  49. ^ Brownstein, Ronald (February 23, 2020). "Sanders won big with Latinos in Nevada. The nation's largest minority group could reshape the Democratic race". CNN. Retrieved February 28, 2020.
  50. ^ Gambino, Lauren (February 23, 2020). "Buoyed by Latino voters in Nevada, Sanders cements his frontrunner status". The Guardian. Retrieved February 23, 2020.
  51. ^ Walker, Hunter; Romano, Andrew (February 23, 2020). "Latinos, Sanders's secret weapon in Nevada, could make him unstoppable on Super Tuesday". Yahoo! News. Retrieved February 24, 2020.
  52. ^ Martin, Jonathan; Burns, Alexander (February 22, 2020). "Bernie Sanders Wins Nevada Caucuses, Strengthening His Primary Lead". The New York Times. Retrieved February 28, 2020.
  53. ^ Kaplan, Thomas; Glueck, Katie (February 17, 2020). "Biden, Seeking Revival, Is Counting on at Least Second Place in Nevada". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved July 8, 2020.

External links edit

  • The Green Papers delegate allocation summary
  • Nevada Democratic Party draft delegate selection plan
  • FiveThirtyEight Nevada caucus poll tracker
  • The Nevada Independent Nevada candidate tracker

2020, nevada, democratic, presidential, caucuses, took, place, february, 2020, with, early, voting, february, third, nominating, contest, democratic, party, primaries, 2020, presidential, election, following, hampshire, primary, week, before, nevada, caucuses,. The 2020 Nevada Democratic presidential caucuses took place on February 22 2020 with early voting on February 14 18 and was the third nominating contest in the Democratic Party primaries for the 2020 presidential election following the New Hampshire primary the week before The Nevada caucuses were a closed caucus meaning that only registered Democrats could vote in this caucus The state awarded 49 delegates towards the national convention of which 36 were pledged delegates allocated on the basis of the results of the caucuses 2020 Nevada Democratic presidential caucuses 2016 February 22 2020 2024 NHSC 49 delegates 36 pledged 13 unpledged to the Democratic National ConventionThe number of pledged delegates won is determined by the number of county convention delegates CCDs a Candidate Bernie Sanders Joe Biden Pete ButtigiegHome state Vermont Delaware IndianaDelegate count 24 9 3First vote 35 652 34 0 18 424 17 6 16 102 15 4 Final vote b 41 075 40 5 19 179 18 9 17 598 17 3 CCDs c 6 788 46 8 2 927 20 2 2 073 14 3 Candidate Elizabeth Warren Tom Steyer Amy KlobucharHome state Massachusetts California MinnesotaDelegate count 0 0 0First vote 13 438 12 8 9 503 9 06 10 100 9 63 Final vote b 11 703 11 5 4 120 4 06 7 376 7 26 CCDs c 1 406 9 7 682 4 71 603 4 16 First alignment vote results by countyFinal alignment vote results by countyFinal alignment vote results by congressional districtCounty convention delegate winner by county Pete Buttigieg Bernie Sanders Tom Steyer TiePledged nationalconvention delegates 1 2 Type Del CD1 5CD2 6CD3 6CD4 6PLEO 5At large 8Total pledged delegates 36Senator Bernie Sanders won the caucuses in a landslide 3 with 46 8 of county convention delegates CCDs and 40 5 of the final popular vote alignment with former vice president Joe Biden coming in second Former mayor Pete Buttigieg 4 and senator Elizabeth Warren failed to cross the 15 threshold of county convention delegates CCDs required to earn statewide delegates Buttigieg did earn three delegates due to the fact that he received at least 15 of CCDs in at least one congressional district despite falling short of the statewide threshold 5 This was the third presidential nominating contest in a row that Sanders topped the popular vote in after the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary Of the 104 883 votes more than 70 000 were cast early with ranked choice voting ballots 6 Contents 1 Procedure 2 Candidates 3 Campaign 3 1 February 14 18 primary 3 2 February 19 22 caucus 4 Polling 5 Results 5 1 Delay 6 Analysis 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksProcedure editFurther information Walking subcaucus Caucus votes were initially