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2024 Democratic Party presidential primaries

Presidential primaries and caucuses are being organized by the Democratic Party to select the delegates to the 2024 Democratic National Convention, to determine the party's nominee for president in the 2024 United States presidential election. The elections will take place in all 50 U.S. states, the District of Columbia, five U.S. territories, and Democrats Abroad, and will be held between February and June that year.[1] Incumbent President Joe Biden is running for re-election with Vice President Kamala Harris as his running mate.[2] Biden maintains a significant lead in polls,[3] and no incumbent president in modern history has lost renomination.[4][5]

2024 Democratic Party presidential primaries

← 2020 February to June 2024 2028 →

[a]
Opinion polls

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First place by first-instance vote

Previous Democratic nominee

Joe Biden



While Biden had repeatedly expressed his intent to run for re-election since 2021, there was speculation in the first two years of his presidency that he might not seek re-election due to his age and low approval ratings.[6][7] Additionally, Biden had indicated in 2019 that he would only serve a single term.[8] Former Democratic House representatives including Carolyn Maloney,[9] Joe Cunningham[10] and Tim Ryan[11] had publicly said Biden should not run. There had been speculation that Biden may face a primary challenge, especially from a member of the Democratic Party's progressive faction.[12][13] Three primary opponents have emerged; Marianne Williamson declared her candidacy in March 2023,[14] which was followed by anti-vaccine activist, environmental attorney, and conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr.[15] in April[16] and Representative Dean Phillips in October.[17] Kennedy withdrew from the Democratic primaries in October 2023 to declare an independent presidential run.[18]

After Democrats outperformed expectations in the 2022 midterm elections, many believed the chances that Biden would run for and win his party's nomination had increased.[19] On April 25, 2023, Biden announced via a video that he would be running for re-election.[20]

Candidates edit

As of November 2023, more than 180 candidates have filed with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) to run for the Democratic nomination in 2024.[21] In previous cycles, the majority of these candidates did not appear on any ballots, raise money, or otherwise attempt to formally run a campaign.[21][22]

Declared major candidates edit

The candidates in this section have declared their candidacies and meet one or more of the following criteria:

  • their campaign has received substantial major media coverage.
  • the candidate is a current or previous holder of a significant elected office (such as president, vice president, governor, U.S. senator, U.S. representative).
  • the candidate has been included in at least five national polls.
Declared major candidates for the 2024 Democratic Party presidential primaries
Name Born Experience Home state Campaign
Announcement date
Ref
 
Joe Biden
November 20, 1942
(age 80)
Scranton, Pennsylvania
President of the United States
(2021–present)

Vice President of the United States
(2009–2017)
U.S. Senator from Delaware
(1973–2009)
 
Delaware
 
Campaign
April 25, 2023
FEC filing[23]
Website
[2]
 
Dean Phillips
January 20, 1969
(age 54)
Saint Paul, Minnesota
U.S. Representative from MN-03
(2019–present)

CEO of Phillips Distilling Company
(2000–2012)
 
Minnesota
 
Campaign

October 26, 2023
FEC filing[24]
Website

[25]
 
Marianne
Williamson
July 8, 1952
(age 71)
Houston, Texas
Author
Founder of Project Angel Food
Candidate for President in 2020
 
California
 
Campaign

March 4, 2023
FEC filing[26]
Website

[14]

Other declared candidates edit

The candidates in this section are otherwise notable, but have not met the criteria outlined above.

Withdrew before the primaries edit

The candidates in this section have suspended their campaigns, or have otherwise ceased campaigning and ended their bids for the nomination before any primary contests were held.

Withdrawn major candidates for the 2024 Democratic Party presidential primaries
Name Born Experience Home state Campaign
announced
Campaign
suspended
Campaign Ref.
 
Robert F.
Kennedy Jr.
January 17, 1954
(age 69)
Washington, D.C.
Environmental lawyer
Founder of Children's Health Defense
Founder of Waterkeeper Alliance
Anti-vaccine activist
  California April 19, 2023 October 9, 2023
(running as an independent)
 
Campaign
FEC filing[34][35]
Website
[36][37]

Other notable individuals who were not considered major candidates and who withdrew from the race before the beginning of the primary season include:


Decision pending edit

As of November 2023, the following notable individual is expected to make a decision regarding their official candidacy within a set timeline.

Declined to be candidates edit

The following notable individuals have been the subject of speculation about their possible candidacy, but have publicly denied interest in running.

Vice presidential speculation edit

 
Kamala Harris, incumbent vice president

On January 19, 2022, President Biden confirmed that Vice President Kamala Harris will be his running mate in 2024 in his re-election campaign.[97]

Some Democrats expressed skepticism about Biden choosing Harris again as his running mate, as she has also seen similar low approval ratings to Biden. In January 2023, U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren said in a radio interview that she supported Biden's reelection bid, but stopped short of supporting Harris.[98] She later clarified her position, saying she supported the Biden–Harris ticket.[99]

Primaries and caucus calendar edit

The following primary and caucus dates have been scheduled by state statutes or state party decisions, but are subject to change pending legislation, state party delegate selection plans, or the decisions of state secretaries of state: [100]

Timeline edit

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 2024 presidential campaignDean Phillips 2024 presidential campaignMarianne Williamson 2024 presidential campaignJoe Biden 2024 presidential campaign
Active campaign Exploratory committee Withdrawn candidate
Midterm elections Primaries Democratic National Convention

Early developments edit

Biden declared his intent in January 2022 to run for re-election, keeping Kamala Harris as his running mate.[2] On September 15, he told Scott Pelley in a CBS 60 Minutes interview that he had not yet committed to run.[102] In a private conversation with civil-rights activist Al Sharpton on October 3, he reportedly told Sharpton that he was seeking re-election.[103] On October 11, he told Jake Tapper in an interview on CNN that he would decide whether or not to seek re-election after the 2022 midterm elections.[104]

Throughout 2022, several prominent Democrats publicly urged Biden not to run for a second term. On June 23, shortly after winning the Democratic nomination in the South Carolina gubernatorial race, former U.S. Representative Joe Cunningham told CNN that he believed Biden would be too old by the end of his second term and should not run in 2024. CNN pointed out that Biden had endorsed Cunningham in his 2018 and 2020 campaigns.[10] In July, U.S. Representative Dean Phillips of Minnesota said he believed that Democrats should nominate someone from a younger generation in 2024, and fellow Minnesota Representative Angie Craig agreed with him the following week.[11] On August 1, then-U.S. Representative Carolyn Maloney told The New York Times that she thought Biden should not run in 2024 and that she believed he would not run. She later apologized and said that he should run again, though she reiterated her belief that he would not.[9] In September, U.S. Representative and Ohio U.S. Senate nominee Tim Ryan similarly called for a "generational move" away from Biden during an interview with a local TV station; Forbes Magazine noted that Biden, who had endorsed Ryan, headlined a rally with him just hours after the interview aired.[11]

Primary calendar changes edit

On February 4, 2023, the Democratic National Committee approved a new 2024 primary calendar, moving South Carolina to hold its race first on February 3, followed by Nevada and New Hampshire on February 6, Georgia on February 13, and Michigan on February 27. Iowa, which traditionally goes first, would then be held later in the primary season. This vote was preceded by a December 2022 vote of the DNC Rules and Bylaws Committee, held after a letter from President Biden requesting the change was released.[105] DNC members who supported this new plan say this will give a better representation of Democratic voters' preference during the early months of the campaign.

Members of the Iowa Democratic Party and the New Hampshire Democratic Party opposed the move since they would no longer be the first two states to hold their races. Democratic officials from New Hampshire and Georgia also note that moving their primaries to comply with the new calendar would require changing their respective state laws (New Hampshire state law mandates them to hold the first primary in the country, while Georgia state law requires them to hold both the Democratic and Republican primaries on the same day), which is unlikely to happen since both states have governors and state legislatures controlled by Republicans.[106][107] New Hampshire governor Chris Sununu in particular criticized the DNC's plan as an "absolute joke ... It's just based on a personal preference of a candidate."[108]

The DNC originally gave Georgia and New Hampshire until June to change their primary dates.[109] In May 2023, Georgia Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger denied the DNC's request for a separate February date and scheduled the Georgia primaries for March 12.[110] In June 2023, the DNC extended New Hampshire's compliance deadline to September.[111] With New Hampshire still planning to hold its race before South Carolina's, Biden's team announced in October that he will not appear on the New Hampshire ballot to show solidarity with the DNC;[112] Democrats may still mount a write-in campaign to help Biden avoid the embarrassment of losing the states by default.[113] It remains unclear how the DNC will proceed, as its convention rules would penalize the state's number of delegates if they are unable to move their primary date to comply with the party's primary calendar.[109]

On October 6, the DNC and the Iowa Democratic Party reached a compromise in which the in-person Iowa Democratic caucuses focusing on party business could still be held in January, but voting on presidential candidates would be done via mail-in ballots until Super Tuesday, March 5.[114]

Debates edit

The Democratic National Committee has expressed full support for Biden and, as of March 2023, has no plans to host any official primary debates.[115] Williamson has criticized this decision as "rigging" and "candidate suppression."[116][117]

A June 2023 poll by USA Today and Suffolk University found that 8 in 10 Democratic voters would like to see Biden debate the other Democratic candidates. Among Biden supporters, 72% said they would like to see him debate in the primaries with other Democratic candidates.[118]

No primary debates have been held for any incumbent president since Gerald Ford in 1976.[116]

Following Phillips' campaign announcement, Williamson offered to debate him.[119] Williamson had previously expressed similar sentiments when Kennedy had joined the race.[120]

Endorsements edit

Dean Phillips
State representatives
Notable individuals
Marianne Williamson
State senators
State representatives
Local officials
Notable individuals

Opinion polling edit

Aggregate polls edit

Aggregate polls of declared candidates in the 2024 Democratic Party presidential primaries
Source of poll aggregation Dates administered Dates updated Joe Biden Dean Phillips Marianne Williamson Other/undecided[d] Margin
270 to Win October 12–30, 2023 November 2, 2023 69.4% 3.5% 8.4% 18.7% 61.0%
FiveThirtyEight through November 1, 2023 November 2, 2023 68.5% 5.6% 25.9% 62.9%
Race to the WH through October 23, 2023 November 1, 2023 67.4% 7.0% 25.6% 60.4%
Real Clear Politics October 12 – November 1, 2023 November 2, 2023 72.2% 5.0% 8.0% 14.8% 64.2%
Average 69.4% 4.3% 7.3% 19.0% 62.1%

Polling with declared candidates edit

Polling with declared candidates in the 2024 Democratic Party presidential primaries
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Joe
Biden
Robert F.
Kennedy Jr.
Dean Phillips Marianne
Williamson
Other Undecided Margin
Morning Consult October 30 – November 2, 2023 789 (LV) 73% 4% 4% 19% 69%
HarrisX/The Messenger October 30 – November 1, 2023 725 (RV) 75% 4% 5% 9%[e] 10% 70%
Quinnipiac October 26–30, 2023 695 (RV) 77% 6% 8% 5%[f] 5% 69%
October 26, 2023 Phillips declares his candidacy
Echelon Insights October 23–26, 2023 472 (LV) 59% 1% 7% 4%[g] 27% 52%
HarrisX/The Messenger October 16–23, 2023 1,106 (RV) 70% 9% 13% 9% 61%
USA Today/Suffolk October 17–20, 2023 289 (LV) 73.0% 10.7% 1.0% 15.2% 62.3%
Emerson College October 16–17, 2023 643 (RV) 70.0% 9.9% 20.1% 60.1%
Yahoo News October 12–16, 2023 509 (LV) 68% 6% 4% 21% 62%
Zogby Analytics October 13–15, 2023 424 (LV) 67.6% 14.9% 1.6% 6.4% 9.6% 52.7%
October 9, 2023 Kennedy announces he will run as an independent
Harris X/The Messenger October 4–7, 2023 1,080 (RV) 58% 15% 7% 7% 13% 43%
Big Village September 29 – October 3, 2023 1,106 (RV) 61.8% 23.7% 7.2% 7.3% 38.1%
TIPP/I&I September 27–29, 2023 560 (RV) 65% 14% 51%
Echelon Insights September 25–28, 2023 499 (LV) 58% 18% 4% 4% 16% 40%
McLaughlin & Associates September 22–26, 2023 432 (LV) 56% 15% 3% 26% 41%
Marquette University Law School September 18–25, 2023 372 (LV) 49% 13% 4% 34% 36%
HarrisX/The Messenger September 13–19, 2023 1,114 (RV) 62% 16% 6% 5% 11% 46%
Emerson College September 17–18, 2023 457 (LV) 61.6% 14.3% 3.6% 20.5% 47.3%
Rasmussen September 14–18, 2023 57% 25% 3% 7% 32%
YouGov September 14–18, 2023 486 (RV) 68% 7% 4% 19% 61%
Harvard/Harris[A] September 13–14, 2023 800 (RV) 60% 15% 4% 9% 13% 45%
Ipsos/Reuters September 8–14, 2023 2,024 (A) 67% 14% 4% 53%
Fox News September 9–12, 2023 404 (LV) 71% 17% 6% 3% 3% 54%
Quinnipiac University September 7–11, 2023 724 (RV) 73% 11% 8% 62%
HarrisX/The Messenger September 6–11, 2023 1,245 (RV) 65% 11% 7% 7% 10% 54%
Redfield & Wilton Strategies September 3–4, 2023 618 (LV) 71% 9% 3% 3%[h] 14% 62%
Morning Consult August 30 – September 1, 2023 800 (RV) 76% 9% 3% 67%
I&I/TIPP August 30 – September 1, 2023 606 (RV) 68% 10% 5% 3% 14% 58%
Echelon Insights August 28–31, 2023 468 (RV) 57% 13% 6% 4% 20% 44%
Big Village August 25–27, 2023 919 (A) 60.3% 19.0% 9.7% 10.9% 41.3%
Emerson College August 25–26, 2023 374 (RV) 61.0% 11.5% 4.4% 23.0% 49.5%
HarrisX August 24–26, 2023 763 (RV) 66% 13% 7% 5% 9% 53%
McLaughlin & Associates August 15–23, 2023 444 (LV) 61% 12% 7% 21% 40%
HarrisX August 17–21, 2023 648 (A) 64% 13% 4% 8% 11% 51%
Yahoo News/YouGov August 17–21, 2023 495 (RV) 69% 7% 5% 2% 18% 62%
Emerson College August 16–17, 2023 608 68.9% 8.9% 3.8% 18.5% 60.0%
Fox News/Beacon Research August 11–14, 2023 399 (RV) 64% 17% 9% 47%
RMG Research August 11–14, 2023 64% 13% 4% 7%[i] 9% 51%
Quinnipiac University August 10–14, 2023 666 (RV) 72% 13% 9% 1% 3% 59%
I&I/TIPP August 2–4, 2023 615 (RV) 63% 15% 4% 3% 15% 48%
Echelon Insights July 24–27, 2023 500 (LV) 62% 16% 5% 4% 14% 46%
The New York Times/Siena College July 23–27, 2023 296 (LV) 64% 13% 10% 1% 12% 51%
Big Village July 24–26, 2023 922 (A) 62.6% 19.8% 9.1% 8.4% 42.8%
McLaughlin & Associates July 19–24, 2023 428 (LV) 65% 13% 3% 19% 52%
Harvard-Harris July 19–20, 2023 62% 16% 5% 5% 11% 46%
Quinnipiac University July 13–17, 2023 727 (RV) 71% 14% 7% 1% 5% 57%
Yahoo News July 13–17, 2023 494 69% 7% 5% 2% 17% 62%
Reuters/Ipsos July 11–17, 2023 2,044 (RV) 63% 15% 4% 3% 14% 48%
I&I/TIPP July 5–7, 2023 60% 16% 5% 5% 14% 44%
Echelon Insights June 26–29, 2023 511 (LV) 65% 14% 5% 6% 11% 51%
Fox News June 23–26, 2023 391 64% 17% 10% 4% 6% 47%
Emerson College June 19–20, 2023 441 (RV) 72.5% 14.6% 2.5% 10.4% 57.9%
YouGov June 16–20, 2023 70% 7% 3% 2% 18% 63%
Harvard-Harris June 14–15, 2023 2,090 (RV) 62% 15% 4% 8% 12% 47%
The Messenger/HarrisX June 14–15, 2023 381 (RV) 54% 14% 5% 10% 17% 40%
Big Village June 9–14, 2023 916 (RV) 60.0% 18.3% 11.2% 10.5% 41.7%
Quinnipiac University June 8–12, 2023 722 (RV) 70% 17% 8% 53%
USA Today/Suffolk June 5–9, 2023 293 (RV) 58% 15% 6% 21% 43%
I&I/TIPP May 31 – June 2, 2023 638 (RV) 68% 12% 4% 4% 12% 56%
YouGov May 25–30, 2023 467 (RV) 62% 12% 5% 19% 50%
Big Village May 26–28, 2023 425 (LV) 58.8% 19.0% 10.6% 11.6% 39.8%
Echelon Insights May 22–25, 2023 538 (LV) 60% 14% 5% 2% 19% 46%
Fox News May 19–22, 2023 1001 (RV) 62% 16% 8% 6% 8% 46%
CNN May 17–20, 2023 432 (RV) 60% 20% 8% 13% 40%
Marquette Law School May 8–18, 2023 312 (RV) 53% 12% 7% 28% 41%
YouGov May 5–8, 2023 480 (RV) 67% 10% 6% 17% 57%
Rasmussen Reports May 3–7, 2023 910 (LV) 62% 19% 4% 15% 43%
Change Research April 28 – May 2, 2023 1,208 (LV) 65% 11% 11% 11% 2% 55%
Echelon Insights April 25–27, 2023 513 (LV) 66% 10% 2% 5% 17% 56%
April 25, 2023 Biden declares his candidacy
Emerson College Polling April 24–25, 2023 1,100 (RV) 70% 21% 8% 49%
Fox News April 21–24, 2023 1,004 (RV) 62% 19% 9% 10% 43%
Suffolk University April 19, 2023 600 (LV) 67% 14% 5% 13% 53%
Morning Consult April 7–9, 2023 827 (LV) 70% 10% 4% 8% 8% 60%
April 5, 2023 Kennedy declares his candidacy
Echelon Insights[j] March 27–29, 2023 370 (LV) 73% 10% 17% 63%
Morning Consult March 3–5, 2023 826 (LV) 77% 4% 9% 10% 73%
March 4, 2023 Williamson declares her candidacy

