It will not necessarily mean that the presumptive nominee will be chosen as quickly as Kerry was in 2004, but expect the 2008 primary calendar to be Iowa, followed by New Hampshire eight days later, followed by a much larger mini-Tuesday seven days after that. For example,
North Carolina seems to be following at least Pennsylvania's lead in joining the mini-Tuesday fray:North Carolina voters are usually irrelevant when it comes to picking a presidential nominee for a party, but the legislature is considering a bill that could change that.
State Sen. Andrew Brock, a Republican from Mocksville, has introduced a bill to move North Carolina's presidential primary from May to the first Tuesday in February in 2008.
That would put North Carolina's primary right after the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary.
Combined, Pennsylvania and North Carolina are as large as all seven mini-Tuesday states were in 2004 (AZ, DE, MO, NM, ND, OK, and SC). Subscription only Hotline notes that NC is part of an "ever-growing list of states potentially holding a WH primary on that day," but does not name any names.
This probably means that if Clinton wins either Iowa or New Hampshire, she would basically seal the nomination on February 5th, 2008. If someone else wins both Iowa and New Hampshire, that person would probably seal the nomination on February 5th. If two people who are not Hillary Clinton split Iowa and New Hampshire, then look out for a wild, long lasting primary season that might not be decided until the convention. Ever constricting television coverage of the primary season before Iowa and New Hampshire will almost certainly continue to grant Iowa and New Hampshire their ridiculous power, especially if extensive political restrictions are placed upon the rising political information source that is the Internet.
2012 might see some improvements to the primary system, but it is growing obvious that 2008 will not.
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