Iowa to Make Its Pitch Today that Caucuses Remain First in the Nation
WASHINGTON D.C. (Radio Iowa) Three Iowa Democrats will be making a pitch to national party leaders today (Thursday), arguing the Iowa Democratic Party’s Caucuses should be first in 2024. National Democrats are hearing applications from 16 states and Puerto Rico seeking to be among the five “early” voting states in the presidential campaign. Members of the party’s Rules and Bylaws Committee have made it clear they’re looking for states with diverse populations. State Representative Ras Smith of Waterloo is a member of the Black Caucus in the Iowa House.
“Tell Waterloo that we’re not diverse,” Smith says. Smith says while Iowa’s overall population is nearly 91 percent white, Iowa is diverse in other ways.
“I think we need to branch or expand our definition of diversity as well. It doesn’t just mean people who are black or white,” Smith says. (It’s) folks with disabilities, folks whose first spoken language is not English.” The chairmen of the Iowa Democratic Party AND the Iowa G-O-P have both been arguing that Iowa inserts geographic diversity in the presidential selection process. Smith says national party leaders need to consider what will be lost if Iowa’s Caucuses aren’t an early providing ground for those who aspire to be president.
“How do we ensure that folks on every level don’t allow the retail politics that Iowa holds so dear to become extinct? Because I’m concerned about that and I’m concerned that politics is already elitist,” Smith says. “If all the exposure you get is on TV, it becomes even more elitist.” Smith made his comments during a recent episode of Iowa Press on Iowa P-B-S. Iowa Democratic Party chairman Ross Wilburn, Democratic National Committee member Scott Brennan of Des Moines and House Democratic Leader Jennifer Konfrst are making Iowa’s pitch to the Rules and Bylaws Committee of the Democratic National Committee this (Thursday) morning. They will be discussing a big change in the voting process — mail-in balloting rather than a Caucus Night scramble in precinct meetings using complicated math that ultimately decides who won the Democratic Party’s Caucuses. The Republican National Committee has already set its calendar of 2024 presidential contests. The Iowa G-O-P’s Caucuses — which essentially conduct a straw poll to determine the winner — are first.