Nevada is the next contest of the 2024 Republican primary. Here’s why it doesn’t matter
Nevada will be the next state to vote for the Republican nominee for president but one could be forgiven for not remembering that fact, given the lack of media attention.
Both Nikki Haley and Donald Trump, the only two prominent contenders remaining in the fight for their party’s nomination, are technically on the ballot in Nevada.
But they are on different ones — Ms Haley is competing in the state’s primary and Mr Trump is competing in its caucus.
That means they will not actually be “against” each other in the state, as Republican voters can choose to participate in both the primary and the caucus, which will be held on different days.
It is a bewildering system that has almost entirely sapped the state’s political relevance for the 2024 primary season.
And it’s all thanks to 2020, when a delay in the results led to many Democratic political leaders in the state, including the late Harry Reid, pushing for the state to abandon the caucus system in favour of a primary.
Only, they didn’t: Nevada now has both.
This is because the state’s Republicans unsuccessfully fought in court to stop the primary from going forward, having opposed the switch. They lost and a judge ruled last year that both contests could take place — the state GOP left todecide how to allocate delegates to the participants on its own.
Unsurprisingly, the Nevada Republican Party chose to award those delegates to the winner of the caucus, which will be Mr Trump, given Ms Haley’s non-participation.
The former president will therefore walk out of the state with up 26 delegates and without having to do much by way of campaigning against his rival.
He has, however, rallied in the Silver State since New Hampshire, not least because it retains