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Timeline of the 2024 United States presidential election

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Timeline of the 2024 United States presidential election

← 2020 November 5, 2024 2028 →

This is a timeline of major events leading up to, during, and after the 2024 United States presidential election, which was the first presidential election to be run with population data from the 2020 census. In addition to the dates mandated by the relevant federal laws such as those in the U.S. Constitution and the Electoral Count Act, several milestones have consistently been observed since the adoption of the conclusions of the 1971 McGovern–Fraser Commission.

2020

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2021

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2022

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2023

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January 2023

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  • January 6: John Anthony Castro, a minor presidential candidate, files a federal lawsuit against Donald Trump claiming the ineligibility of his candidacy.[35]
  • January 26: The Michigan Legislature passes a bill that moves the state's presidential primary date to February, which violates Republican Party rules and may disqualify its delegates.[36]

February 2023

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  • February 4: The Democratic National Committee approves a new primary calendar, moving South Carolina to February 3, followed by Nevada and New Hampshire on February 6, Georgia on February 13, and Michigan on February 27. Iowa, which traditionally goes first, would then be held later in the primary season.[37][38] The DNC gives Georgia and New Hampshire an extended deadline of June to modify their state laws so they can comply with the new dates (New Hampshire state law mandates them to hold the first primary in the country, while Georgia state law requires them to hold both the Democratic and Republican primaries on the same day), but this remains unlikely to happen since both states have Republican-controlled state legislatures.[39]
  • February 14: Former UN ambassador and South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley announces her bid for the Republican presidential nomination.[40]
  • February 21: Author and businessman Vivek Ramaswamy announces his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination.[41]

March 2023

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April 2023

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May 2023

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June 2023

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July 2023

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  • July 6: The Republican Party of Florida announces a requirement for candidates to pledge support for the eventual nominee in order to appear on the state primary ballot.[109]
  • July 7: DeSantis declares that he will participate in the first primary debate whether or not Trump chooses to attend.[110]
  • July 8: The Republican Party of Iowa determines the date for its presidential caucuses for January 15, the earliest caucus date since 2012.[111]
  • July 10: Doug Burgum's campaign begins offering $20 gift cards to supporters who donate at least $1 as a tactic to qualify for the debates.[112]
  • July 12: Morning Consult releases the first debate-qualifying poll, with eight candidates surpassing the one percent threshold.[113]
  • July 13: A Nevada District Court rules against the state GOP's request to block the state-run primary. Nevada Republicans indicate they will boycott the primary and hold their own caucus at a later date.[114]
  • July 14: The Family Leader holds its leadership summit in Des Moines, Iowa. President Biden and Robert Kennedy were invited, but declined to attend.[115]
  • July 15: The DeSantis campaign lays off a number of staffers amid struggles with fundraising, according to a report from an internal source.[116]
  • July 15–16: Turning Point Action hosts its conference at the Palm Beach County Convention Center in Florida, with various candidates, including Trump, attending the event.[117]
  • July 16:
    • DeSantis states that he would consider Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds as his running mate if he wins the nomination.[118]
    • Trump wins the Turning Point Action Conference straw poll with 86% support. In the vice presidential poll, Kari Lake won 30%, with Byron Donalds at 24% and Ramaswamy at 22%.[119]
  • July 25: DeSantis and members of his staff are involved in a car accident outside of Chattanooga, Tennessee; the governor is unhurt and one staffer receives minor injuries.[120]
  • July 28: Republican candidates attend the GOP Lincoln Dinner hosted by the Republican Party of Iowa in Des Moines.[121]

August 2023

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September 2023

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October 2023

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November 2023

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December 2023

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2024

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January 2024

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February 2024

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March 2024

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April 2024

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May 2024

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June 2024

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July 2024

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August 2024

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  • August 1–5: The Democratic "roll call" to nominate Kamala Harris is held online.[398][399]
  • August 3: Former president Jimmy Carter endorses Harris.[400]
  • August 4: Twenty-nine Uncommitted delegates from eight states took part in a virtual roll call where they voted for Palestinian victims over Harris.[401]
  • August 5: Kamala Harris is confirmed as the Democratic presidential nominee.[399]
  • August 6:
  • August 7: This was the original deadline for final candidate names to be submitted to the Ohio Secretary of State for printing on ballots and voter materials, weeks before the planned Democratic National Convention. Democrats implemented the virtual roll call nomination process as a workaround. The Ohio legislature postponed the date to August 23, but Democrats continued with the virtual roll call as planned,[404] as the bill does not take effect until September 1.[405]
  • August 15–18: The 2024 Green National Convention is held online.[406]
  • August 16: Stein announces Butch Ware, a historian at the University of California, Santa Barbara, as her running mate.[407]
  • August 17: Delegates at the Green Party's National Convention vote to nominate Jill Stein as the party's presidential candidate and Dr. Butch Ware as the party's vice presidential candidate.[408]
  • August 19–22: The 2024 Democratic National Convention is held in Chicago, Illinois.[409]
  • August 23: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. holds a conference in Phoenix where he announces that he is suspending his campaign and, despite his name remaining on the ballot in most states, endorsing Trump.[410]
  • August 26: Trump's visit to Arlington National Cemetery develops into an incident when a cemetery official attempts to stop his team from bringing external videographers.[411]

