Before Americans pick a president in November, they get to pick the candidates in a series of primaries and caucuses.
It's a wonky process that has evolved over the course of the country's history and continues to evolve today.
Here's what to know:
It's an election to select candidates, usually for a particular political party, to appear on the general election ballot.
For Democrats, Joe Biden is the sitting president and he's running for reelection, which makes him the incumbent candidate.
Incumbents rarely face serious competition. There are some Democrats challenging him in the Democratic primaries, including Rep. Dean Phillips of Minnesota and author Marianne Williamson. But they have not yet generated much support, at least in opinion polls.
For Republicans, former President Donald Trump has long been the front-runner, meaning he appears in polling to have a lead over five other candidates who are still in the race.
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Trump, as a former president, also projects some of the power of an incumbent, although he lost the last election. His is the first serious campaign by a former president for his party's nomination since Teddy Roosevelt tried and failed to reclaim the Republican nomination in 1912.
Anti-Trump Republicans appear to be interested in two main options: former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. Haley has polled better in New Hampshire and DeSantis has focused on Iowa. Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy and former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson have had more trouble gaining support.
It varies by state. Primaries are generally conducted in polling places like any other election.
But some states have "open primaries," meaning any registered voter can vote in either the Democratic or Republican primary. Other states have "closed primaries," meaning only people registered in a particular political party - usually Republicans or Democrats - can vote in that party's primary.
Others offer voting day registration, which essentially opens the primaries to most registered voters.
The first date on the presidential primary calendar is January 15, although it is not technically for a primary.
On that day in Iowa, Republican Party members gather at events called caucuses, where they hear speeches from a campaign's supporters and then vote for their preferred candidate. Unlike primaries in other states, these events are overseen by state parties and are not conducted like normal elections.
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Democrats will also gather that day in Iowa, but their vote for president will be conducted by mail ending on March 5.
In some states, presidential primaries are conducted on one date and primaries for other offices are conducted later in the year. See the full calendar.
After Iowa, New Hampshire holds its "first-in-the-nation" primary on January 23, although Democrats are not sanctioning the event. Democrats want their first official primary to take place on February 3 in South Carolina, which is a more racially diverse state, and the first place Biden won a primary in 2020. That will then be followed by Nevada's primary on February 6.
The calendar spreads out from there. Republicans compete in caucuses in Nevada and the US Virgin Islands on February 8 and South Carolina on February 24.
Not necessarily. In 2020, Biden didn't win either Iowa or New Hampshire, but his campaign got a reset in South Carolina and he went on to the Democratic nomination and the White House.
In 2016, Donald Trump lost Iowa but won New Hampshire, similar to fellow Republican Mitt Romney in 2012.
In 2008, Democrat Barack Obama won Iowa, but lost New Hampshire. Republican John McCain lost Iowa that year but won New Hampshire.
The last candidate to win both in Iowa and New Hampshire and go on to the White House was Democrat Jimmy Carter in 1976, although he technically placed second in Iowa, behind "uncommitted."
Voters cast ballots for candidates, but they're really selecting delegates for the party conventions, which take place over the summer.
Delegates can either be apportioned through a winner-take-all system, meaning the top candidate in a state's primary gets all of that state's delegates, or they can be apportioned proportionally to the primary election results. Some states have thresholds where every candidate who gets over a certain amount of the vote - say, 20% - may be entitled to delegates.
Democrats these days apportion all of their delegates proportionally.
Republican rules this year generally require that states with primaries and caucuses before March 15 apportion delegates proportionally. States with primaries and caucuses after March 15 may switch to a winner-take-all format.
We will have to see how the primaries play out.
Keep an eye on Super Tuesday, March 5. While there won't yet be enough delegates on the table to clinch the nomination, that is the night with the largest pot of delegates, where Republicans in 16 states and territories will vote for president.
It might take until May or June for one candidate to secure enough votes to win his or her party's nomination. The last presidential primaries occur on June 4.
Delegates are mostly required to be "bound" (the Republican term) or "pledged" (the Democratic term) to a particular candidate heading into the convention.
A very small portion of delegates in certain states and territories on the Republican side are "unbound." These few delegates can support whomever they choose at the outset of the convention.
Democrats have "unpledged" delegates - party bigwigs - but they do not cast ballots in the first round of voting on the convention floor if they could impact the outcome.
If there's no clear majority winner after the delegates vote, they go to additional rounds of voting where the bound delegates become unbound so that they can ultimately select a nominee. This is what's known as a "brokered convention."
When we say this is rare, we mean it hasn't happened since 1952.
It evolved over the course of the country's history. It used to be congressional delegations who would select presidential candidates.
The first election for which there were political conventions for party members was 1832, when Andrew Jackson won the White House. The first convention was held by the short-lived and long-defunct Anti-Masonic Party.
The move toward focusing on primary elections and making the system more democratic began after violence at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago in 1968, when party leaders had opted for then-Vice President Hubert Humphrey over anti-war candidate Eugene McCarthy. (Humphrey went on to lose to Richard Nixon.)
The Republican National Convention runs July 15-18 in Milwaukee.
The Democratic National Convention runs August 19-22 in Chicago.
Yes, but not for the office of president.
A growing number of states are experimenting with nonpartisan primaries, where all voters and candidates take part in one primary election and the top finishers, regardless of their party affiliation, square off on Election Day.
These nonpartisan primaries, which feature in statewide races for Senate and governor and for House races, are not used in the presidential election.
California, Nebraska and Washington use the top-two system. Alaska has a top-four system.
Louisiana has so-called "jungle primaries." All candidates for local, state or federal office are listed on the Election Day ballot, and if no candidate gets a majority, the top-two finishers take part in a runoff.
Yes. The Green Party will likely have a presidential candidate on the ballot in most states, and the Libertarian Party expects to be on the ballot in all 50 states. These parties will select their nominees in their own conventions.
The last time a third-party or independent candidate secured electoral votes in a general election, however, was 1968.
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