slated to be counted on the Shadow app that caused significant problems during the counting of 2020 Iowa Democratic caucuses As a consequence of those difficulties the caucuses instead used Google Forms running on 2 000 iPads to send in results 7 Some volunteers believed there was a lack of training on the iPads which could result in malfunctions 8 Early voting for the caucuses took place from February 15 to 18 In addition to Google Forms early voters filled out a paper ballot that required them to rank candidates according to preference 9 Early voting ballots were only counted if voters ranked at least three candidates and were transmitted to voter s home precincts to be counted alongside election day votes 10 Precinct caucuses were held starting at 10 00 a m local time PST with voting starting at noon on February 22 In the closed caucuses candidates had to meet a 15 viability threshold within an individual precinct in order to be considered viable and 15 at the congressional district or statewide level to win delegates with supporters of non viable candidates at precinct caucuses then allowed to support one of the remaining viable candidates Of the 36 pledged delegates to the 2020 Democratic National Convention 23 were allocated on the basis of the district results made up of the precinct caucuses with between 5 and 6 allocated to each of the state s four congressional districts In the same step the precinct caucuses also elected delegates to county conventions based on the results of the vote in each precinct Of the remaining 13 pledged delegates 5 were allocated to party leaders and elected officials PLEO delegates in addition to 8 at large delegates and these were distributed proportionally based on the number of county delegates for presidential contenders 2 The county conventions were planned for April 18 2020 to choose delegates for the state convention On May 30 2020 the state convention met to vote on the 36 pledged delegates for the Democratic National Convention The delegation also included 13 unpledged PLEO delegates 6 members of the Democratic National Committee 5 members of Congress both senators and 3 representatives the governor Steve Sisolak and former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid This meant that presumptive nominee Joe Biden together with the delegates he received from Buttigieg was able to get 25 votes on the national convention one more than Sanders 24 11 On March 20 2019 the Nevada Democratic Party had released its 2020 delegate selection plan introducing four days for early voting from February 15 to 18 2020 and like the Iowa caucuses virtual caucuses on February 16 and 17 to allow those unable to physically attend to vote in addition to releasing raw vote totals In both cases caucusgoers ranked presidential preferences would be sent to their precinct and counted on the day of the physical caucus but in late August 2019 the Democratic National Committee ordered both the Iowa and Nevada Democratic state parties to scrap their plans for virtual caucuses because of security concerns 12 After county conventions following the previous caucuses had left open the risk of a candidate winning a majority of delegates at the state conventions despite trailing among district delegates even all unpledged delegates had to be allocated on the basis of the results of the precinct caucuses on February 22 13 Candidates editIn order to get on the caucus preference card ballot candidates had to file with the State committee and pay a 2 500 fee by New Year s Day 2020 The following candidates qualified 14 Joe Biden Pete Buttigieg Tulsi Gabbard Amy Klobuchar Bernie Sanders Tom Steyer Elizabeth Warren Michael Bennet withdrawn Deval Patrick withdrawn Andrew Yang withdrawn Cory Booker John Delaney and Marianne Williamson were accepted onto the ballot but withdrew soon enough that they did not appear on it 14 15 Although Delaney had not been on the ballot he received one vote in the first caucus alignment There was also an uncommitted option on the ballot 15 Campaign editTwenty three candidates visited the state