Hypothetical polling edit

This section lists polling with hypothetical candidates, which was mostly conducted between 2020 and April 2023, before the presidential candidacies were declared.

Polls including Joe Biden edit

Hypothetical polls including Joe Biden
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Stacey
Abrams
Joe
Biden
Pete
Buttigieg
Kamala
Harris
Amy
Klobuchar
Gavin
Newsom
Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez
Bernie
Sanders
Elizabeth
Warren
Other
American Pulse Research and Polling October 27–30, 2023 243 (LV) 38% 11% 17% 10% 24%[k]
April 25, 2023 Biden declares his candidacy
Big Village April 19–23, 2023 902 (A) 32% 7% 15% 3% 5% 6% 13% 4% 13%[l]
Harris Poll & HarrisX April 18–19, 2023 683 (RV) 3% 37% 6% 10% 2% 4% 2% 8% 4% 11%[m]
Legar April 6–10, 2023 368 (A) 27% 7% 10% 2% 7% 12% 6% 7%[n]
Big Village March 29–31, 2023 445 (A) 36% 7% 15% 2% 4% 5% 13% 8% 7%[o]
Harris Poll & HarrisX March 22–23, 2023 2,905 (RV) 2% 41% 5% 11% 2% 3% 3% 7% 4% 10%[p]
Big Village March 15–17, 2023 434 (A) 33% 5% 17% 5% 5% 6% 15% 7% 4%
Yahoo! News Survey/You Gov February 23–27, 2023 1,516 (LV) 53% 22% 25%
McLaughlin & Associates February 17–23, 2023 442 (LV) 26% 7% 6% 2% 3% 3% 8% 4% 41%[q]
Big Village February 15–17, 2023 437 (A) 34% 9% 13% 3% 6% 7% 13% 7% 8% [r]
Harris Poll February 15–16, 2023 2% 36% 6% 15% 2% 4% 4% 8% 3% 20% [s]
Léger February 10–13, 2023 354 (A) 25% 10% 10% 1% 6% 14% 4% 30% [t]
Ipsos February 6–13, 2023 1,786 (RV) 35% 10% 12% 5% 13% 5% 20% [u]
McLaughlin & Associates January 19–24, 2023 442 (LV) 0% 25% 7% 6% 2% 7% 5% 5% 4% 40%[v]
Big Village January 18–20, 2023 447 (A) 34.3% 9.0% 14.0% 3.9% 5.2% 5.4% 13.2% 5.7% 9.3%[w]
Harris Poll January 18–19, 2023 3% 35% 5% 12% 3% 3% 3% 11% 3% 25%[x]
YouGov January 14–17, 2023 618 (A) 39% 10% 8% 6% 13% 26%[y]
YouGov January 5–9, 2023 442 (A) 31% 11% 9% 4% 6% 14% 9% 9%[z]
Big Village January 4–6, 2023 477 (A) 32.9% 8.7% 16.0% 12.5% 29.9%[aa]
Big Village December 16–18, 2022 466 (A) 37.2% 9.8% 15.8% 10.1% 27.1%[ab]
Harris Poll December 14–15, 2022 685 (RV) 3% 36% 6% 10% 3% 5% 7% 3% 27%[ac]
Harris Poll December 14–15, 2022 685 (RV) 3% 36% 6% 10% 3% 5% 7% 3% 27%[ad]
McLaughlin & Associates December 9–14, 2022 455 (RV) 22% 6% 8% 2% 3% 4% 8% 2% 42%[ae]
Marist College December 6–8, 2022 519 (RV) 35% 16% 17% 32%
Big Village November 30 – December 2, 2022 452 (A) 35% 9% 15% 4% 4% 5% 13% 7% 4%[af]
Cornell University Collaborative Midterm Survey October 26 – November 25, 2022 4,079 (A) 27% 14% 15% 6% 11% 8% 12% 7%[ag]
Ipsos November 9–21, 2022 569 (LV) 5% 15% 10% 11% 3% 5% 4% 7% 5% 35%[ah]
Emerson College November 18–19, 2022 591 (RV) 42% 9% 17% 6% 12% 7% 4%[ai]
Big Village November 16–18, 2022 454 (A) 39% 8% 14% 11% 6%
Harris Poll November 16–17, 2022 3% 35% 6% 13% 3% 4% 9% 3% 24%[aj]
Zogby Analytics November 9–11, 2022 859 (LV) 2% 41% 9% 11% 10% 6% 13% 9%
Big Village November 9–10, 2022 446 (A) 39% 16% 25% 16%
November 8, 2022 2022 midterm elections
Big Village November 2–4, 2022 356 (LV) 42% 19% 19% 16%
Big Village November 2–4, 2022 444 (A) 40% 16% 21% 18%
Big Village October 31 – November 2, 2022 378 (LV) 41% 13% 21% 19%
Big Village October 31 – November 2, 2022 488 (A) 39% 12% 22% 22%
YouGov October 11–26, 2022 1,860 (RV) 42% 14% 14% 7% 12% 1%[ak]
YouGov October 17–19, 2022 29% 13% 9% 7% 14% 8% 10%[al]
McLaughlin & Associates October 12–17, 2022 474 (LV) 3% 27% 4% 9% 1% 3% 3% 8% 2% 40%[am]
Harris Poll October 12–13, 2022 744 (RV) 3% 37% 6% 13% 1% 4% 6% 3% 13%[an]
Big Village October 5–7, 2022 362 (RV) 44% 15% 17% 20%
Big Village October 5–7, 2022 453 (A) 40% 15% 20% 21%
Big Village September 21–23, 2022 397 (RV) 48% 16% 14% 15%
Big Village September 21–23, 2022 434 (A) 47% 16% 15% 15%
McLaughlin & Associates September 17–22, 2022 471 (LV) 4% 27% 5% 6% 1% 2% 3% 7% 2% 43%[ao]
TIPP Insights September 7–9, 2022 596 (RV) 3% 34% 4% 10% 1% 4% 2% 7% 3% 32%[ap]
Big Village September 7–9, 2022 492 (A) 43% 14% 22% 27%
Harris Poll September 7–8, 2022 672 (RV) 4% 37% 6% 13% 3% 3% 8% 2% 12%[aq]
Big Village August 24–26, 2022 487 (A) 40% 16% 19% 19%
McLaughlin & Associates August 20–24, 2022 468 (LV) 3% 23% 5% 8% 1% 5% 1% 6% 3% 45%[ar]
Big Village August 10–12, 2022 465 (A) 37% 14% 20% 22%
TIPP Insights August 2–4, 2022 576 (RV) 4% 30% 4% 8% 1% 6% 3% 8% 4% 32%[as]
Harris Poll July 27–28, 2022 697 (RV) 4% 31% 5% 12% 3% 3% 8% 4% 14%[at]
Harris Poll June 29–30, 2022 484 (RV) 4% 30% 6% 18% 2% 4% 8% 3% 8%[au]
McLaughlin & Associates June 17–22, 2022 456 (LV) 5% 23% 5% 5% 2% 2% 6% 40%[av]
TIPP Insights June 8–10, 2022 509 (RV) 2% 24% 4% 7% 2% 2% 3% 9% 3% 30%[aw]