September 2024

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October 2024

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  • October 1: A vice presidential debate between Vance and Walz is hosted by CBS in New York City.[418]
  • October 7: America PAC announces it will offer $47 to supporters who refer another registered voter in a swing state to sign a petition in support of the First and Second Amendments.[419]
  • October 10: Musk increases the reward for signing the petition to $100 and pledges to give $1 million to a random signer each day.[420]
  • October 24: A 35-year-old man is arrested for lighting a U.S. Postal Service mailbox on fire in Phoenix, Arizona, damaging a number of mail-in ballots.[421]
  • October 25:
    • The Washington Post announces that it will not endorse a presidential candidate for the first time since 1988, a decision reportedly made by owner Jeff Bezos.[422] The decision comes two days after the Los Angeles Times made the decision not to endorse a presidential candidate, and the same day as interns at The Nation write a repudiation of the magazine's endorsement of Kamala Harris.[423][424]
    • In an Ipsos poll, 49% of respondents say Trump is a fascist, defined as "a political extremist who seeks to act as a dictator, disregards individual rights and threatens or uses force against their opponents;" 22% see Harris as a fascist.[425]
  • October 27: Trump organises a rally at Madison Square Garden at which comedian Tony Hinchcliffe describes Puerto Rico as a "floating island of garbage". The widely condemned joke and its potential ramifications are described as a potential October surprise, as commentators suggest it could influence the vote of Puerto Ricans living in swing states, particularly in Pennsylvania.[426][427][428][429]
  • October 28: House Speaker Mike Johnson, at a campaign event regarding healthcare changes, responds to an attendee's question "No Obamacare?" with "No Obamacare." The Trump campaign denies wanting to repeal the act.[430][431][432][433][434]
  • October 29: In a video call, Biden refers to Hinchcliffe's joke and makes a comment interpreted as calling Trump's supporters 'garbage', for which he receives a rebuttal[435] from Harris. This was regarded by many as potentially damaging for the Democratic Party's attempts to woo undecided voters, as well as sidelining a large proportion of the American population who support Trump.[436][437][better source needed] Despite stenographer concerns, the White House changes a transcript of Biden's 'garbage' remarks from "supporters" to "supporter's", which would make the remark refer to Hinchcliffe.[438]
  • October 30:
    • In a response to Biden's 'garbage' comment, Trump holds a rally while driving a garbage truck and wearing a garbage worker vest. During this rally, he states, "I'm the president. I want to protect the women of our country. ... I'm going to do it, whether the women like it or not", and specifically criticizes that his advisors had told him not to use that line because it would be "inappropriate". Harris uses Trump's comment in a rally in the context of bodily autonomy, while others related the comment to his sexual misconduct cases.[439][440][441][442]
    • In addition, HuffPost spoke with Puerto Rican voters in Pennsylvania after the event, one of whom stated that he saw Trump's garbage truck campaign stop as an endorsement of Hinchcliffe's remark and an additional insult.[443] Staff from both campaigns believed that the event would remind voters more of Hinchcliffe than of Biden's gaffe.[444]
  • October 31: At a campaign event, Trump calls Liz Cheney "deranged" and comments, "She's a radical war hawk. Let's put her with the rifle standing there with nine barrels shooting at her. OK, let's see how she feels about it. You know, when the guns are trained on her face." Cheney as well as Harris campaign staff compared the comment to a death threat and a firing squad, while Arizona prosecutors opened an investigation into whether Trump's comments qualified as a death threat which would be unlawful.[445][446]

November 2024

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All times on the Election Day as well as the day after are listed according to the Eastern Time Zone.

  • November 12: U.S. Representative Lloyd Doggett, who was the first sitting Democrat in Congress to openly call for President Joe Biden to withdraw from the 2024 United States presidential election after the first presidential debate, states after Trump's win, "I only regret I didn't do it earlier ... I believe that the only person in our caucus who doesn't share some responsibility for the outcome is Dean Phillips, who came out early."[481]

December 2024

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  • December 11: (at least six days prior to the first Tuesday after the second Wednesday in December): the "safe harbor" deadline under the Electoral Count Act, where states must finally resolve any controversies over the selection of their electors of the Electoral College.[482]
  • December 17: (the Tuesday after the second Wednesday in December): The electors meet in their respective state capitals and the District of Columbia to formally vote for president and vice president.[483] The number of states that prohibit faithless electors is subject to change. In 2020, 33 states and D.C. had such laws.[484]

2025

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Candidate participation timeline

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Candidate announcement and, if applicable, withdrawal dates are as follows:

Political party
Democratic Party
Republican Party
Libertarian Party
Green Party
Constitution Party
Party for Socialism
and Liberation
American
Solidarity Party
People's Party
Independent
candidate
Exploratory
committee
Events
Midterm elections
Iowa caucuses
Super Tuesday
First debate
Second debate
Republican Convention
Democratic Convention
Election Day
Inauguration Day
Kanye West 2024 presidential campaignRobert F. Kennedy Jr. 2024 presidential campaignCornel West 2024 presidential campaignPeter SonskiClaudia De la Cruz 2024 presidential campaignRandall Terry 2024 presidential campaignJill Stein 2024 presidential campaignMichael RectenwaldArt OlivierChase Oliver 2024 presidential campaignFrancis X. Suarez 2024 presidential campaignWill Hurd 2024 presidential campaignPerry Johnson 2024 presidential campaignLarry Elder 2024 presidential campaignMike Pence 2024 presidential campaignTim Scott 2024 presidential campaignDoug Burgum 2024 presidential campaignChris Christie 2024 presidential campaignVivek Ramaswamy 2024 presidential campaignAsa Hutchinson 2024 presidential campaignRon DeSantis 2024 presidential campaignNikki Haley 2024 presidential campaignDonald Trump 2024 presidential campaignMarianne Williamson 2024 presidential campaignDean Phillips 2024 presidential campaignJason Palmer 2024 presidential campaignJoe Biden 2024 presidential campaignKamala Harris 2024 presidential campaign

See also

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References

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  482. ^ 3 U.S.C. § 5
  483. ^ 3 U.S.C. § 7
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