during 2019 The largest event of that year was the November 17 First in the West cattle call which was attended by fourteen candidates 16 For a second caucus in a row the Culinary Workers Union declined to endorse a candidate 17 This came after it circulated a flyer among members criticizing Sanders and Warren s support for single payer healthcare which it argued would leave members with worse benefits 18 The Las Vegas Sun endorsed both Klobuchar and Biden saying that they think nominating Sanders guarantees a Trump second term 19 The following was spent on television advertising 20 Tom Steyer 13 55 million Bernie Sanders 1 54 million Elizabeth Warren 1 51 million Pete Buttigieg 1 26 million Joe Biden 1 16 million Amy Klobuchar 838 740Even though the Republican caucus had been canceled President Trump held several campaign events in Nevada 21 22 February 14 18 primary edit With encouragement from the remaining campaigns the five day early voting began on February 14 Hundreds of polling places were open throughout the state with candidate events taking place near to them 23 24 Turnout was large with close to 12 000 showing up the first day 25 and greater numbers over the weekend February 15 16 It was estimated that up to 60 of all participants would vote early 26 and 77 000 voters took the opportunity to do so 27 As approximately 84 000 voters voted in the caucus in 2016 and approximately 110 000 voters voted in 2008 this put the trajectory for voter turn out in the 2020 caucus above 2016 and near 2008 28 Early voters who did not fill out at least a first choice second choice and third choice ballot oval would not have their votes counted creating concerns of lost votes but this rule ultimately affected few voters 29 30 February 19 22 caucus edit With the early voting phase over the ninth official debate between the candidates on the ballot took place on February 19 31 Steyer who was in double digits in several polls in Nevada did not qualify for the debate 32 while Michael Bloomberg who was not on the ballot did 33 The doors opened for the caucus at 9 AM PST and the caucus itself an hour later There was controversy about the NDAs that the people working at the caucuses were made to sign 34 Nevada State Democratic Party Chairman William McCurdy stated that signing the non disclosure agreements was voluntary but this was disputed Several people quit rather than doing so 35 Polling editPolling aggregationSource of poll aggregation Dateupdated Datespolled BernieSanders JoeBiden PeteButtigieg ElizabethWarren TomSteyer AmyKlobuchar Others Undecided d 270 to Win Feb 21 2020 Feb 14 21 2020 30 0 16 7 14 0 13 7 9 7 9 7 1 3 e 4 9 RealClear Politics Feb 21 2020 Feb 19 21 2020 32 5 16 0 16 0 14 0 9 0 9 5 2 0 f 1 0 FiveThirtyEight Feb 21 2020 until Feb 21 2020 g 30 5 14 4 15 3 11 8 10 2 8 9 11 0 h i Average 31 0 15 7 15 1 13 2 9 6 9 4 4 7 j 2 0 Nevada caucus results first alignment February 22 2020 34 0 17 6 15 4 12 8 9 1 9 6 1 5 k Debate qualifying poll as designated by the Democratic National Committee Tabulation of individual polls of the 2020 Nevada Democratic CaucusPoll source Date s administered Samplesize l Marginof error JoeBiden CoryBooker PeteButtigieg KamalaHarris AmyKlobuchar BetoO Rourke BernieSanders TomSteyer ElizabethWarren AndrewYang Other UndecidedNevada caucuses first alignment vote Feb 22 2020 17 6 15 4 9 6 34 9 1 12 8 0 6 1 m Data for Progress 1 n Feb 19 21 2020 1010 LV 2 8 16 15 8 35 8 16 2 o AtlasIntel Feb 19 21 2020 517 LV 4 0 11 14 5 38 11 9 7 p 5 Emerson College Feb 19 20 2020 425 LV 4 7 16 17 11 30 10 12 4 q Feb 15 18 2020 Early voting occurred in the Nevada caucuses 36 Point Blank Political Feb 13 15 2020 256 LV 5 6 14 3 12 6 15 6 13 18 6 7 1 1 7 r 17 1 Beacon Research Tom Steyer Feb 12 15 2020 600 LV 19 13 7 24 18 10 4 s 6 Data for Progress 2 t Feb 12 15 2020 766 LV 3 4 14 15 9 35 10 16 2 u WPA Intelligence Las Vegas Review Journal AARP Nevada Feb 11 13 2020 413 LV 4 8 18 10 10 25 11 13 5 v 8 Feb 11 2020 New Hampshire primary Yang withdraws from the race after close of pollsJan 13 2020 Booker withdraws from the raceSuffolk