Polls excluding Joe Biden edit

Hypothetical polls without Joe Biden
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Stacey
Abrams
Cory
Booker
Pete
Buttigieg
Hillary
Clinton
Andrew
Cuomo
Kamala
Harris
Amy
Klobuchar
Joe
Manchin
Gavin
Newsom
Michelle
Obama
Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez
Bernie
Sanders
Elizabeth
Warren
Gretchen
Whitmer
Other Undecided
HarrisX/The Messenger October 30–November 1, 2023 725 (RV) 48% 33%[ax] 20%
Big Village April 19–23, 2023 902 (A) 10% 28% 4% 7% 7% 16% 7% 3% 14%[ay]
Big Village March 29–31, 2023 445 (A) 11% 28% 4% 7% 7% 18% 11% 4% 7%[az]
Echelon Insights March 27–29, 2023 530 (RV) 2% 4% 8% 27% 2% 9% 6% 7% 5% 7%[ba]
Harris Poll & HarrisX March 22–23, 2023 2,905 (RV) 5% 8% 13% 2% 22% 3% 4% 6% 4% 10% 8% 4%[bb]
Big Village March 15–17, 2023 434 (A) 7% 31% 4% 8% 8% 21% 10% 3% 2%
Yahoo News February 23–27, 2023 450 (LV) 12% 25% 5% 12% 12% 8% 5%
Echelon Insights February 21–23, 2023 499 (LV) 3% 5% 14% 27% 5% 0% 6% 6% 8% 3% 24%[bc]
McLaughlin & Associates February 17–23, 2023 442 (LV) 3% 11% 6% 11% 3% 2% 5% 19% 5% 9% 6% 12%[bd]
Big Village February 15–17, 2023 437 (A) 11% 27% 5% 9% 8% 18% 10% 5% 3%[be]
Harris Poll February 15–16, 2023 3% 8% 16% 3% 22% 4% 5% 7% 7% 12% 3%
Ipsos February 6–13, 2023 1,786 (RV) 15% 27% 10% 18% 8% 4% 3%[bf]
Echelon Insights January 23–25, 2023 467 (LV) 4% 4% 11% 23% 4% 8% 9% 8% 3% 9%[bg]
McLaughlin & Associates January 19–24, 2023 442 (LV) 2% 8% 8% 15% 2% 2% 7% 15% 6% 5% 5% 11%[bh]
Big Village January 18–20, 2023 447 (A) 14% 29% 5% 8% 6% 19% 8% 4% 3%[bi]
Harris Poll January 18–19, 2023 5% 7% 11% 2% 26% 5% 4% 6% 4% 12% 5%
Big Village January 4–6, 2023 477 (A) 11% 30% 5% 11% 9% 17% 7% 2% 4%[bj]
Big Village December 16–18, 2022 466 (A) 10% 14% 2% 35% 5% 7% 6% 16% 8% 3% 3%[bk]
Harris Poll December 14–15, 2022 685 (RV) 3% 9% 14% 2% 23% 4% 4% 5% 11% 5%
Echelon Insights December 12–14, 2022 523 (RV) 3% 3% 11% 24% 6% 5% 5% 5% 3% 12%[bl]
476 (LV) 3% 3% 12% 26% 5% 6% 5% 5% 3% 10%[bm]
McLaughlin & Associates December 9–14, 2022 455 (LV) 1% 6% 8% 13% 3% 2% 4% 21% 4% 9% 5% 12%[bn]
YouGov December 1–5, 2022 588 (RV) 14% 19% 10% 6% 13% 7% 7%
724 (A) 12% 18% 9% 7% 11% 7% 6%
Big Village November 30 – December 2, 2022 452 (A) 13% 32% 6% 5% 6% 17% 9% 3% 2%[bo]
Echelon Insights November 17–19, 2022 496 (RV) 3% 4% 13% 21% 2% 6% 7% 7% 4% 7%[bp]
496 (LV) 2% 4% 12% 23% 4% 6% 7% 8% 3% 7%[bq]
Harris Poll November 16–17, 2022 4% 8% 24% 4% 3% 6% 11% 6% 3%[br]
Zogby Analytics November 9–11, 2022 859 (LV) 5% 10% 32% 6% 10% 13% 9% 38%
November 8, 2022 2022 midterm elections
Echelon Insights October 24–26, 2022 475 (LV) 5% 4% 11% 27% 3% 4% 7% 6% 1% 12%[bs]
475 (LV) 5% 3% 14% 26% 4% 6% 5% 7% 1% 11%[bt]
McLaughlin & Associates October 12–17, 2022 474 (LV) 3% 2% 6% 6% 2% 16% 2% 2% 5% 17% 5% 8% 2% 0% 24%[bu]
Harris Poll October 12–13, 2022 744 (RV) 3% 10% 17% 25% 2% 4% 5% 11% 4% 3%[bv]
Morning Consult September 23–25, 2022 893 (RV) 4% 13% 26% 4% 5% 8% 7% 1% 4%[bw]
McLaughlin & Associates September 17–22, 2022 471 (LV) 4% 1% 6% 11% 1% 11% 2% 1% 5% 18% 2% 7% 4% 0% 25%[bx]
Echelon Insights September 16–19, 2022 509 (LV) 8% 3% 11% 28% 5% 6% 7% 5% 2% 8%[by]
Harris Poll September 7–8, 2022 672 (RV) 6% 9% 14% 26% 2% 2% 5% 10% 5% 3%[bz]
McLaughlin & Associates August 20–24, 2022 468 (LV) 4% 2% 6% 7% 1% 15% 2% 2% 4% 16% 2% 7% 5% 2% 25%[ca]
Echelon Insights August 19–22, 2022 515 (RV) 6% 3% 12% 22% 2% 6% 9% 5% 2% 8%[cb]
505 (LV) 7% 4% 14% 21% 3% 6% 5% 6% 2% 8%[cc]
Harris Poll July 27–28, 2022 697 (RV) 5% 8% 23% 4% 4% 5% 8% 4% 4%[cd]
Suffolk University July 22–25, 2022 440 (RV) 16% 8% 18% 11% 8% 10% 18%
Echelon Insights July 15–18, 2022 500 (RV) 7% 4% 10% 27% 3% 0% 7% 5% 7% 1% 10%[ce]
493 (LV) 6% 5% 13% 26% 3% 0% 7% 5% 7% 1% 9%[cf]
Harris Poll June 29–30, 2022 484 (RV) 4% 6% 25% 4% 1% 4% 12% 6% 14%[cg]
McLaughlin & Associates June 17–22, 2022 456 (LV) 6% 3% 8% 7% 1% 13% 3% 2% 3% 19% 7% 13%[ch]
Echelon Insights June 17–20, 2022 489 (RV) 5% 5% 11% 30% 3% 0% 5% 6% 6% 2% 8%[ci]
484 (LV) 6% 6% 12% 27% 4% 0% 5% 7% 6% 2% 8%[cj]
Zogby Analytics May 23–24, 2022 554 (LV) 5% 21% 19% 5% 21% 8% 4% 7%[ck] 10%
Echelon Insights May 20–23, 2022 474 (LV) 7% 7% 12% 30% 2% 4% 4% 5% 1% 7%[cl] 21%
480 (RV) 7% 5% 11% 31% 2% 3% 8% 5% 1% 7%[cm] 20%
Harvard/Harris May 18–19, 2022 3% 7% 10% 19% 3% 6% 4% 10% 4% 4%[cn] 28%
McLaughlin & Associates April 22–26, 2022 463 (LV) 6% 3% 9% 9% 2% 17% 4% 1% 2% 23% 1% 4% 4%[co] 17%
Harvard/Harris April 20–21, 2022 727 (RV) 5% 8% 14% 31% 3% 4% 6% 10% 5% 14%
Echelon Insights April 18–20, 2022 469 (RV) 5% 6% 10% 31% 3% 1% 1% 6% 6% 1% 9%[cp] 19%
456 (LV) 6% 7% 11% 30% 4% 1% 1% 5% 6% 1% 8%[cq] 20%
Harvard/Harris March 23–24, 2022 740 (RV) 6% 8% 15% 28% 4% 3% 4% 9% 4% 19%
Echelon Insights March 18–21, 2022 472 (LV) 6% 4% 9% 26% 5% 2% 7% 8% 1% 8%[cr] 24%
490 (LV) 6% 4% 11% 26% 6% 2% 6% 8% 1% 6%[cs] 22%
McLaughlin & Associates March 17–22, 2022 466 (LV) 5% 3% 7% 7% 1% 18% 2% 2% 2% 20% 2% 6% 9%[ct] 18%
Harvard/Harris February 23–24, 2022 750 (RV) 5% 8% 13% 29% 3% 5% 5% 9% 6% 17%
Echelon Insights February 19–23, 2022 543 (RV) 8% 6% 9% 29% 3% 2% 10% 6% 0% 8%[cu] 21%
McLaughlin & Associates February 16–22, 2022 453 (LV) 6% 4% 10% 9% 1% 15% 2% 2% 4% 22% 6% 8%[cv] 13%
Echelon Insights January 21–23, 2022 477 (RV) 6% 5% 12% 30% 3% 2% 5% 8% 1% 7%[cw] 21%
Harvard/Harris January 19–20, 2022 672 (RV) 6% 7% 17% 23% 2% 3% 6% 12% 7% 17%
McLaughlin & Associates January 13–18, 2022 463 (LV) 6% 4% 6% 9% 2% 16% 3% 2% 2% 22% 9% 4%[cx] 15%
Morning Consult December 11–13, 2021 916 (RV) 5% 11% 31% 3% 3% 8% 8% 3%[cy] 16%
Echelon Insights December 9–13, 2021 479 (RV) 5% 6% 7% 33% 3% 2% 1% 5% 14% 8% 2% 2%[cz] 8%
Harvard/Harris November 30 – December 2, 2021 1,989 (RV) 5% 5% 8% 31% 5% 7% 15% 7% 2% 14%[da]
Hill-HarrisX November 18–19, 2021 939 (RV) 4% 3% 5% 26% 3% 4% 15% 5% 7% 2% 1% 10%[db] 16%
Echelon Insights November 12–18, 2021 458 (LV) 6% 6% 8% 29% 2% 1% 2% 5% 16% 6% 0% 0%[dc] 16%
McLaughlin & Associates November 11–16, 2021 450 (LV) 5% 3% 8% 2% 22% 5% 23% 5% 32%[dd]
YouGov/Yahoo News October 19–21, 2021 671 (A) 7% 9% 22% 7% 12% 8% 4%[de] 31%
Echelon Insights October 15–19, 2021 533 (LV) 5% 4% 9% 23% 4% 1% 3% 5% 16% 6% 0% 2%[df] 20%
McLaughlin & Associates October 14–18, 2021 473 (LV) 5% 3% 9% 2% 29% 3% 2% 2% 18% 7% 8%[dg] 14%
McLaughlin & Associates September 9–14, 2021 476 (LV) 5% 4% 7% 2% 29% 3% 2% 17% 7% 6%[dh] 17%
Echelon Insights August 13–18, 2021 514 (RV) 6% 6% 11% 33% 2% 2% 8% 5% 1% 8%[di] 18%
McLaughlin & Associates July 29 – August 3, 2021 467 (LV) 4% 5% 8% 4% 28% 2% 2% 16% 7% 10%[dj] 14%
YouGov/Yahoo News July 30 – August 2, 2021 697 (A) 4% 6% 44% 4% 10% 6% 18%[dk] 20%
McLaughlin & Associates June 16–20, 2021 463 (LV) 5% 3% 4% 2% 31% 3% 1% 19% 5% 11%[dl] 16%
McLaughlin & Associates May 12–18, 2021 459 (LV) 4% 4% 6% 1% 35% 3% 2% 16% 7% 11%[dm] 13%
Trafalgar Group April 30 – May 6, 2021 – (LV)[dn] 9% 41% 5% 8% 36%[do]
McLaughlin & Associates April 8–13, 2021 458 (LV) 4% 5% 2% 34% 4% 2% 20% 3% 13%[dp] 12%
McLaughlin & Associates February 24–28, 2021 443 (LV) 4% 7% 1% 28% 3% 23% 8% 12%[dq] 14%
January 20, 2021 Inauguration of Joe Biden
McLaughlin & Associates December 9–13, 2020 445 (LV) 3% 5% 5% 25% 2% 29% 7% 8%[dr] 18%
McLaughlin & Associates/Newsmax November 21–23, 2020 445 (LV) 2% 6% 5% 29% 2% 23% 6% 5%[ds] 23%
November 3, 2020 2020 presidential election
McLaughlin & Associates November 2–3, 2020 461 (LV) 2% 8% 8% 18% 25% 6% 6%[dt] 28%
Léger August 4–7, 2020 1,007 (LV) 6% 7% 14% 20% 13% 6% 8% 9% 6% 24%[du]
390 (LV) 6% 6% 16% 21% 19% 6% 9% 17%[dv]

Campaign finance edit

This is an overview of the money used by each campaign as it is reported to the Federal Election Commission (FEC). Totals raised include individual contributions, loans from the candidate, and transfers from other campaign committees. Individual contributions are itemized (catalogued) by the FEC when the total value of contributions by an individual comes to more than $200. The last column, Cash On Hand, shows the remaining cash each campaign had available for its future spending as of September 30, 2023. Campaign finance reports for the fourth quarter of 2023 will become available on January 15, 2024.[137]

This table does not include contributions made to Super PACs or party committees supporting the candidate. Each value is rounded up to the nearest dollar.

  Candidate who withdrew prior to September 30
  Candidate who withdrew following September 30
Overview of campaign financing for candidates in the 2024 Democratic Party presidential primaries through September 30, 2023
Candidate Total raised Total raised
since last quarter
Individual contributions Debt Spent Spent since
last quarter
Cash on hand
Total Unitemized Pct
Biden[138] $72,838,281 $24,785,201 $15,237,941 $9,061,416 59.5% $0 $73,094,919 $12,730,208 $32,180,366[dw]
Williamson[139] $2,515,539 $821,832 $2,277,201 $1,191,053 52.3% $347,490 $2,414,193 $825,656 $101,167
Kennedy[140] $15,078,528 $8,713,134 $15,052,084 $5,072,721 33.7% $0 $8,906,488 $7,060,571 $6,172,041

