As an early supporter of Joe Biden in the 2020 Democratic presidential primary, Kermit Williams of Wilton was invited to drive Biden to several events in southern New Hampshire.
That experience included trekking through a couple snowstorms with the future president.
โI told Joe, โItโs good you have someone from New Hampshire driving you, and not someone from Delaware or further south, because we know how to handle the snow,โ said Williams, who served as a state representative from 2012 to 2020 and failed in a bid to return to the Legislature this year. โHe said, โWell, Iโm glad you’re here.โโ
Last week, theย Democratic National Committeeโs Rules and Bylaws Committee endorsed Bidenโs proposal to make South Carolina the first Democratic primary state in 2024, followed by New Hampshire and Nevada on the same day, then Georgia, then Michigan. The full DNC will vote on the schedule next year.
Under state law, New Hampshireโs primary must be first, which Gov. Chris Sununu, U.S. Rep.ย Annie Kusterย and U.S. Sens. Maggie Hassan and Jeanne Shaheenย are among those who have stated that the state will remain first in the nation, no matter what the DNC decides.ย However, even if the secretary of state moves the primary forward, perhaps into the end of 2023, Williams worries that a push from national Democrats would keep candidates from coming to the state.
โIf the candidates donโt come, we can vote, but it certainly wonโt be the same,โ Williams said, citing theย โoutsize presenceโ New Hampshire currently has due to being first and its small size providing candidates with the opportunity to meet voters in a way that would be difficult in a larger state. โIf they take away that outsize presence, it will sort of be a hollow victory.โ
According to Christina Cliff, associate professor of political science atย Franklin Pierce University, the logic behind removing New Hampshireโs first-in-the-nation status is sound, โbut it also fundamentally flawed and an overly simplistic โsolutionโย that will likely create other problems.โ
โThe argument that New Hampshire (and Iowa) should no longer be the first primary events of presidential election cycles is based almost entirely on the fact that New Hampshire and Iowa are relatively small populations that lack diversity,โshe stated.ย โThese are facts, and facts that cannot and should not be ignored.โย ย
Cliff agreed that getting more diverse voters involved in the early presidential primaries is important and should have been addressed long ago, but that the answer isnโt to abandon small states.
โNew Hampshire, and Iowa to a lesser extent, have spent decades developing engaged voters. There is both a formal and informal infrastructure that facilitates votersโ interactions with candidates,โ she stated. โNew Hampshire voters want and expect to interact with every presidential candidate and assess their qualifications. Long-shot candidates will draw crowds, and the โbig namesโย will still have to earn the votersโ approval.ย The small states, and the small-state political environment, is fundamentally different from what campaigning looks like in South Carolina, Nevada, and other, larger states.โย
Instead,ย Cliff believes parties and candidates should stay in the race longer.
โIf the Democrats, or the Republicans, canโt afford to spend campaign funds on 13 candidates through more than one or two primaries, then perhaps they shouldnโt encourage 13 candidates to run.ย And candidates should persevere โ if they sincerely believe that they are qualified to run the country, why would a couple of early setbacks be sufficient for them to give up?โ she stated. โThe states with early primaries are not the ones letting down voters. Itโs the candidates and parties that are limiting the ability of a diverse population to have equal primary choices.ย The parties shouldnโt be penalizing engaged voters because of their own lack of staying power.โ