University USA Today 3 Jan 8 11 2020 500 LV 4 4 19 2 8 4 18 8 11 4 4 w 22 https www yang2020 com wp content uploads Myers Research Nevada pdf Archived January 11 2020 at the Wayback Machine Jan 5 8 2020 635 4 0 23 3 6 2 17 12 12 4 13 x 6 Dec 3 2019 Harris withdraws from the raceYouGov CBS News Nov 6 13 2019 708 RV 4 7 33 2 9 4 2 23 2 21 1 2 y Fox News Nov 10 13 2019 627 4 0 24 1 8 4 2 18 5 18 3 4 z 10 Emerson Polling Oct 31 Nov 2 2019 451 LV 4 6 30 1 5 5 1 19 3 22 5 10 aa Mellman Group The Nevada Independent Oct 28 Nov 2 2019 600 LV 4 0 29 1 7 3 3 0 19 4 19 3 3 ab 9 Nov 1 2019 O Rourke withdraws from the raceCNN SSRS Sep 22 26 2019 324 LV 7 1 22 2 4 5 1 0 22 4 18 3 3 ac 13 Suffolk University USA Today Sep 19 23 2019 500 LV 23 2 3 4 0 1 14 3 19 3 4 ad 21 YouGov CBS News Aug 28 Sep 4 2019 563 LV 4 9 27 1 4 6 0 3 29 2 18 1 9 ae Gravis Marketing Aug 14 16 2019 382 RV 5 0 25 3 5 9 2 0 10 6 15 2 13 af 9 Change Research Aug 2 8 2019 439 LV 4 7 26 0 7 10 1 2 22 3 23 1 5 ag Morning Consult Jul 1 21 2019 749 RV 4 0 29 3 6 11 1 3 23 1 12 3 10 ah Jul 9 2019 Steyer announces his candidacyMonmouth University Jun 6 11 2019 370 LV 5 1 36 2 7 6 1 2 13 19 2 3 ai 8 Change Research May 9 12 2019 389 LV 29 2 13 11 1 4 24 12 1 4 aj Apr 25 2019 Biden announces his candidacyApr 14 2019 Buttigieg announces his candidacyEmerson College Archived April 20 2019 at the Wayback Machine Mar 28 30 2019 310 LV 5 5 26 2 5 9 2 10 23 10 3 9 ak Results editBernie Sanders won the Nevada caucuses with Joe Biden coming in second and Pete Buttigieg in third nbsp Final alignment popular vote share by county Sanders 30 40 Sanders 40 50 Sanders 60 70 Sanders 70 80 Buttigieg lt 30 Buttigieg 30 40 Buttigieg 40 50 nbsp County convention delegates won by county Sanders 30 40 Sanders 40 50 Sanders 50 60 Sanders 70 80 Buttigieg lt 30 Buttigieg 30 40 Buttigieg 40 50 Steyer lt 30 nbsp Final alignment popular vote share by congressional district Sanders 30 40 Sanders 40 50 2020 Nevada Democratic presidential caucuses 37 38 39 40 Candidate Firstalignment Finalalignment b Countyconventiondelegates c Pledgednationalconventiondelegates a Votes Votes Number Bernie Sanders 35 652 33 99 41 075 40 45 6 788 46 84 24Joe Biden 18 424 17 57 19 179 18 89 2 927 20 20 9Pete Buttigieg 16 102 15 35 17 598 17 33 2 073 14 31 3Elizabeth Warren 13 438 12 81 11 703 11 53 1 406 9 70Tom Steyer 9 503 9 06 4 120 4 06 682 4 71Amy Klobuchar 10 100 9 63 7 376 7 26 603 4 16Tulsi Gabbard 353 0 34 32 0 03 4 0 03Andrew Yang withdrawn 612 0 58 49 0 05 1 0 01Michael Bennet withdrawn 140 0 13 36 0 04 0 0 00Deval Patrick withdrawn 86 0 08 8 0 01 0 0 00John Delaney withdrawn not on the ballot 1 0 00 0 0 00 0 0 00Uncommitted 472 0 45 367 0 36 7 0 05Totals 104 883 100 101 543 100 14 491 100 36Delay edit Similarly to the Iowa caucus there were some controversies surrounding the outcome of the caucus One day after voting with forty percent of the precincts not reported Pete Buttigieg questioned the results citing more than 200 reports of problems merging the early votes 41 42 Full set of results were published two days after the caucus 43 Reports of confusion calculation glitches and delays in reporting emerged once again bringing into question the future of caucuses 44 with former Nevada Senator Harry Reid calling for Nevada to switch to a primary system 45 Analysis editParticipation in the 2020 caucuses 105 195 initial alignment votes in the official count 46 was 25 higher compared to the approximately 84 000 people who participated in the 2016 caucuses but 4 less compared to the approximately 110 000 voters who participated in the 2008 caucuses 28 Entrance polls by CNN indicated that Sanders won nearly every gender race age and education demographic group except for African Americans and voters over 65 where Biden won 38 28 and 29 12 respectively He performed extremely well among younger voters capturing 65 of voters in the 17 29 demographic and 56 of voters under 45 overall showcasing his overwhelming strength with the youth vote In terms of ideological preference Sanders won handily among voters who identified as liberal 