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ 2,260 of 4,518 delegates needed to win any subsequent ballots at a contested convention lasting more than a single round of balloting. As of November 2023, the number of extra unpledged delegates (superdelegates), who after the first ballot at a contested convention participate in any subsequently needed nominating ballots (together with the 3,770 pledged delegates), is expected to be 744, but the exact number of superdelegates is still subject to change due to possible deaths, resignations, accessions, or potential election as a pledged delegate.
  2. ^ Uygur is not eligible to serve as president as he is not a natural-born citizen, but he claims he can run for the office.[33]
  3. ^ New Hampshire's delegates could be penalized, if the tentative date is confirmed by the Republican Secretary of State. The early date would be in violation of the DNC-approved calendar, which confirmed South Carolina as the first primary state.
  4. ^ Calculated by taking the difference of 100% and all other candidates combined.
  5. ^ Someone Else at 9%
  6. ^ Uygur at 2%; Refused, Someone Else and Would Not Vote at 1%
  7. ^ Uygur at 1%; Someone Else at 3%
  8. ^ Manchin at 1%
  9. ^ Newsom at 7%
  10. ^ April 3, 2023, at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ Another Candidate at 7%; Phillips and Williamson at 1%; Undecided at 15%
  12. ^ Kennedy with 7%; Shapiro, Williamson and Whitmer with 2%
  13. ^ Hillary Clinton with 7%; Andrew Cuomo with 2%; Joe Manchin and Marianne Williamson with 1%
  14. ^ Whitmer with 4%; and Booker with 3%
  15. ^ Whitmer with 3%; Williamson and Shapiro with 1%
  16. ^ Hillary Clinton with 6%; Joe Manchin with 2%; Andrew Cuomo and Marianne Williamson with 1%
  17. ^ Michelle Obama with 14%; Hillary Clinton with 4%; Beto O'Rourke, Phil Murphy and Cory Booker with 2%; Manchin, Kaine, Hickenlooper, Gillibrand, Steyer and Polis with 1%; Adams and Patrick with 0%
  18. ^ Gretchen Whitmer with 4%; Josh Shapiro with 1%
  19. ^ Hillary Clinton with 8%; Andrew Cuomo with 2%; Manchin with 1%
  20. ^ Cory Booker with 6%; Gretchen Whitmer with 2%
  21. ^ Gretchen Whitmer with 3%; Josh Shapiro with 2%
  22. ^ Obama with 14%; Clinton with 6%; O'Rourke with 2%; Booker, Gillibrand, Kaine, Manchin, and Polis with 1%; Adams, Cuomo, Hickenlooper, Markle, McConaughey, Murphy, Patrick, Steyer, and Winfrey with 0%, Undecided with 13%
  23. ^ Whitmer with 3.0%; Shapiro with 2.8%; Someone Else with 3.5%
  24. ^ Hillary Clinton with 8%; Manchin and Cuomo with 1%
  25. ^ Gretchen Whitmer with 3%; Someone Else with 3%; Not Sure with 16%; Would Not Vote with 4%
  26. ^ Gretchen Whitmer with 5%; Raphael Warnock with 4%
  27. ^ Someone else at 29.9%
  28. ^ Someone Else at 27.1%
  29. ^ Hillary Clinton with 7%; Michael Bloomberg with 3%; Joe Manchin and Andrew Cuomo with 2%
  30. ^ Hillary Clinton with 7%; Michael Bloomberg with 3%; Joe Manchin and Andrew Cuomo with 2%
  31. ^ Michelle Obama with 18%; Hillary Clinton with 6%; O'Rourke with 3%; Booker with 2%; Winfrey and Manchin with 1%; Phil Murphy, Kaine, Adams, Hickenlooper, Patrick, Gillibrand, Steyer and Polis with 0%
  32. ^ Gretchen Whitmer with 3%; Shapiro with 1%
  33. ^ Hillary Clinton with 7%
  34. ^ Gretchen Whitmer with 3%; Polis with 1%; Cooper with 0%
  35. ^ Gretchen Whitmer and Jared Polis with 2%
  36. ^ Hillary Clinton with 6%; Joe Manchin and Michael Bloomberg with 2%
  37. ^ Hochul with 1%
  38. ^ Hillary Clinton with 10%
  39. ^ Michelle Obama with 12%; Hillary Clinton and O'Rourke with 5%; Winfrey and Booker with 2%; McConaughey, Manchin, Cuomo, Phil Murphy and Adams with 1%; Kaine, Hickenlooper, Patrick, Gillibrand, Steyer and Polis with 0%
  40. ^ Hillary Clinton with 9%; Michael Bloomberg and Joe Manchin with 2%
  41. ^ Michelle Obama with 16%; Hillary Clinton with 6%; Beto O'Rourke with 3%; Matthew McConaughey with 2%; Booker, Winfrey, Manchin, Kaine, Hickenlooper, Steyer and Polis with 1%; Cuomo, Murphy, Adams, Patrick and Gillibrand with 0%
  42. ^ Michelle Obama with 11%; Hillary Clinton with 5%; Kennedy, Whitmer, Booker, Pritzker, Adams, Manchin, Bennet, Inslee and Lujan Grisham with 1%; Gabbard with 0%
  43. ^ Hillary Clinton with 7%; Michael Bloomberg with 3%; Joe Manchin with 2%
  44. ^ Michelle Obama with 13%; Hillary Clinton with 6%; Beto O'Rourke with 4%; Cory Booker and Joe Manchin with 2%; Winfrey, McConaughey, Cuomo, Murphy and Adams, Hickenlooper, Gillibrand and Steyer with 1%; Kaine and Polis with 0%
  45. ^ Michelle Obama with 10%; Hillary Clinton with 5%; Cory Booker with 3%; Gretchen Whitmer and Kennedy with 2%; Pritzker and Gabbard with 1%; Bennet, Lujan Grisham, Manchin, Inslee and Adams with 0%
  46. ^ Hillary Clinton with 9%; Joe Manchin with 3%; Michael Bloomberg with 2%
  47. ^ Hillary Clinton with 6%; Manchin and Bloomberg with 1%
  48. ^ Michelle Obama with 18%; Hillary Clinton with 5%; Beto O'Rourke with 4%; Cory Booker with 3%; Oprah Winfrey with 2%; Manchin, McConaughey, Cuomo, Murphy, Kaine and Adams with 1%; Hickenlooper, Patrick, Gillibrand and Steyer with 0%
  49. ^ Michelle Obama with 14%; Hillary Clinton with 6%; Cory Booker with 3%; Kennedy, Whitmer, Bennet, Lujan Grisham and Gabbard with 1%; Manchin, Inslee and Pritzker with 0%
  50. ^ Someone Else at 19%; Williamson at 8%; Phillips at 6%
  51. ^ Kennedy with 10%; Williamson and Shapiro with 2%
  52. ^ Marianne Williamson with 3%; and Josh Shapiro with 4%
  53. ^ Marianne Williamson with 4%; and Roy Cooper, Phil Murphy, and Rapheal Warnock with 1%
  54. ^ Marianne Williamson with 1%
  55. ^ Raphael Warnock with 2%; JB Pritzker with 1%; Beshear, Cooper and Raimondo on 0%
  56. ^ Beto O'Rourke with 3%; Phil Murphy with 1%; Gillibrand, Adams, Patrick, Hickenlooper, Steyer, and Polis with 1%; Kaine and Pritzker with 0%
  57. ^ Josh Shapiro with 3%, Pritzker with 0%
  58. ^ Josh Shapiro with 3%, Pritzker with 0%
  59. ^ Pritzker with 3%, Raimondo, Polis and Warnock with 1%; Beshear, Cooper, Murphy, Adams and Landrieu with 0%
  60. ^ Beto O'Rourke with 3%; Gillibrand, Adams, Patrick, Murphy, Hickenlooper, Steyer, Markle and Polis with 1%; Kaine and Pritzker with 0%
  61. ^ Josh Shapiro with 3%, Pritzker with 0%
  62. ^ Josh Shapiro with 4%, Pritzker with 0%
  63. ^ Josh Shapiro with 3%; Pritzker with 0%
  64. ^ Pritzker and Warnock with 3%; Beshear, Raimondo, Murphy, Adams and Polis with 1%; Landrieu and Cooper with 0%
  65. ^ Pritzker and Warnock with 2%; Cooper, Murphy, Polis and Adams with 1%; Beshear, Landrieu and Raimondo with 0%
  66. ^ Beto O'Rourke with 4%; Oprah Winfrey with 3%; Kaine and Gillibrand with 1%; Adams, Patrick, Murphy, Pritzker, Hickenlooper, Steyer, and Polis with 0%
  67. ^ Josh Shapiro with 2%, Pritzker with 0%
  68. ^ Phil Murphy with 2%; Beshear and Warnock with 1%; Sinema, Cooper, Landrieu, Pritzker, Raimondo, Adams, and Polis with 0%
  69. ^ Phil Murphy with 2%; Beshear and Warnock with 1%; Sinema, Cooper, Landrieu, Pritzker, Raimondo, Adams, and Polis with 0%
  70. ^ Michael Bloomberg with 3%
  71. ^ Andy Beshear with 3%; Raphael Warnock with 2%; Sinema, Cooper, Landrieu, Murphy, Pritzker, and Adams with 1%; Raimondo and Polis with 0%
  72. ^ Andy Beshear and Raphael Warnock with 2%; Sinema, Cooper, Pritzker, and Adams with 1%; Landrieu, Raimondo, Murphy and Polis with 0%
  73. ^ Beto O'Rourke with 5%; Oprah Winfrey with 2%; McConaughey, Polis, Patrick, Hickenlooper and Steyer with 1%; Adams, Kaine, Murphy, Pritzker, and Gillibrand with 0%
  74. ^ Michael Bloomberg with 3%
  75. ^ Adams, Pritzker, and Raimondo with 1%; Cooper with 0%
  76. ^ Beto O'Rourke with 5%; Oprah Winfrey with 3%; Matthew McConaughey and Jared Polis with 2%; Adams, Murphy, Gillibrand, Patrick, Pritzker, Hickenlooper, and Steyer with 1%; Omar with 0%
  77. ^ Murphy, Polis, Pritzker, and Warnock with 1%; Raimondo, Beshear, Sinema, Cooper and Landrieu with 0%
  78. ^ Michael Bloomberg with 3%
  79. ^ Beto O'Rourke with 3%; Tim Kaine, Oprah Winfrey and Matthew McConaughey with 2%; Adams, Murphy, Gillibrand, and Steyer with 1%; Patrick, Hickenlooper, Omar, Pritzker, and Polis with 0%
  80. ^ Phil Murphy and Kyrsten Sinema with 2%; Beshear, Adams, Polis, and Warnock with 1%; Cooper, Landrieu, Pritzker, and Raimondo with 0%
  81. ^ Phil Murphy with 2%; Beshear, Sinema, Adams, Polis, and Warnock with 1%; Cooper, Pritzker, Landrieu, and Raimondo with 0%
  82. ^ Michael Bloomberg with 4%
  83. ^ Pritzker and Warnock with 2%; Murphy, Adams, Raimondo and Polis with 1%; Beshear, Sinema, Cooper and Landrieu with 0%
  84. ^ Pritzker with 2%, Murphy, Adams, Polis and Warnock with 1%; Beshear, Sinema, Cooper, Landrieu and Raimondo with 0%
  85. ^ Michael Bloomberg with 3%
  86. ^ Beto O'Rourke with 4%; Oprah Winfrey and Matthew McConaughey with 2%; Adams, Kaine, Patrick, and Murphy with 1%; Gillibrand, Hickenlooper, Pritzker, and Steyer with 0%
  87. ^ Pritzker with 2%, Sinema, Murphy and Warnock with 1%; Beshear, Raimondo, Adams, Polis, Cooper and Landrieu with 0%
  88. ^ Kyrsten Sinema, Phil Murphy, JB Pritzker, and Raphael Warnock with 1%; Beshear, Raimondo, Adams, Polis, Cooper, and Landrieu with 0%
  89. ^ Jill Biden with 7%
  90. ^ Cooper, Raimondo and Pritzker with 1%; Beshear, Sinema, Landrieu, Murphy, Adams, Polis and Warnock with 0%
  91. ^ Cooper, Raimondo and Pritzker with 1%; Beshear, Sinema, Landrieu, Murphy, Adams, Polis and Warnock with 0%
  92. ^ Michael Bloomberg with 4%
  93. ^ Eric Adams, Tim Kaine, Beto O'Rourke, and Tom Steyer with 1%; Kirsten Gillibrand, John Hickenlooper, Phil Murphy, Ilhan Omar, and Deval Patrick with 0%
  94. ^ Tulsi Gabbard with 2%; Cooper and Murphy with 1%; Beshear, Sinema, Landrieu, Adams, Polis, Raimondo and Pritzker with 0%
  95. ^ Tulsi Gabbard with 2%; Cooper and Murphy with 1%; Beshear, Sinema, Landrieu, Adams, Polis, Raimondo and Pritzker with 0%
  96. ^ Eric Adams with 2%; Cooper, Raimondo, Murphy, Pritzker and Polis with 1%; Landrieu, Beshear, Raimondo and Sinema with 0%
  97. ^ Cooper and Adams with 1%; Sinema, Beshear, Landrieu, Raimondo, Pritzker, Murphy and Polis with 0%
  98. ^ Beto O'Rourke with 3%, Tom Steyer with 2%; Eric Adams, Tim Kaine, and Deval Patrick with 1%; Kirsten Gillibrand and Ilhan Omar with 0%
  99. ^ Roy Cooper with 2%; Beshear, Sinema, Raimondo and Murphy with 1%; Landrieu, Pritzker and Adams with 0%
  100. ^ Beto O'Rourke with 3%; John Hickenlooper with 2%; Tim Kaine, Deval Patrick, and Tom Steyer with 1%; Eric Adams, Kirsten Gillibrand, and Ilhan Omar with 0%
  101. ^ Beshear, Sinema, Cooper, Landrieu, Raimondo, Pritzker and Adams with 1%; Murphy with 0%
  102. ^ Beto O'Rourke with 2%; Eric Adams and John Hickenlooper with 1%; Kirsten Gillibrand, Tim Kaine, Ilhan Omar, Deval Patrick, and Tom Steyer with 0%
  103. ^ Cooper, Adams and Raimondo with 3%
  104. ^ Gabbard with 1%; Beshear and Sinema with 0%
  105. ^ Other/Don't know with 14%
  106. ^ "Someone else" with 3%; Michael Bloomberg and Beto O'Rourke with 2%; Sherrod Brown, Andrew Yang, and Katie Porter with 1%
  107. ^ "Someone else", Andy Beshear, Tulsi Gabbard and Kyrsten Sinema with 0%
  108. ^ Beto O'Rourke with 3%, other with 29%
  109. ^ Sherrod Brown with 4%
  110. ^ "Someone else" and Tulsi Gabbard with 1%; Andy Beshear and Kyrsten Sinema with 0%
  111. ^ Beto O'Rourke with 3%; Kirsten Gillibrand, John Hickenlooper, Tim Kaine, Deval Patrick and Tom Steyer with 1%; Ilhan Omar with 0%
  112. ^ Beto O'Rourke with 3%, Kirsten Gillibrand, Deval Patrick and Tom Steyer with 1%; John Hickenlooper, Tim Kaine and Ilhan Omar with 0%
  113. ^ O'Rourke and Yang with 2%; Besehar, Gabbard, and Gillibrand with 1%; Sinema with 0%
  114. ^ Andrew Yang with 4%; John Hickenlooper and Beto O'Rourke with 2%; Kirsten Gillibrand and Tim Kaine with 1%; Ilhan Omar with 0%
  115. ^ Sherrod Brown with 2%
  116. ^ Beto O'Rourke and Andrew Yang with 3%; John Hickenlooper with 2%; Tim Kaine, Deval Patrick and Ilhan Omar with 1%
  117. ^ Tim Kaine, Beto O'Rourke, Deval Patrick, and Andrew Yang with 2%; Kirsten Gillibrand, John Hickenlooper and Ilhan Omar with 1%
  118. ^ Democratic subsample of full sample of 1,574 likely voters
  119. ^ "Someone else" with 26%; Beto O'Rourke with 4%, Andrew Yang with 3%, Julian Castro with 2%; John Bel Edwards with 1%
  120. ^ Andrew Yang with 4%, Kirsten Gillibrand, John Hickenlooper and Beto O'Rourke with 2%; Tim Kaine, Ilhan Omar, and Deval Patrick with 1%
  121. ^ Andrew Yang with 4%, John Hickenlooper and Beto O'Rourke with 2%; Tim Kaine, Kirsten Gillibrand, Ilhan Omar, and Deval Patrick with 1%; Gavin Newsom with 0%
  122. ^ John Hickenlooper with 3%; Tim Kaine with 2%; Kirsten Gillibrand, Ilhan Omar and Deval Patrick with 1%
  123. ^ Kirsten Gillibrand, John Hickenlooper, Tim Kaine, Ilhan Omar, and Deval Patrick with 1%
  124. ^ John Hickenlooper with 3%; Kirsten Gillibrand, Tim Kaine and Deval Patrick with 1%
  125. ^ Andrew Yang with 14%, Beto O'Rourke with 6%, Kirsten Gillibrand with 4%
  126. ^ Andrew Yang with 8%, Beto O'Rourke with 6%, Kirsten Gillibrand with 3%
  127. ^ Biden's principal campaign committee, Biden for President, was also used for his earlier 2020 presidential campaign. Some of these figures, therefore, include money left over from that previous candidacy.
  1. ^ Poll sponsored by Harvard University Center for American Political Studies

References edit

  1. ^ Democratic National Committee Rules and Bylaws Committee (April 13, 2022). "Resolution on the Principles and Framework of a Transparent and Fair Review of the Presidential Nominating Calendar" (PDF). democrats.org. p. 4. (PDF) from the original on May 18, 2022. Retrieved November 18, 2022.
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External links edit

