The Republican National Committee keeps the tradition. The full RNC members voted unanimously on Thursday not to make changes to the 2024 presidential nomination calendar, keeping Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada as the four states with early voting. The vote, at the RNC Spring Training Meeting in Memphis, Tennessee, approved recommendations approved by a committee at the national party’s winter meeting in February. The committee was chaired by Iowa GOP President Jeff Kaufman and included the presidents of the Republican Party of New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada. DEMOCRATS ARE MOVING TO INCREASE THE PRESCRIPTION CALENDAR OF THE 2024 PRESIDENT “I thank @GOPChairwoman and the entire RNC for reaffirming the rules that allow Iowa to host First Nation meetings. Iowa residents take their responsibility seriously and are ready to begin the presidential nomination process of our country! ” Kaufman wrote on Twitter a few minutes after the vote. New Hampshire GOP President Steve Stepanek told Fox News that “the RNC supports the states of Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina, Nevada. We do it in New Hampshire and the RNC sees great value in continuing this program for the forthcoming presidential primaries “. RONNA MCDANIEL CHAIR IS THINKING OFFER FOR A FOURTH RNC STEERING RECORD The confirmation of the RNC program came a day after the rival National Democratic Commission took an important step in overturning the long presidential and parliamentary calendar led by Iowa and New Hampshire for decades. The DNC’s Committee on Regulations and Statutes voted Wednesday to require the two states, as well as Nevada and South Carolina, which are in the third and fourth bids on the DNC program, to re-apply for an early state in the calendar. 2024. Other states interested in climbing to the top of the calendar may also apply. ARCHIVE – The Iowa Caucuses Exhibition in Des Moines, Iowa (Fox News) The move by the Rules and Statutes group, which oversees the party’s presidential nomination calendar, would also allow a fifth state to gain carve-out status, meaning it will run its pre-election nominations before in March 2024, when the other states are allowed to start holding their competitions. Iowa community bodies have been on both the Democrat and Republican nominees’ calendars for half a century, and New Hampshire has held the country’s first primary in a century. TRUMP 2024 TEASE DOES NOT STOP OTHER POTENTIAL PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES FROM THE VISIT OF IOWA AND NH But the blow for many years against both states among many Democrats was that they are too white, lack significant urban areas and do not represent a Democratic Party that has become increasingly diverse in recent decades. Nevada and South Carolina are much different than Iowa or New Hampshire. New Hampshire is holding the country’s first primaries in a century. A sign outside the state capital at Concord, NH marks the state’s valuable primary status. (Fox News) To complicate matters, Nevada Democrats last year passed a bill that would turn the state’s presidential caucus into a qualifier and aimed to move the race to first place in the race for the White House, ahead of Iowa and New Hamsa. And Iowa’s issues were exacerbated by the poor reporting of the 2020 meetings, which became national and international history and a disgrace to the Iowa Democrats as well as the DNC. CLICK HERE TO RECEIVE THE FOX NEWS APPLICATION In addition to the four current four early voting states, Michigan and New Jersey have said they will apply for carve-out status.