50 and somewhat liberal 29 whereas Biden won over moderate voters 25 Sanders also won the state s population center of Clark County which constituted 70 of all caucusgoers with 49 of the vote 47 In a break with Culinary Workers Union leadership who had previously come out against Sanders s Medicare for All plan Sanders won several caucus precincts along the Las Vegas Strip home to many hotel and casino workers who are members of the union 48 Sanders s landslide victory has been attributed in part to his intentional outreach to Latino communities coordinated by staff member Chuck Rocha resulting in winning 53 of Latino voters 49 who make up about 30 of Nevada s population 50 Under Rocha s direction the Sanders campaign focused heavily on mobilizing Latino voters a historically low turnout demographic group by hiring 76 Latino staffers and spending over 3 million on Spanish language advertising specifically crafted to cater to Latino issues in Nevada 51 Sanders s substantial margin of victory in Nevada the first early state with a diverse electorate helped ease concerns that his campaign had limited appeal among voters of color as was the case in 2016 These concerns would arise again for Sanders when Joe Biden went on to win South Carolina a state where 60 of the Democratic electorate is African American by a large margin 52 For Biden his distant second place finish in Nevada helped allay fears of a faltering campaign after two underwhelming results in Iowa and New Hampshire With South Carolina being the next state to hold a primary it would be this state that would make or break his campaign or one that would cement Bernie Sanders status as a frontrunner 53 Notes edit a b The number of pledged national convention delegates is determined by the number of CCDs won However a candidate must get both at least 15 of the total vote to get statewide delegates and at least 15 of the vote in a congressional district to get delegates from that district Each precinct has a certain number of CCDs and allocates them based on how many caucus goers there are for each candidate at that precinct a b Vote count after votes for candidates who did not get at least 15 of the vote in that precinct are reallocated to the voter s second choice a b County convention delegates CCDs are used to calculate how many pledged national convention delegates each candidate wins statewide and in the state s four congressional districts Calculated by taking the difference of 100 and all other candidates combined Gabbard with 1 3 Bloomberg not reported Gabbard with 2 0 Bloomberg not reported FiveThirtyEight aggregates polls with a trendline regression of polls rather than a strict average of recent polls Bloomberg with 9 1 Gabbard with 1 9 Individual candidate numbers add up to more than 100 Bloomberg with 3 0 Gabbard with 1 7 Uncommitted with 0 4 Gabbard with 0 3 Yang with 0 6 Bennet and Patrick with 0 1 Delaney with 0 0 Key A all adultsRV registered votersLV likely votersV unclear Uncomitted with 0 4 Gabbard with 0 3 Bennet and Delaney with 0 1 Patrick with 0 By the time of this poll Data for Progress which has worked with both the Sanders and Warren campaigns had endorsed Warren Gabbard with 2 Gabbard with 3 other with 4 Gabbard with 2 someone else with 2 Gabbard with 1 7 others with 4 By the time of this poll Data for Progress which has worked with both the Sanders and Warren campaigns had endorsed Warren Gabbard with 2 Gabbard with 0 Other with 5 Delaney and Gabbard with 1 Patrick with 0 Bennet and Williamson with no voters other with 0 refused with 2 Bloomberg and Gabbard with 2 Williamson with 1 Bennet Delaney and Patrick with 0 others with 0 none with 8 Castro with 1 Bennet Bullock Delaney Gabbard Messam Sestak and Williamson with 0 Someone else with 1 Gabbard with 2 Castro with 1 Bennet Bullock Delaney Messam Sestak and Williamson with 0 others with 1 none with 2 Bennet Castro and Gabbard with 1 Bullock Delaney Sestak and Williamson with 0 someone else with 7 Castro Gabbard and Williamson with 1 Bennet Bullock Delaney and Sestak with 0 Gabbard Ryan and Williamson