2024, democratic, party, presidential, primaries, presidential, primaries, caucuses, being, organized, democratic, party, select, delegates, 2024, democratic, national, convention, determine, party, nominee, president, 2024, united, states, presidential, elect. Presidential primaries and caucuses are being organized by the Democratic Party to select the delegates to the 2024 Democratic National Convention to determine the party s nominee for president in the 2024 United States presidential election The elections will take place in all 50 U S states the District of Columbia five U S territories and Democrats Abroad and will be held between February and June that year 1 Incumbent President Joe Biden is running for re election with Vice President Kamala Harris as his running mate 2 Biden maintains a significant lead in polls 3 and no incumbent president in modern history has lost renomination 4 5 2024 Democratic Party presidential primaries 2020 February to June 2024 2028 3 774 delegates to the Democratic National Convention1 888 delegates needed to win a Opinion pollsFirst place by first instance votePrevious Democratic nomineeJoe BidenWhile Biden had repeatedly expressed his intent to run for re election since 2021 there was speculation in the first two years of his presidency that he might not seek re election due to his age and low approval ratings 6 7 Additionally Biden had indicated in 2019 that he would only serve a single term 8 Former Democratic House representatives including Carolyn Maloney 9 Joe Cunningham 10 and Tim Ryan 11 had publicly said Biden should not run There had been speculation that Biden may face a primary challenge especially from a member of the Democratic Party s progressive faction 12 13 Three primary opponents have emerged Marianne Williamson declared her candidacy in March 2023 14 which was followed by anti vaccine activist environmental attorney and conspiracy theorist Robert F Kennedy Jr 15 in April 16 and Representative Dean Phillips in October 17 Kennedy withdrew from the Democratic primaries in October 2023 to declare an independent presidential run 18 After Democrats outperformed expectations in the 2022 midterm elections many believed the chances that Biden would run for and win his party s nomination had increased 19 On April 25 2023 Biden announced via a video that he would be running for re election 20 Contents 1 Candidates 1 1 Declared major candidates 1 2 Other declared candidates 1 3 Withdrew before the primaries 1 4 Decision pending 1 5 Declined to be candidates 2 Vice presidential speculation 3 Primaries and caucus calendar 4 Timeline 4 1 Early developments 4 2 Primary calendar changes 5 Debates 6 Endorsements 7 Opinion polling 7 1 Aggregate polls 7 2 Polling with declared candidates 7 3 Hypothetical polling 7 3 1 Polls including Joe Biden 7 3 2 Polls excluding Joe Biden 8 Campaign finance 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksCandidates editAs of November 2023 more than 180 candidates have filed with the Federal Election Commission FEC to run for the Democratic nomination in 2024 21 In previous cycles the majority of these candidates did not appear on any ballots raise money or otherwise attempt to formally run a campaign 21 22 Declared major candidates edit The candidates in this section have declared their candidacies and meet one or more of the following criteria their campaign has received substantial major media coverage the candidate is a current or previous holder of a significant elected office such as president vice president governor U S senator U S representative the candidate has been included in at least five national polls Declared major candidates for the 2024 Democratic Party presidential primaries Name Born Experience Home state Campaign Announcement date Ref nbsp Joe Biden November 20 1942 age 80 Scranton Pennsylvania President of the United States 2021 present Vice President of the United States 2009 2017 U S Senator from Delaware 1973 2009 nbsp Delaware nbsp Campaign April 25 2023 FEC filing 23 Website 2 nbsp Dean Phillips January 20 1969 age 54 Saint Paul Minnesota U S Representative from MN 03 2019 present CEO of Phillips Distilling Company 2000 2012 nbsp Minnesota nbsp Campaign October 26 2023 FEC filing 24 Website 25 nbsp MarianneWilliamson July 8 1952 age 71 Houston Texas AuthorFounder of Project Angel FoodCandidate for President in 2020 nbsp California nbsp CampaignMarch 4 2023 FEC filing 26 Website 14 Other declared candidates edit The candidates in this section are otherwise notable but have not met the criteria outlined above Terrisa Bukovinac founder of Pro Life San Francisco and Progressive Anti Abortion Uprising PAAU former president of Democrats for Life of America 27 28 29 Joe Exotic businessman and media personality independent candidate for president in 2016 30 Cenk Uygur creator of The Young Turks co founder of Justice Democrats Democratic candidate for California s 25th congressional district in 2020 31 32 b Withdrew before the primaries edit The candidates in this section have suspended their campaigns or have otherwise ceased campaigning and ended their bids for the nomination before any primary contests were held Withdrawn major candidates for the 2024 Democratic Party presidential primaries Name Born Experience Home state Campaignannounced Campaignsuspended Campaign Ref nbsp Robert F Kennedy Jr January 17 1954 age 69 Washington D C Environmental lawyerFounder of Children s Health DefenseFounder of Waterkeeper AllianceAnti vaccine activist nbsp California April 19 2023 October 9 2023 running as an independent nbsp CampaignFEC filing 34 35 Website 36 37 Other notable individuals who were not considered major candidates and who withdrew from the race before the beginning of the primary season include Jerome Segal research scholar and Bread and Roses Party nominee for president in 2020 running for U S Senate in Maryland 38 39 Decision pending edit As of November 2023 update the following notable individual is expected to make a decision regarding their official candidacy within a set timeline Joe Manchin United States Senator from West Virginia 2010 present 34th Governor of West Virginia 2005 2010 27th West Virginia Secretary of State 2001 2005 member of the West Virginia Senate from the 13th district 1986 1996 member of the West Virginia House of Delegates from the 31st district 1982 1986 40 41 decision expected in late 2023 42 nbsp U S Senator Joe Manchin from West Virginia Declined to be candidates edit The following notable individuals have been the subject of speculation about their possible candidacy but have publicly denied interest in running Stacey Abrams founder of Fair Fight Action Minority Leader of the Georgia House of Representatives 2011 2017 from the 89th district 2007 2017 nominee for Governor of Georgia in 2018 and 2022 43 44 Eric Adams 110th Mayor of New York City 2022 present 45 46 endorsed Biden 47 Tammy Baldwin United States Senator from Wisconsin 2013 present United States Representative from WI 02 1999 2013 48 49 running for re election 50 Andy Beshear 63rd Governor of Kentucky 2019 present 50th Attorney General of Kentucky 2016 2019 51 running for re election 52 53 Cory Booker United States Senator from New Jersey 2013 present 38th Mayor of Newark New Jersey 2006 2013 member of the Municipal Council of Newark 1998 2002 candidate for president in 2020 54 55 endorsed Biden Sherrod Brown United States Senator from Ohio 2007 present United States Representative from OH 13 1993 2007 47th Secretary of State of Ohio 1983 1991 56 running for re election 57 endorsed Biden 58 Pete Buttigieg 19th United States Secretary of Transportation 2021 present 32nd Mayor of South Bend Indiana 2012 2020 candidate for president in 2020 54 59 endorsed Biden Hillary Clinton 67th United States Secretary of State 2009 2013 United States Senator from New York 2001 2009 First Lady of the United States 1993 2001 First Lady of Arkansas 1979 1981 1983 1992 Democratic presidential nominee in 2016 candidate for president in 2008 60 endorsed Biden 61 Roy Cooper 75th Governor of North Carolina 2017 present 49th Attorney General of North Carolina 2001 2017 Majority Leader of the North Carolina Senate 1997 2001 from the 10th district 1991 2001 member of the North Carolina House of Representatives from the 72nd district 1987 1991 62 endorsed Biden Jamie Dimon Chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase 63 64 Al Gore 45th Vice President of the United States 1993 2001 United States Senator from Tennessee 1985 1993 United States Representative from TN 06 1977 1985 Democratic presidential nominee in 2000 candidate for president in 1988 65 66 Jay Inslee 23rd Governor of Washington 2013 present United States Representative from WA 01 1993 1995 1999 2012 candidate for president in 2020 67 68 Ro Khanna United States Representative from CA 17 2017 present 69 70 endorsed Biden 71 Amy Klobuchar United States Senator from Minnesota 2007 present County Attorney of Hennepin County 1999 2007 candidate for president in 2020 72 running for re election 73 Wes Moore 63rd Governor of Maryland 2023 present 74 endorsed Biden 75 Chris Murphy United States Senator from Connecticut 2013 present United States Representative from CT 05 2007 2013 member of the Connecticut State Senate from the 16th district 2003 2007 member of the Connecticut House of Representatives from the 81st district 1999 2003 76 77 running for re election 78 Phil Murphy 56th Governor of New Jersey 2018 present United States Ambassador to Germany 2009 2013 Finance Chair of the Democratic National Committee 2006 2009 44 79 endorsed Biden Gavin Newsom 40th Governor of California 2019 present 49th Lieutenant Governor of California 2011 2019 41st Mayor of San Francisco 2004 2011 80 81 endorsed Biden Michelle Obama First Lady of the United States 2009 2017 82 83 Jared Polis 43rd Governor of Colorado 2019 present United States Representative from CO 02 2009 2019 member of the Colorado State Board of Education 2001 2007 84 85 J B Pritzker 43rd Governor of Illinois 2019 present 44 86 endorsed Biden Bernie Sanders United States Senator from Vermont 2007 present United States Representative from VT AL 1991 2007 37th Mayor of Burlington 1981 1989 candidate for president in 2016 and 2020 endorsed Biden 87 Adam Schiff United States Representative from CA 30 2001 present 88 89 running for U S Senate 90 Jon Stewart host of The Problem with Jon Stewart 2021 2023 host of The Daily Show 1999 2015 91 92 Elizabeth Warren United States Senator from Massachusetts 2013 present candidate for president in 2020 93 94 endorsed Biden Gretchen Whitmer 49th Governor of Michigan 2019 present Ingham County Prosecuting Attorney 2016 Minority Leader of the Michigan Senate 2011 2015 from the 23rd district 2006 2015 member of the Michigan House of Representatives from the 69th district 2001 2006 95 96 endorsed Biden Vice presidential speculation edit nbsp Kamala Harris incumbent vice presidentOn January 19 2022 President Biden confirmed that Vice President Kamala Harris will be his running mate in 2024 in his re election campaign 97 Some Democrats expressed skepticism about Biden choosing Harris again as his running mate as she has also seen similar low approval ratings to Biden In January 2023 U S Senator Elizabeth Warren said in a radio interview that she supported Biden s reelection bid but stopped short of supporting Harris 98 She later clarified her position saying she supported the Biden Harris ticket 99 Primaries and caucus calendar editThe following primary and caucus dates have been scheduled by state statutes or state party decisions but are subject to change pending legislation state party delegate selection plans or the decisions of state secretaries of state 100 January 23 tentative New Hampshire primary 101 c February 3 South Carolina primary February 6 Nevada primary February 27 Michigan primary March 5 Super Tuesday Alabama Arkansas American Samoa California Colorado Iowa mail in vote Maine Massachusetts Minnesota North Carolina Oklahoma Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont and Virginia primaries March 12 Democrats Abroad Georgia Mississippi and Washington primaries and Northern Mariana Islands caucuses March 19 Arizona Florida Illinois Kansas and Ohio primaries March 23 Louisiana and Missouri primaries April 2 Delaware New York Rhode Island Connecticut and Wisconsin primaries April 6 Alaska Hawaii and North Dakota primaries April 13 Wyoming county caucuses April 23 Pennsylvania primary April 28 Puerto Rico primary May 7 Indiana primary May 14 Maryland Nebraska and West Virginia primaries May 21 Kentucky and Oregon primaries May 23 Idaho county caucuses June 4 District of Columbia Montana New Jersey New Mexico and South Dakota primaries June 8 Guam and United States Virgin Islands caucusesTimeline editSee also Timeline of the 2024 United States presidential election Active campaign Exploratory committee Withdrawn candidateMidterm elections Primaries Democratic National ConventionEarly developments edit Biden declared his intent in January 2022 to run for re election keeping Kamala Harris as his running mate 2 On September 15 he told Scott Pelley in a CBS 60 Minutes interview that he had not yet committed to run 102 In a private conversation with civil rights activist Al Sharpton on October 3 he reportedly told Sharpton that he was seeking re election 103 On October 11 he told Jake Tapper in an interview on CNN that he would decide whether or not to seek re election after the 2022 midterm elections 104 Throughout 2022 several prominent Democrats publicly urged Biden not to run for a second term On June 23 shortly after winning the Democratic nomination in the South Carolina gubernatorial race former U S Representative Joe Cunningham told CNN that he believed Biden would be too old by the end of his second term and should not run in 2024 CNN pointed out that Biden had endorsed Cunningham in his 2018 and 2020 campaigns 10 In July U S Representative Dean Phillips of Minnesota said he believed that Democrats should nominate someone from a younger generation