Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

GOP to punish states over primaries

Washington Post The Spokesman-Review

WASHINGTON – It’s official: The five states that set their 2008 presidential primaries before Feb. 5 will lose half of their delegates to the Republican convention next summer, under rules passed by the Republican National Committee in 2004.

Committee officials announced in a conference call with reporters Thursday that New Hampshire, Michigan, South Carolina, Wyoming and Florida will be punished with the withdrawal of half their delegates.

Iowa and Nevada are exempt from the rule, because their nominating contests in January are caucuses in which delegates will not technically be awarded.

“Five states have gone outside the rules, and they’ve been made fully aware of what the consequences would be,” said RNC Chairman Mike Duncan.

The impact of the delegate losses remains to be seen. Candidates who win big states such as Florida and Michigan will, under the rules, collect many fewer delegates as rewards for their victories, but those states are looming as big prizes as much for the momentum a victory would bestow as for actual delegates. And it is conceivable that the five states could petition the eventual nominee next spring and summer to ask the party to restore their lost delegates, assuming the nominee’s margin of victory allowed for such magnanimity.

The nominee would then face a choice between currying favor with the punished states and perhaps irking the much larger cohort of states that dutifully stayed behind the Feb. 5 threshold.