with 1 Bennet Bullock Castro Delaney and Sestak with 0 Bennet Bullock Castro and Gabbard with 1 de Blasio Delaney Messam Ryan Sestak and Williamson with 0 refused with 1 Castro with 2 de Blasio Delaney Gabbard Ryan and Sestak with 1 Bennet Bullock Messam and Williamson with 0 others with 2 Bennet de Blasio and Gabbard with 2 Bullock Castro Delaney Gillibrand Inslee Ryan and Williamson with 1 Castro Gabbard Gillibrand and Inslee with 1 Bennet Booker Bullock Hickenlooper and Williamson with 0 Castro with 2 Bullock de Blasio and Ryan with 1 others with 4 Castro Gabbard and Williamson with 1 Bullock Hickenlooper Inslee Messam and Ryan with lt 1 Bennet de Blasio Delaney Gillibrand Gravel Moulton and Swalwell with 0 Abrams Castro Gabbard and Swalwell with 1 Gillibrand Hickenlooper Inslee and Ryan with 0 Gabbard with 2 Castro and Gillibrand with 1 Hickenlooper and Inslee with 0 others with 6 References edit LIVE RESULTS Bernie Sanders wins the Nevada caucus a critical victory fuelling a striking delegate advantage Business Insider Australia February 23 2020 Retrieved February 23 2010 a b Nevada Democratic Delegation 2020 The Green Papers March 31 2019 Retrieved April 12 2019 Scott Dylan February 22 2020 3 winners and 2 losers from the Nevada caucuses Vox Retrieved May 24 2020 Sanders Projected to Win 24 of 36 Delegates in Nevada as Vote Count Nears Completion 270towin February 24 2020 Retrieved November 20 2023 Nilsen Ella February 22 2020 Bernie Sanders just won the Nevada caucuses Vox Retrieved February 23 2020 Appleton Rory February 19 2020 33K vote on final day of early voting for Democratic caucus Las Vegas Review Journal Retrieved May 24 2020 Musil Steven February 13 2020 Nevada Democrats to use iPads loaded with Google Forms to track caucuses Cnet Barron Lopez Laura February 16 2020 A complete disaster Fears grow over potential Nevada caucus malfunction Politico Retrieved February 16 2020 Jessie Faith February 14 2020 Nevada Caucus early voting begins Saturday will use paper ballots 3 News Las Vegas Retrieved February 15 2020 Scott Dylan February 22 2020 3 winners and 2 losers from the Nevada caucuses Vox Retrieved May 24 2020 2020 Presidential Primaries Caucuses and Conventions Nevada Democrat The Green Papers May 30 2020 Retrieved November 19 2020 Korecki Natasha August 31 2019 DNC throws Iowa Nevada caucuses into confusion Politico Messerly Megan March 19 2019 After bitter 2016 cycle Nevada Democrats overhaul caucus process to build a bigger tent The Nevada Independent Retrieved April 12 2019 a b NV DEMS ANNOUNCE CANDIDATES TO APPEAR ON 2020 FIRST IN THE WEST CAUCUS PREFERENCE CARD Press release Nevada Democratic Party January 2 2020 a b Nevada Caucuses Ballot Twitter Appleton Rory November 18 2019 National Democrats make their pitches at Nevada party dinner Las Vegas Review Journal Bradner Eric February 13 2020 Nevada s powerful Culinary Union won t endorse in Democratic presidential race CNN Messerly Megan February 11 2020 In new flyer Culinary Union warns members Sanders would end their health care if elected president The Nevada Independent Concha Joe February 13 2020 Las Vegas newspaper endorses Biden and Klobuchar scorches non starter Sanders The Hill Retrieved February 14 2020 Reid J Epstein Adriana Ramic February 21 2020 What s at Stake in the Nevada Caucuses The New York Times Chalfant Morgan February 21 2020 Trump rallies supporters in Nevada capping four day trip to the West The Hill Kim Catherine February 22 2020 Trump sows doubt in Nevada caucuses results before they re even out Vox Biden Buttigieg Steyer Klobuchar Campaign in Nevada Bloomberg February 17 2020 DeHaven James February 15 2020 Big turnout slim staffing blamed for long lines on first day of early caucusing in Reno Reno Gazette Journal Olvera Kaitlyn February 16 2020 NV Dems More than 26 000 voters participate in first 2 days of early voting for Nevada Democratic Caucus 8 News Now Paz Isabella Grullon February 14 2020 Another Caucus is Coming But Nevada Will Look Completely Different The New York Times Retrieved February 18 2020 More than 77 000 Democrats