in 2024 and fellow Minnesota Representative Angie Craig agreed with him the following week 11 On August 1 then U S Representative Carolyn Maloney told The New York Times that she thought Biden should not run in 2024 and that she believed he would not run She later apologized and said that he should run again though she reiterated her belief that he would not 9 In September U S Representative and Ohio U S Senate nominee Tim Ryan similarly called for a generational move away from Biden during an interview with a local TV station Forbes Magazine noted that Biden who had endorsed Ryan headlined a rally with him just hours after the interview aired 11 Primary calendar changes edit See also Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire presidential primary First primary status and efforts to change On February 4 2023 the Democratic National Committee approved a new 2024 primary calendar moving South Carolina to hold its race first on February 3 followed by Nevada and New Hampshire on February 6 Georgia on February 13 and Michigan on February 27 Iowa which traditionally goes first would then be held later in the primary season This vote was preceded by a December 2022 vote of the DNC Rules and Bylaws Committee held after a letter from President Biden requesting the change was released 105 DNC members who supported this new plan say this will give a better representation of Democratic voters preference during the early months of the campaign Members of the Iowa Democratic Party and the New Hampshire Democratic Party opposed the move since they would no longer be the first two states to hold their races Democratic officials from New Hampshire and Georgia also note that moving their primaries to comply with the new calendar would require changing their respective state laws New Hampshire state law mandates them to hold the first primary in the country while Georgia state law requires them to hold both the Democratic and Republican primaries on the same day which is unlikely to happen since both states have governors and state legislatures controlled by Republicans 106 107 New Hampshire governor Chris Sununu in particular criticized the DNC s plan as an absolute joke It s just based on a personal preference of a candidate 108 The DNC originally gave Georgia and New Hampshire until June to change their primary dates 109 In May 2023 Georgia Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger denied the DNC s request for a separate February date and scheduled the Georgia primaries for March 12 110 In June 2023 the DNC extended New Hampshire s compliance deadline to September 111 With New Hampshire still planning to hold its race before South Carolina s Biden s team announced in October that he will not appear on the New Hampshire ballot to show solidarity with the DNC 112 Democrats may still mount a write in campaign to help Biden avoid the embarrassment of losing the states by default 113 It remains unclear how the DNC will proceed as its convention rules would penalize the state s number of delegates if they are unable to move their primary date to comply with the party s primary calendar 109 On October 6 the DNC and the Iowa Democratic Party reached a compromise in which the in person Iowa Democratic caucuses focusing on party business could still be held in January but voting on presidential candidates would be done via mail in ballots until Super Tuesday March 5 114 Debates editThe Democratic National Committee has expressed full support for Biden and as of March 2023 has no plans to host any official primary debates 115 Williamson has criticized this decision as rigging and candidate suppression 116 117 A June 2023 poll by USA Today and Suffolk University found that 8 in 10 Democratic voters would like to see Biden debate the other Democratic candidates Among Biden supporters 72 said they would like to see him debate in the primaries with other Democratic candidates 118 No primary debates have been held for any incumbent president since Gerald Ford in 1976 116 Following Phillips campaign announcement Williamson offered to debate him 119 Williamson had previously expressed similar sentiments when Kennedy had joined the race 120 Endorsements editJoe BidenMain article List of Joe Biden 2024 presidential campaign primary endorsements Dean PhillipsState representativesSteve Shurtleff New Hampshire state representative from the 11th district Merrimack 2004 present and former speaker of the New Hampshire House of Representatives 2018 2020 121 Notable individualsSteve Schmidt political and corporate strategist campaign advisor 122 Marianne WilliamsonState senatorsKendra Anderson former Rhode Island State Senator from the 31st district 2021 2023 123 better source needed Cynthia Mendes former Rhode Island State Senator from the 18th district 2021 2023 123 better source needed State representativesMaria Perez New Hampshire State Representative from the 43rd district Hillsborough 2020 present vice chair of the National Hispanic Caucus of State Legislators Independent 124 Robin Vogt New Hampshire State Representative from the 21st district Rockingham 2022 present 123 better source needed national volunteer coordinator 125 Local officialsMaebe A Girl at large Silver Lake Neighborhood Councilor 2019 present and drag queen 126 Notable individualsKii Arens pop artist graphic designer and director 127 Krystal Ball political commentator and media host Democratic nominee for U S Representative from VA 01 in 2010 128 Jamie Lee Curtis actress and producer 129 Peter Daou political activist musician and author 130 previously her campaign manager then campaigned for Cornel West before resigning Independent 131 Keith David actor 132 Jimmy Demers singer 133 Steven Donziger attorney 127 Frances Fisher actress 134 Harvey J Kaye historian and sociologist campaign advisor 135 Kyle Kulinski political commentator and media host 128 Leah McSweeney fashion designer and TV personality 136 Opinion polling editAggregate polls edit Aggregate polls of declared candidates in the 2024 Democratic Party presidential primaries Source of poll aggregation Dates administered Dates updated Joe Biden Dean Phillips Marianne Williamson Other undecided d Margin270 to Win October 12 30 2023 November 2 2023 69 4 3 5 8 4 18 7 61 0 FiveThirtyEight through November 1 2023 November 2 2023 68 5 5 6 25 9 62 9 Race to the WH through October 23 2023 November 1 2023 67 4 7 0 25 6 60 4 Real Clear Politics October 12 November 1 2023 November 2 2023 72 2 5 0 8 0 14 8 64 2 Average 69 4 4 3 7 3 19 0 62 1 Polling with declared candidates edit Polling with declared candidates in the 2024 Democratic Party presidential primaries Poll source Date s administered Samplesize JoeBiden Robert F Kennedy Jr Dean Phillips MarianneWilliamson Other Undecided MarginMorning Consult October 30 November 2 2023 789 LV 73 4 4 19 69 HarrisX The Messenger October 30 November 1 2023 725 RV 75 4 5 9 e 10 70 Quinnipiac October 26 30 2023 695 RV 77 6 8 5 f 5 69 October 26 2023 Phillips declares his candidacyEchelon Insights October 23 26 2023 472 LV 59 1 7 4 g 27 52 HarrisX The Messenger October 16 23 2023 1 106 RV 70 9 13 9 61 USA Today Suffolk October 17 20 2023 289 LV 73 0 10 7 1 0 15 2 62 3 Emerson College October 16 17 2023 643 RV 70 0 9 9 20 1 60 1 Yahoo News October 12 16 2023 509 LV 68 6 4 21 62 Zogby Analytics October 13 15 2023 424 LV 67 6 14 9 1 6 6 4 9 6 52 7 October 9 2023 Kennedy announces he will run as an independentHarris X The Messenger October 4 7 2023 1 080 RV 58 15 7 7 13 43 Big Village September 29 October 3 2023 1 106 RV 61 8 23 7 7 2 7 3 38 1 TIPP I amp I September 27 29 2023 560 RV 65 14 51 Echelon Insights September 25 28 2023 499 LV 58 18 4 4 16 40 McLaughlin amp Associates September 22 26 2023 432 LV 56 15 3 26 41 Marquette University Law School September 18 25 2023 372 LV 49 13 4 34 36 HarrisX The Messenger September 13 19 2023 1 114 RV 62 16 6 5 11 46 Emerson College September 17 18 2023 457 LV 61 6 14 3 3 6 20 5 47 3 Rasmussen September 14 18 2023 57 25 3 7 32 YouGov September 14 18 2023 486 RV 68 7 4 19 61 Harvard Harris A September 13 14 2023 800 RV 60 15 4 9 13 45 Ipsos Reuters September 8 14 2023 2 024 A 67 14 4 53 Fox News September 9 12 2023 404 LV 71 17 6 3 3 54 Quinnipiac University September 7 11 2023 724 RV 73 11 8 62 HarrisX The Messenger September 6 11 2023 1 245 RV 65 11 7 7 10 54 Redfield amp Wilton Strategies September 3 4 2023 618 LV 71 9 3 3 h 14 62 Morning Consult August 30 September 1 2023 800 RV 76 9 3 67 I amp I TIPP August 30 September 1 2023 606 RV 68 10 5 3 14 58 Echelon Insights August 28 31 2023 468 RV 57 13 6 4 20 44 Big Village August 25 27 2023 919 A 60 3 19 0 9 7 10 9 41 3 Emerson College August 25 26 2023 374 RV 61 0 11 5 4 4 23 0 49 5 HarrisX August 24 26 2023 763 RV 66 13 7 5 9 53 McLaughlin amp Associates August 15 23 2023 444 LV 61 12 7 21 40 HarrisX August 17 21 2023 648 A 64 13 4 8 11 51 Yahoo News YouGov August 17 21 2023 495 RV 69 7 5 2 18 62 Emerson College August 16 17 2023 608 68 9 8 9 3 8 18 5 60 0 Fox News Beacon Research August 11 14 2023 399 RV 64 17 9 47 RMG Research August 11 14 2023 64 13 4 7 i 9 51 Quinnipiac University August 10 14 2023 666 RV 72 13 9 1 3 59 I amp I TIPP August 2 4 2023 615 RV 63 15 4 3 15 48 Echelon Insights July 24 27 2023 500 LV 62 16 5 4 14 46 The New York Times Siena College July 23 27 2023 296 LV 64 13 10 1 12 51 Big Village July 24 26 2023 922 A 62 6 19 8 9 1 8 4 42 8 McLaughlin amp Associates July 19 24 2023 428 LV 65 13 3 19 52 Harvard Harris July 19 20 2023 62 16 5 5 11 46 Quinnipiac University July 13 17 2023 727 RV 71 14 7 1 5 57 Yahoo News July 13 17 2023 494 69 7 5 2 17 62 Reuters Ipsos July 11 17 2023 2 044 RV 63 15 4 3 14 48 I amp I TIPP July 5 7 2023 60 16 5 5 14 44 Echelon Insights June 26 29 2023 511 LV 65 14 5 6 11 51 Fox News June 23 26 2023 391 64 17 10 4 6 47 Emerson College June 19 20 2023 441 RV 72 5 14 6 2 5 10 4 57 9 YouGov June 16 20 2023 70 7 3 2 18 63 Harvard Harris June 14 15 2023 2 090 RV 62 15 4 8 12 47 The Messenger HarrisX June 14 15 2023 381 RV 54 14 5 10 17 40 Big Village June 9 14 2023 916 RV 60 0 18 3 11 2 10 5 41 7 Quinnipiac University June 8 12 2023 722 RV 70 17 8 53 USA Today Suffolk June 5 9 2023 293 RV 58 15 6 21 43 I amp I TIPP May 31 June 2 2023 638 RV 68 12 4 4 12 56 YouGov May 25 30 2023 467 RV 62 12 5 19 50 Big Village May 26 28 2023 425 LV 58 8 19 0 10 6 11 6 39 8 Echelon Insights May 22 25 2023 538 LV 60 14 5 2 19 46 Fox News May 19 22 2023 1001 RV 62 16 8 6 8 46 CNN May 17 20 2023 432 RV 60 20 8 13 40 Marquette Law School May 8 18 2023 312 RV 53 12 7 28 41 YouGov May 5 8 2023 480 RV 67 10 6 17 57 Rasmussen Reports May 3 7 2023 910 LV 62 19 4 15 43 Change Research April 28 May 2 2023 1 208 LV 65 11 11 11 2 55 Echelon Insights April 25 27 2023 513 LV 66 10 2 5 17 56 April 25 2023 Biden declares his candidacyEmerson College Polling April 24 25 2023 1 100 RV 70 21 8 49 Fox News April 21 24 2023 1 004 RV 62 19 9 10 43 Suffolk University April 19 2023 600 LV 67 14 5 13 53 Morning Consult April 7 9 2023 827 LV 70 10 4 8 8 60 April 5 2023 Kennedy declares his candidacyEchelon Insights j March 27 29 2023 370 LV 73 10 17 63 Morning Consult March 3 5 2023 826 LV 77 4 9 10 73 March 4 2023 Williamson declares her candidacyHypothetical polling edit This section lists polling with hypothetical candidates which was mostly conducted between 2020 and April 2023 before the presidential candidacies were declared Polls including Joe Biden edit Hypothetical polls including Joe Biden Poll source Date s administered Samplesize StaceyAbrams JoeBiden PeteButtigieg KamalaHarris AmyKlobuchar GavinNewsom AlexandriaOcasio Cortez BernieSanders ElizabethWarren OtherAmerican Pulse Research and Polling October 27 30 2023 243 LV 38 11 17 10 24 k April 25 2023 Biden declares his candidacyBig Village April 19 23 2023 902 A 32 7 15 3 5 6 13 4 13 l Harris Poll amp HarrisX April 18 19 2023 683 RV 3 37 6 10 2 4 2 8 4 11 m Legar April 6 10 2023 368 A 27 7 10 2 7 12 6 7 n Big Village March 29 31 2023 445 A 36 7 15 2 4 5 13 8 7 o Harris Poll amp HarrisX March 22 23 2023 2 905 RV 2 41 5 11 2 3 3 7 4 10 p Big Village March 15 17 2023 434 A 33 5 17 5 5 6 15 7 4 Yahoo News Survey You Gov February 23 27 2023 1 516 LV 53 22 25 McLaughlin amp Associates February 17 23 2023 442 LV 26 7 6 2 3 3 8 4 41 q Big Village February 15 17 2023 437 A 34 9 13 3 6 7 13 7 8 r Harris Poll February 15 16 2023 2 36 6 15 2 4 4 8 3 20 s Leger February 10 13 2023 354 A 25 10 10 1 6 14 4 30 t Ipsos February 6 13 2023 1 786 RV 35 10 12 5 13 5 20 u McLaughlin amp Associates January 19 24 2023 442 LV 0 25 7 6 2 7 5 5 4 40 v Big Village January 18 20 2023 447 A 34 3 9 0 14 0 3 9 5 2 5 4 13 2 5 7 9 3 w Harris Poll January 18 19 2023 3 35 5 12 3 3 3 11 3 25 x YouGov January 14 17 2023 618 A 39 10 8 6 13 26 y YouGov January 5 9 2023 442 A 31 11 9 4 6 14 9 9 z Big Village January 4 6 2023 477 A 32 9 8 7 16 0 12 5 29 9 aa Big Village December 16 18 2022 466 A 37 2 9 8 15 8 10 1 27 1 ab Harris Poll December 14 15 2022 685 RV 3 36 6 10 3 5 7 3 27 ac Harris Poll December 14 15 2022 685 RV 3 36 6 10 3 5 7 3 27 ad McLaughlin amp Associates December 9 14 2022 455 RV 22 6 8 2 3 4 8 2 42 ae Marist College December 6 8 2022 519 RV 35 16 17 32 Big Village November 30 December 2 2022 452 A 35 9 15 4 4 5 13 7 4 af Cornell University Collaborative Midterm Survey October 26 November 25 2022 4 079 A 27 14 15 6 11 8 12 7 ag Ipsos November 9 21 2022 569 LV 5 15 10 11 3 5 4 7 5 35 ah Emerson College November 18 19 2022 591 RV 42 9 17 6 12 7 4 ai Big Village November 16 18 2022 454 A 39 8 14 11 6 Harris Poll November 16 17 2022 3 35 6 13 3 4 9 3 24 aj Zogby Analytics November 9 11 2022 859 LV 2 41 9 11 10 6 13 9 Big Village November 9 10 2022 446 A 39 16 25 16 November 8 2022 2022 midterm electionsBig Village November 2 4 2022 356 LV 42 19 19 16 Big Village November 2 4 2022 444 A 40 16 21 18 Big Village October 31 November 2 2022 378 LV 41 13 21 19 Big Village October 31 November 2 2022 488 A 39 12 22 22 YouGov October 11 26 2022 1 860 RV 42 14 14 7 12 1 ak YouGov October 17 19 2022 29 13 9 7 14 8 10 al McLaughlin amp Associates October 12 17 2022 474 LV 3 27 4 9 1 3 3 8 2 40 am Harris Poll October 12 13 2022 744 RV 3 37 6 13 1 4 6 3 13 an Big Village October 5 7 2022 362 RV 44 15 17 20 Big Village October 5 7 2022 453 A 40 15 20 21 Big Village September 21 23 2022 397 RV 48 16 14 15 Big Village September 21 23 2022 434 A 47 16 15 15 McLaughlin amp Associates September 17 22 2022 471 LV 4 27 5 6 1 2 3 7 2 43 ao TIPP Insights September 7 9 2022 596 RV 3 34 4 10 1 4 2 7 3 32 ap Big Village September 7 9 2022 492 A 43 14 22 27 Harris Poll September 7 8 2022 672 RV 4 37 6 13 3 3 8 2 12 aq Big Village August 24 26 2022 487 A 40 16 19 19 McLaughlin amp Associates August 20 24 2022 468 LV 3 23 5 8 1 5 1 6 3 45 ar Big Village August 10 12 2022 465 A 37 14 20 22 TIPP Insights August 2 4 2022 576 RV 4 30 4 8 1 6 3 8 4 32 as Harris Poll July 27 28 2022 697 RV 4 31 5 12 3 3 8 4 14 at Harris Poll June 29 30 2022 484 RV 4 30 6 18 2 4 8 3 8 au McLaughlin amp Associates June 17 22 2022 456 LV 5 23 5 5 2 2 6 40 av TIPP Insights June 8 10 2022 509 RV 2 24 4 7 2 2 3 9 3 30 aw Polls excluding Joe Biden edit Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues Hypothetical polls without Joe Biden Poll source Date s administered Samplesize StaceyAbrams CoryBooker PeteButtigieg HillaryClinton AndrewCuomo KamalaHarris AmyKlobuchar JoeManchin GavinNewsom MichelleObama AlexandriaOcasio Cortez BernieSanders ElizabethWarren GretchenWhitmer Other UndecidedHarrisX The Messenger October 30 November 1 2023 725 RV 48 33 ax 20 Big Village April 19 23 2023 902 A 10 28 4 7 7 16 7 3 14 ay Big Village March 29 31 2023 445 A 11 28 4 7 7 18 11 4 7 az Echelon Insights March 27 29 2023 530 RV 2 4 8 27 2 9 6 7 5 7 ba Harris Poll amp HarrisX March 22 23 2023 2 905 RV 5 8 13 2 22 3 4 6 4 10 8 4 bb Big Village March 15 17 2023 434 A 7 31 4 8 8 21 10 3 2 Yahoo News February 23 27 2023 450 LV 12 25 5 12 12 8 5 Echelon Insights February 21 23 2023 499 LV 3 5 14 27 5 0 6 6 8 3 24 bc McLaughlin amp Associates February 17 23 2023 442 LV 3 11 6 11 3 2 5 19 5 9 6 12 bd Big Village February 15 17 2023 437 A 11 27 5 9 8 18 10 5 3 be Harris Poll February 15 16 2023 3 8 16 3 22 4 5 7 7 12 3 Ipsos February 6 13 2023 1 786 RV 15 27 10 18 8 4 3 bf Echelon Insights January 23 25 2023 467 LV 4 4 11 23 4 8 9 8 3 9 bg McLaughlin amp Associates January 19 24 2023 442 LV 2 8 8 15 2 2 7 15 6 5 5 11 bh Big Village January 18 20 2023 447 A 14 29 5 8 6 19 8 4 3 bi Harris Poll January 18 19 2023 5 7 11 2 26 5 4 6 4 12 5 Big Village January 4 6 2023 477 A 11 30 5 11 9 17 7 2 4 bj Big Village December 16 18 2022 466 A 10 14 2 35 5 7 6 16 8 3 3 bk Harris Poll December 14 15 2022 685 RV 3 9 14 2 23 4 4 5 11 5 Echelon Insights December 12 14 2022 523 RV 3 3 11 24 6 5 5 5 3 12 bl 476 LV 3 3 12 26 5 6 5 5 3 10 bm McLaughlin amp Associates December 9 14 2022 455 LV 1 6 8 13 3 2 4 21 4 9 5 12 bn YouGov December 1 5 2022 588 RV 14 19 10 6 13 7 7 724 A 12 18 9 7 11 7 6 Big Village November 30 December 2 2022 452 A 13 32 6 5 6 17 9 3 2 bo Echelon Insights November 17 19 2022 496 RV 3 4 13 21 2 6 7 7 4 7 bp 496 LV 2 4 12 23 4 6 7 8 3 7 bq Harris Poll November 16 17 2022 4 8 24 4 3 6 11 6 3 br Zogby Analytics November 9 11 2022 859 LV 5 10 32 6 10 13 9 38 November 8 2022 2022 midterm electionsEchelon Insights October 24 26 2022 475 LV 5 4 11 27 3 4 7 6 1 12 bs 475 LV 5 3 14 26 4 6 5 7 1 11 bt McLaughlin amp Associates October 12 17 2022 474 LV 3 2 6 6 2 16 2 2 5 17 5 8 2 0 24 bu Harris Poll October 12 13 2022 744 RV 3 10 17 25 2 4 5 11 4 3 bv Morning Consult September 23 25 2022 893 RV 4 13 26 4 5 8 7 1 4 bw McLaughlin amp Associates September 17 22 2022 471 LV 4 1 6 11 1 11 2 1 5 18 2 7 4 0 25 bx Echelon Insights September 16 19 2022 509 LV 8 3 11 28 5 6 7 5 2 8 by Harris Poll September 7 8 2022 672 RV 6 9 14 26 2 2 5 10 5 3 bz McLaughlin amp Associates August 20 24 2022 468 LV 4 2 6 7 1 15 2 2 4 16 2 7 5 2 25 ca Echelon Insights August 19 22 2022 515 RV 6 3 12 22 2 6 9 5 2 8 cb 505 LV 7 4 14 21 3 6 5 6 2 8 cc Harris Poll July 27 28 2022 697 RV 5 8 23 4 4 5 8 4 4 cd Suffolk University July 22 25 2022 440 RV 16 8 18 11 8 10 18 Echelon Insights July 15 18 2022 500 RV 7 4 10 27 3 0 7 5 7 1 10 ce 493 LV 6 5 13 26 3 0 7 5 7 1 9 cf Harris Poll June 29 30 2022 484 RV 4 6 25 4 1 4 12 6 14 cg McLaughlin amp Associates June 17 22 2022 456 LV 6 3 8 7 1 13 3 2 3 19 7 13 ch Echelon Insights June 17 20 2022 489 RV 5 5 11 30 3 0 5 6 6 2 8 ci 484 LV 6 6 12 27 4 0 5 7 6 2 8 cj Zogby Analytics May 23 24 2022 554 LV 5 21 19 5 21 8 4 7 ck 10 Echelon Insights May 20 23 2022 474 LV 7 7 12 30 2 4 4 5 1 7 cl 21 480 RV 7 5 11 31 2 3 8 5 1 7 cm 20 Harvard Harris May 18 19 2022 3 7 10 19 3 6 4 10 4 4 cn 28 McLaughlin amp Associates April 22 26 2022 463 LV 6 3 9 9 2 17 4 1 2 23 1 4 4 co 17 Harvard Harris April 20 21 2022 727 RV 5 8 14 31 3 4 6 10 5 14 Echelon Insights April 18 20 2022 469 RV 5 6 10 31 3 1 1 6 6 1 9 cp 19 456 LV 6 7 11 30 4 1 1 5 6 1 8 cq 20 Harvard Harris March 23 24 2022 740 RV 6 8 15 28 4 3 4 9 4 19 Echelon Insights March 18 21 2022 472 LV 6 4 9 26 5 2 7 8 1 8 cr 24 490 LV 6 4 11 26 6 2 6 8 1 6 cs 22 McLaughlin amp Associates March 17 22 2022 466 LV 5 3 7 7 1 18 2 2 2 20 2 6 9 ct 18 Harvard Harris February 23 24 2022 750 RV 5 8 13 29 3 5 5 9 6 17 Echelon Insights February 19 23 2022 543 RV 8 6 9 29 3 2 10 6 0 8 cu 21 McLaughlin amp Associates February 16 22 2022 453 LV 6 4 10 9 1 15 2 2 4 22 6 8 cv 13 Echelon Insights January 21 23 2022 477 RV 6 5 12 30 3 2 5 8 1 7 cw 21 Harvard Harris January 19 20 2022 672 RV 6 7 17 23 2 3 6 12 7 17 McLaughlin amp Associates January 13 18 2022 463 LV 6 4 6 9 2 16 3 2 2 22 9 4 cx 15 Morning Consult December 11 13 2021 916 RV 5 11 31 3 3 8 8 3 cy 16 Echelon Insights December 9 13 2021 479 RV 5 6 7 33 3 2 1 5 14 8 2 2 cz 8 Harvard Harris November 30 December 2 2021 1 989 RV 5 5 8 31 5 7 15 7 2 14 da Hill HarrisX November 18 19 2021 939 RV 4 3 5 26 3 4 15 5 7 2 1 10 db 16 Echelon Insights November 12 18 2021 458 LV 6 6 8 29 2 1 2 5 16 6 0 0 dc 16 McLaughlin amp Associates November 11 16 2021 450 LV 5 3 8 2 22 5 23 5 32 dd YouGov Yahoo News October 19 21 2021 671 A 7 9 22 7 12 8 4 de 31 Echelon Insights October 15 19 2021 533 LV 5 4 9 23 4 1 3 5 16 6 0 2 df 20 McLaughlin amp Associates October 14 18 2021 473 LV 5 3 9 2 29 3 2 2 18 7 8 dg 14 McLaughlin amp Associates September 9 14 2021 476 LV 5 4 7 2 29 3 2 17 7 6 dh 17 Echelon Insights August 13 18 2021 514 RV 6 6 11 33 2 2 8 5 1 8 di 18 McLaughlin amp Associates July 29 August 3 2021 467 LV 4 5 8 4 28 2 2 16 7 10 dj 14 YouGov Yahoo News July 30 August 2 2021 697 A 4 6 44 4 10 6 18 dk 20 McLaughlin amp Associates June 16 20 2021 463 LV 5 3 4 2 31 3 1 19 5 11 dl 16 McLaughlin amp Associates May 12 18 2021 459 LV 4 4 6 1 35 3 2 16 7 11 dm 13 Trafalgar Group April 30 May 6 2021 LV dn 9 41 5 8 36 do McLaughlin amp Associates April 8 13 2021 458 LV 4 5 2 34 4 2 20 3 13 dp 12 McLaughlin amp Associates February 24 28 2021 443 LV 4 7 1 28 3 23 8 12 dq 14 January 20 2021 Inauguration of Joe BidenMcLaughlin amp Associates December 9 13 2020 445 LV 3 5 5 25 2 29 7 8 dr 18 McLaughlin amp Associates Newsmax November 21 23 2020 445 LV 2 6 5 29 2 23 6 5 ds 23 November 3 2020 2020 presidential electionMcLaughlin amp Associates November 2 3 2020 461 LV 2 8 8 18 25 6 6 dt 28 Leger August 4 7 2020 1 007 LV 6 7 14 20 13 6 8 9 6 24 du 390 LV 6 6 16 21 19 6 9 17 dv Campaign finance editThis is an overview of the money used by each campaign as it is reported to the Federal Election Commission FEC Totals raised include individual contributions loans from the candidate and transfers from other campaign committees Individual contributions are itemized catalogued by the FEC when the total value of contributions by an individual comes to more than 200 The last column Cash On Hand shows the remaining cash each campaign had available for its future spending as of September 30 2023 Campaign finance reports for the fourth quarter of 2023 will become available on January 15 2024 137 This table does not include contributions made to Super PACs or party committees supporting the candidate Each value is rounded up to the nearest dollar Candidate who withdrew prior to September 30 Candidate who withdrew following September 30 Overview of campaign financing for candidates in the 2024 Democratic Party presidential primaries through September 30 2023 Candidate Total raised Total raisedsince last quarter Individual contributions Debt Spent Spent sincelast quarter Cash on handTotal Unitemized PctBiden 138 72 838 281 24 785 201 15 237 941 9 061 416 59 5 0 73 094 919 12 730 208 32 180 366 dw Williamson 139 2 515 539 821 832 2 277 201 1 191 053 52 3 347 490 2 414 193 825 656 101 167Kennedy 140 15 078 528 8 713 134 15 052 084 5 072 721 33 7 0 8 906 488 7 060 571 6 172 041See also edit2024 United States presidential election 2024 Democratic National Convention 2024 Republican Party presidential primaries 2024 Republican National ConventionNotes edit 2 260 of 4 518 delegates needed to win any subsequent ballots at a contested convention lasting more than a single round of balloting As of November 2023 the number of extra unpledged delegates superdelegates who after the first ballot at a contested convention participate in any subsequently needed nominating ballots together with the 3 770 pledged delegates is expected to be 744 but the exact number of superdelegates is still subject to change due to possible deaths resignations accessions or potential election as a pledged delegate Uygur is not eligible to serve as president as he is not a natural born citizen but he claims he can run for the office 33 New Hampshire s delegates could be penalized if the tentative date is confirmed by the Republican Secretary of State The early date would be in violation of the DNC approved calendar which confirmed South Carolina as the first primary state Calculated by taking the difference of 100 and all other candidates combined Someone Else at 9 Uygur at 2 Refused Someone Else and Would Not Vote at 1 Uygur at 1 Someone Else at 3 Manchin at 1 Newsom at 7 Archived April 3 2023 at the Wayback Machine Another Candidate at 7 Phillips and Williamson at 1 Undecided at 15 Kennedy with 7 Shapiro Williamson and Whitmer with 2 Hillary Clinton with 7 Andrew Cuomo with 2 Joe Manchin and Marianne Williamson with 1 Whitmer with 4 and Booker with 3 Whitmer with 3 Williamson and Shapiro with 1 Hillary Clinton with 6 Joe Manchin with 2 Andrew Cuomo and Marianne Williamson with 1 Michelle Obama with 14 Hillary Clinton with 4 Beto O Rourke Phil Murphy and Cory Booker with 2 Manchin Kaine Hickenlooper Gillibrand Steyer and Polis with 1 Adams and Patrick with 0 Gretchen Whitmer with 4 Josh Shapiro with 1 Hillary Clinton with 8 Andrew Cuomo with 2 Manchin with 1 Cory Booker with 6 Gretchen Whitmer with 2 Gretchen Whitmer with 3 Josh Shapiro with 2 Obama with 14 Clinton with 6 O Rourke with 2 Booker Gillibrand Kaine Manchin and Polis with 1 Adams Cuomo Hickenlooper Markle McConaughey Murphy Patrick Steyer and Winfrey with 0 Undecided with 13 Whitmer with 3 0 Shapiro with 2 8 Someone Else with 3 5 Hillary Clinton with 8 Manchin and Cuomo with 1 Gretchen Whitmer with 3 Someone Else with 3 Not Sure with 16 Would Not Vote with 4 Gretchen Whitmer with 5 Raphael Warnock with 4 Someone else at 29 9 Someone Else at 27 1 Hillary Clinton with 7 Michael Bloomberg with 3 Joe Manchin and Andrew Cuomo with 2 Hillary Clinton with 7 Michael Bloomberg with 3 Joe Manchin and Andrew Cuomo with 2 Michelle Obama with 18 Hillary Clinton with 6 O Rourke with 3 Booker with 2 Winfrey and Manchin with 1 Phil Murphy Kaine Adams Hickenlooper Patrick Gillibrand Steyer and Polis with 0 Gretchen Whitmer with 3 Shapiro with 1 Hillary Clinton with 7 Gretchen Whitmer with 3 Polis with 1 Cooper with 0 Gretchen Whitmer and Jared Polis with 2 Hillary Clinton with 6 Joe Manchin and Michael Bloomberg with 2 Hochul with 1 Hillary Clinton with 10 Michelle Obama with 12 Hillary Clinton and O Rourke with 5 Winfrey and Booker with 2 McConaughey Manchin Cuomo Phil Murphy and Adams with 1 Kaine Hickenlooper Patrick Gillibrand Steyer and Polis with 0 Hillary Clinton with 9 Michael Bloomberg and Joe Manchin with 2 Michelle Obama with 16 Hillary Clinton with 6 Beto O Rourke with 3 Matthew McConaughey with 2 Booker Winfrey Manchin Kaine Hickenlooper Steyer and Polis with 1 Cuomo Murphy Adams Patrick and Gillibrand with 0 Michelle Obama with 11 Hillary Clinton with 5 Kennedy Whitmer Booker Pritzker Adams Manchin Bennet Inslee and Lujan Grisham with 1 Gabbard with 0 Hillary Clinton with 7 Michael Bloomberg with 3 Joe Manchin with 2 Michelle Obama with 13 Hillary Clinton with 6 Beto O Rourke with 4 Cory Booker and Joe Manchin with 2 Winfrey McConaughey Cuomo Murphy and Adams Hickenlooper Gillibrand and Steyer with 1 Kaine and Polis with 0 Michelle Obama with 10 Hillary Clinton with 5 Cory Booker with 3 Gretchen Whitmer and Kennedy with 2 Pritzker and Gabbard with 1 Bennet Lujan Grisham Manchin Inslee and Adams with 0 Hillary Clinton with 9 Joe Manchin with 3 Michael Bloomberg with 2 Hillary Clinton with 6 Manchin and Bloomberg with 1 Michelle Obama with 18 Hillary Clinton with 5 Beto O Rourke with 4 Cory Booker with 3 Oprah Winfrey with 2 Manchin McConaughey Cuomo Murphy Kaine and Adams with 1 Hickenlooper Patrick Gillibrand and Steyer with 0 Michelle Obama with 14 Hillary Clinton with 6 Cory Booker with 3 Kennedy Whitmer Bennet Lujan Grisham and Gabbard with 1 Manchin Inslee and Pritzker with 0 Someone Else at 19 Williamson at 8 Phillips at 6 Kennedy with 10 Williamson and Shapiro with 2 Marianne Williamson with 3 and Josh Shapiro with 4 Marianne Williamson with 4 and Roy Cooper Phil Murphy and Rapheal Warnock with 1 Marianne Williamson with 1 Raphael Warnock with 2 JB Pritzker with 1 Beshear Cooper and Raimondo on 0 Beto O Rourke with 3 Phil Murphy with 1 Gillibrand Adams Patrick Hickenlooper Steyer and Polis with 1 Kaine and Pritzker with 0 Josh Shapiro with 3 Pritzker with 0 Josh Shapiro with 3 Pritzker with 0 Pritzker with 3 Raimondo Polis and Warnock with 1 Beshear Cooper Murphy Adams and Landrieu with 0 Beto O Rourke with 3 Gillibrand Adams Patrick