cast early votes in Nevada Las Vegas Sun Newspaper lasvegassun com February 19 2020 a b Nevada Democratic caucus turnout lower than in 2008 Las Vegas Sun Newspaper lasvegassun com Associated Press February 22 2016 Edelman Adam February 20 2020 Caucus chaos again Experts fear vote counting problems in Nevada NBC News 8NewsNow Staff February 22 2020 Nevada State Democratic Party 1 744 early voting ballots deemed invalid 8 News Now a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Smith Allan February 6 2020 NBC News MSNBC announce 5 moderators for Democratic debate in Las Vegas NBC News Retrieved February 5 2020 Rakich Nathaniel February 18 2020 6 Candidates Have Made The Nevada Debate Including Bloomberg FiveThirtyEight Retrieved February 18 2020 Levin Sam February 19 2020 Gloves will be off Nevada debate could be pivotal for Bloomberg The Guardian Retrieved February 20 2020 Reed Albergotti Isaac Stanley Becker James Pace Cornsilk February 22 2020 Nevada Democratic Party moves to muzzle election workers The Washington Post Kevin Conlon Dianne Gallagher Dan Merica February 22 2020 Nevada Democratic Party asks caucus volunteers to sign confidentiality agreements CNN Important Election Dates amp Deadlines in Nevada Rock the Vote February 2 2018 Archived from the original on March 20 2020 Retrieved January 7 2020 2020 primary Elections Nevada results NBC News February 24 2020 Retrieved March 2 2022 Nevada democratic Caucus Results USA Today February 24 2020 Retrieved March 2 2022 2020 Nevada Democratic presidential caucuses The Washington Post February 24 2020 Retrieved March 2 2022 2020 Presidential Primaries Caucuses and Conventions Nevada Democrat The Green Papers November 24 2021 Retrieved March 2 2022 Price Michelle L February 23 2020 Buttigieg questions 3rd place finish in Nevada cites errors The Associated Press Retrieved February 24 2020 Tin Alex Killion Nikole Linton Caroline Quinn Melissa February 23 2020 Buttigieg campaign alleges irregularities in Nevada results CBS News Retrieved February 24 2020 Epstein Reid J February 23 2020 Why Are Nevada Caucus Results Coming in So Slowly The New York Times Retrieved February 24 2020 Culliford Elizabeth Reid Tim February 23 2020 Slow results confusion and complaints at Nevada caucus sites Reuters Retrieved February 24 2020 Epstein Reid J February 24 2020 Harry Reid Says Nevada Should Have a Primary All Caucuses Should Be a Thing of the Past The New York Times Retrieved February 24 2020 2020 Nevada Democratic Caucus Results Nevada Democratic Party Retrieved February 25 2020 Nevada Caucuses 2020 Polls news maps and results CNN February 23 2020 Archived from the original on March 5 2020 Retrieved February 24 2020 Collins Sean February 22 2020 Culinary Union members seem to have broken from their leaders to back Sanders Vox Retrieved February 28 2020 Brownstein Ronald February 23 2020 Sanders won big with Latinos in Nevada The nation s largest minority group could reshape the Democratic race CNN Retrieved February 28 2020 Gambino Lauren February 23 2020 Buoyed by Latino voters in Nevada Sanders cements his frontrunner status The Guardian Retrieved February 23 2020 Walker Hunter Romano Andrew February 23 2020 Latinos Sanders s secret weapon in Nevada could make him unstoppable on Super Tuesday Yahoo News Retrieved February 24 2020 Martin Jonathan Burns Alexander February 22 2020 Bernie Sanders Wins Nevada Caucuses Strengthening His Primary Lead The New York Times Retrieved February 28 2020 Kaplan Thomas Glueck Katie February 17 2020 Biden Seeking Revival Is Counting on at Least Second Place in Nevada The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 8 2020 External links editThe Green Papers delegate allocation summary Nevada Democratic Party draft delegate selection plan FiveThirtyEight Nevada caucus poll tracker The Nevada Independent Nevada candidate tracker Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2020 Nevada Democratic presidential caucuses amp oldid 1204652731, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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