Murphy Hickenlooper Steyer Markle and Polis with 1 Kaine and Pritzker with 0 Josh Shapiro with 3 Pritzker with 0 Josh Shapiro with 4 Pritzker with 0 Josh Shapiro with 3 Pritzker with 0 Pritzker and Warnock with 3 Beshear Raimondo Murphy Adams and Polis with 1 Landrieu and Cooper with 0 Pritzker and Warnock with 2 Cooper Murphy Polis and Adams with 1 Beshear Landrieu and Raimondo with 0 Beto O Rourke with 4 Oprah Winfrey with 3 Kaine and Gillibrand with 1 Adams Patrick Murphy Pritzker Hickenlooper Steyer and Polis with 0 Josh Shapiro with 2 Pritzker with 0 Phil Murphy with 2 Beshear and Warnock with 1 Sinema Cooper Landrieu Pritzker Raimondo Adams and Polis with 0 Phil Murphy with 2 Beshear and Warnock with 1 Sinema Cooper Landrieu Pritzker Raimondo Adams and Polis with 0 Michael Bloomberg with 3 Andy Beshear with 3 Raphael Warnock with 2 Sinema Cooper Landrieu Murphy Pritzker and Adams with 1 Raimondo and Polis with 0 Andy Beshear and Raphael Warnock with 2 Sinema Cooper Pritzker and Adams with 1 Landrieu Raimondo Murphy and Polis with 0 Beto O Rourke with 5 Oprah Winfrey with 2 McConaughey Polis Patrick Hickenlooper and Steyer with 1 Adams Kaine Murphy Pritzker and Gillibrand with 0 Michael Bloomberg with 3 Adams Pritzker and Raimondo with 1 Cooper with 0 Beto O Rourke with 5 Oprah Winfrey with 3 Matthew McConaughey and Jared Polis with 2 Adams Murphy Gillibrand Patrick Pritzker Hickenlooper and Steyer with 1 Omar with 0 Murphy Polis Pritzker and Warnock with 1 Raimondo Beshear Sinema Cooper and Landrieu with 0 Michael Bloomberg with 3 Beto O Rourke with 3 Tim Kaine Oprah Winfrey and Matthew McConaughey with 2 Adams Murphy Gillibrand and Steyer with 1 Patrick Hickenlooper Omar Pritzker and Polis with 0 Phil Murphy and Kyrsten Sinema with 2 Beshear Adams Polis and Warnock with 1 Cooper Landrieu Pritzker and Raimondo with 0 Phil Murphy with 2 Beshear Sinema Adams Polis and Warnock with 1 Cooper Pritzker Landrieu and Raimondo with 0 Michael Bloomberg with 4 Pritzker and Warnock with 2 Murphy Adams Raimondo and Polis with 1 Beshear Sinema Cooper and Landrieu with 0 Pritzker with 2 Murphy Adams Polis and Warnock with 1 Beshear Sinema Cooper Landrieu and Raimondo with 0 Michael Bloomberg with 3 Beto O Rourke with 4 Oprah Winfrey and Matthew McConaughey with 2 Adams Kaine Patrick and Murphy with 1 Gillibrand Hickenlooper Pritzker and Steyer with 0 Pritzker with 2 Sinema Murphy and Warnock with 1 Beshear Raimondo Adams Polis Cooper and Landrieu with 0 Kyrsten Sinema Phil Murphy JB Pritzker and Raphael Warnock with 1 Beshear Raimondo Adams Polis Cooper and Landrieu with 0 Jill Biden with 7 Cooper Raimondo and Pritzker with 1 Beshear Sinema Landrieu Murphy Adams Polis and Warnock with 0 Cooper Raimondo and Pritzker with 1 Beshear Sinema Landrieu Murphy Adams Polis and Warnock with 0 Michael Bloomberg with 4 Eric Adams Tim Kaine Beto O Rourke and Tom Steyer with 1 Kirsten Gillibrand John Hickenlooper Phil Murphy Ilhan Omar and Deval Patrick with 0 Tulsi Gabbard with 2 Cooper and Murphy with 1 Beshear Sinema Landrieu Adams Polis Raimondo and Pritzker with 0 Tulsi Gabbard with 2 Cooper and Murphy with 1 Beshear Sinema Landrieu Adams Polis Raimondo and Pritzker with 0 Eric Adams with 2 Cooper Raimondo Murphy Pritzker and Polis with 1 Landrieu Beshear Raimondo and Sinema with 0 Cooper and Adams with 1 Sinema Beshear Landrieu Raimondo Pritzker Murphy and Polis with 0 Beto O Rourke with 3 Tom Steyer with 2 Eric Adams Tim Kaine and Deval Patrick with 1 Kirsten Gillibrand and Ilhan Omar with 0 Roy Cooper with 2 Beshear Sinema Raimondo and Murphy with 1 Landrieu Pritzker and Adams with 0 Beto O Rourke with 3 John Hickenlooper with 2 Tim Kaine Deval Patrick and Tom Steyer with 1 Eric Adams Kirsten Gillibrand and Ilhan Omar with 0 Beshear Sinema Cooper Landrieu Raimondo Pritzker and Adams with 1 Murphy with 0 Beto O Rourke with 2 Eric Adams and John Hickenlooper with 1 Kirsten Gillibrand Tim Kaine Ilhan Omar Deval Patrick and Tom Steyer with 0 Cooper Adams and Raimondo with 3 Gabbard with 1 Beshear and Sinema with 0 Other Don t know with 14 Someone else with 3 Michael Bloomberg and Beto O Rourke with 2 Sherrod Brown Andrew Yang and Katie Porter with 1 Someone else Andy Beshear Tulsi Gabbard and Kyrsten Sinema with 0 Beto O Rourke with 3 other with 29 Sherrod Brown with 4 Someone else and Tulsi Gabbard with 1 Andy Beshear and Kyrsten Sinema with 0 Beto O Rourke with 3 Kirsten Gillibrand John Hickenlooper Tim Kaine Deval Patrick and Tom Steyer with 1 Ilhan Omar with 0 Beto O Rourke with 3 Kirsten Gillibrand Deval Patrick and Tom Steyer with 1 John Hickenlooper Tim Kaine and Ilhan Omar with 0 O Rourke and Yang with 2 Besehar Gabbard and Gillibrand with 1 Sinema with 0 Andrew Yang with 4 John Hickenlooper and Beto O Rourke with 2 Kirsten Gillibrand and Tim Kaine with 1 Ilhan Omar with 0 Sherrod Brown with 2 Beto O Rourke and Andrew Yang with 3 John Hickenlooper with 2 Tim Kaine Deval Patrick and Ilhan Omar with 1 Tim Kaine Beto O Rourke Deval Patrick and Andrew Yang with 2 Kirsten Gillibrand John Hickenlooper and Ilhan Omar with 1 Democratic subsample of full sample of 1 574 likely voters Someone else with 26 Beto O Rourke with 4 Andrew Yang with 3 Julian Castro with 2 John Bel Edwards with 1 Andrew Yang with 4 Kirsten Gillibrand John Hickenlooper and Beto O Rourke with 2 Tim Kaine Ilhan Omar and Deval Patrick with 1 Andrew Yang with 4 John Hickenlooper and Beto O Rourke with 2 Tim Kaine Kirsten Gillibrand Ilhan Omar and Deval Patrick with 1 Gavin Newsom with 0 John Hickenlooper with 3 Tim Kaine with 2 Kirsten Gillibrand Ilhan Omar and Deval Patrick with 1 Kirsten Gillibrand John Hickenlooper Tim Kaine Ilhan Omar and Deval Patrick with 1 John Hickenlooper with 3 Kirsten Gillibrand Tim Kaine and Deval Patrick with 1 Andrew Yang with 14 Beto O Rourke with 6 Kirsten Gillibrand with 4 Andrew Yang with 8 Beto O Rourke with 6 Kirsten Gillibrand with 3 Biden s principal campaign committee Biden for President was also used for his earlier 2020 presidential campaign Some of these figures therefore include money left over from that previous candidacy Poll sponsored by Harvard University Center for American Political StudiesReferences edit Democratic National Committee Rules and Bylaws Committee April 13 2022 Resolution on the Principles and Framework of a Transparent and Fair Review of the Presidential Nominating Calendar PDF democrats org p 4 Archived PDF from the original on May 18 2022 Retrieved November 18 2022 a b c Gittleson Ben Nagle Molly April 25 2023 Joe Biden announces he is running for president again setting up possible Trump rematch ABC News Retrieved April 25 2023 Real Clear Politics Retrieved May 30 2023 Dorn Andrew June 27 2023 Has an incumbent 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original on May 9 2021 Retrieved May 24 2021 Strauss Daniel October 7 2022 Is Gretchen Whitmer the Democrats Next Presidential Nominee The New Republic Archived from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved October 10 2022 Whitmer says she won t run for president in 2024 if Biden chooses not to run WXYZ 7 Action News Detroit October 17 2022 Archived from the original on October 23 2022 Retrieved October 23 2022 Rafford Claire January 19 2022 Biden commits to Harris as his running mate for 2024 POLITICO Archived from the original on January 27 2022 Retrieved August 20 2022 Lannan Katie January 27 2023 Warren stops short of backing Harris for VP in 2024 WGBH Boston Archived from the original on February 25 2023 Retrieved February 25 2023 Lannan Katie January 29 2023 Warren clarifies she s all in with Biden Harris ticket for 2024 WGBH Boston Archived from the original on February 25 2023 Retrieved February 25 2023 The Green Papers Presidential Primaries 2024 Democratic Pledged and Unpledged Delegate Summary The Green Papers September 22 2023 Retrieved September 22 2023 Feely Paul July 14 2023 Potential January date for NH s presidential primary comes into focus New Hampshire Union Leader Yahoo Retrieved October 27 2023 President Biden says he hasn t decided on 2024 reelection run CBS News September 18 2022 Archived from the original on September 26 2022 Retrieved September 20 2022 Allen Jonathan October 3 2022 Biden tells Al Sharpton he will run for president again in 2024 NBC News Archived from the original on October 6 2022 Retrieved October 5 2022 Habeshian Sareen October 12 2022 Biden says he ll decide on 2024 presidential run after the midterms Axios Archived from the original on October 23 2022 Retrieved October 23 2022 Joseph R Biden Jr Letter PDF The Democrats December 1 2022 Archived PDF from the original on February 4 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 Shepherd Brittany February 4 2023 Democrats approve new primary calendar for 2024 ABC News Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 Chambers Francesca February 4 2023 Democrats approve 2024 primary calendar that demotes Iowa boosts South Carolina USA Today Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 O Keefe Ed Novak Analisa February 3 2023 New Hampshire battles to retain first in the nation presidential primary as DNC leaders meet to vote on possible changes CBS News Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 a b Vakil Caroline February 4 2023 DNC approves adjusted early presidential primary schedule The Hill Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 Barrow Bill May 4 2023 Georgia election chief denies Democrats early 2024 primary Associated Press Lisa Kashinsky June 16 2023 Democrats buy time in fight over New Hampshire primary POLITICO Retrieved June 20 2023 Schneider Elena October 24 2023 Biden won t appear on New Hampshire primary ballot Politico Retrieved October 30 2023 Otterbein Holly Kashinsky Lisa May 18 2023 Democrats race to avoid a Biden embarrassment in New Hampshire POLITICO Retrieved September 25 2023 Masters Clay October 6 2023 DNC s new calendar will release caucus results on Super Tuesday Iowa Public Radio Retrieved October 19 2023 Shepherd Brittany March 3 2023 Democratic Party remains united behind Biden as long shot 2024 challengers emerge ABC News a b Shepherd Brittany June 2 2023 No incumbent president has participated in a primary debate since Ford Democrats want to keep it that way ABC News Retrieved July 6 2023 Marianne Williamson May 31 2023 Debate Us Mr President Newsweek Retrieved July 6 2023 Page Susan June 11 2023 Poll Eight in 10 Democratic primary voters want Joe Biden to debate USA Today marwilliamson October 28 2023 Democracy is a good thing Welcome to the campaign trail deanbphillips Let s debate Tweet Retrieved October 31 2023 via Twitter The Vanguard May 19 2023 EXCLUSIVE Marianne Williamson RESPONDS to RFK Jr s Candidacy YouTube Graham Steven October 31 2023 Former Biden NH Co Chair Backs Phillips in FITN Primary NH Journal Retrieved November 1 2023 Tessa Stuart October 27 2023 The Man Who Brought You Sarah Palin Has a New Candidate Dean Phillips Rolling Stone Retrieved October 27 2023 a b c New endorsements Update from the road in NH Archive of Political Emails July 5 2023 Retrieved October 28 2023 Gokee Amanda October 3 2023 Why Maria Perez was the latest N H lawmaker to leave the Democratic party The Boston Globe Retrieved October 4 2023 Perez endorsed longshot candidate Marianne Williamson because she wanted a challenger to have the opportunity to be on the ballot Welcome to Volunteer Group Marianne Williamson 2024 Archived from the original on October 29 2023 Retrieved October 29 2023 Garcia Brandon August 26 2023 Maebe A Girl wants you to vote for her ideas not her identity WeHOville Retrieved August 31 2023 a b Marianne Williamson is speaking with Steven Donziger for Earth Day The Bridgetown Museum and New Jersey Advocate April 8 2023 Retrieved April 28 2023 a b King Ryan March 4 2023 Allies of Marianne Williamson lay out game plan to take down Biden The Washington Examiner Archived from the original on March 8 2023 Retrieved March 8 2023 Lloyd Sophie August 23 2023 Jamie Lee Curtis Mask Photo Sparks Uproar Newsweek Retrieved October 27 2023 She recently announced her support for Democratic primary candidate Marianne Williamson on Instagram and has been championing the writers and actors strikes in Hollywood led by the WGA and SAG AFTRA Fung Katherine September 11 2023 Democrat Who Left Party Over Ignored Groping Claims Backs Cornel West Newsweek Retrieved September 11 2023 Trudo Hannah October 27 2023 Cornel West s campaign manager says he s leaving job The Hill Retrieved October 27 2023 Webber Rod Pespisa Lauren April 17 2023 Marianne Williamson Cornel West and MSFB at Dept of P E A C E Awards YouTube Rod Webber s Dumpster Fire Emporium Archived from the original on April 17 2023 Retrieved April 17 2023 JUST IN Marianne Williamson Launches Campaign For President First Democratic Challenger To Biden YouTube Forbes Breaking News March 4 2023 Archived from the original on March 4 2023 Retrieved March 4 2023 Porter Steven August 18 2023 Marianne Williamson and friends touring N H this weekend The Boston Globe Retrieved October 28 2023 Kaye Harvey September 20 2023 Who Should Lead the Democratic Party in 2024 Divided We Fall Retrieved September 20 2023 Marie Ashley April 28 2023 RHONY Leah McSweeney endorses Marianne Williamson for president Starcasm Retrieved April 28 2023 2023 Quarterly reports FEC gov Retrieved July 7 2023 Report of Receipts and Disbursements Biden for President FEC Retrieved October 16 2023 Report of Receipts and Disbursements Marianne Williamson for President FEC Retrieved October 16 2023 Kennedy Robert F Jr Federal Election Commission Retrieved April 24 2023 External links editDemocratic National Committee 2024 Primary Schedule Vote on C Span President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris speak at Democratic National Committee Winter Meeting on C Span Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2024 Democratic Party presidential primaries amp oldid 1183356520 Primaries and caucus calendar, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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