Republican leaders in the state Senate say they will push for a February 28th closed presidential primary date.
That’s one week earlier than the National Republican Party rules allow. National GOP rules state that only four states are allowed to hold primaries before Super Tuesday in March without penalty.
Michigan is not one of those states. Penalties could include having convention delegates stripped.
Senate Majority Leader Randy Richardville says they plan to stick with a primary on February 28th.
“Michigan is going to be really relevant in the decision making process because of this date, but I don’t think we’re doing anything outlandish that would cause the national committee to be upset with us.”
The Michigan Republican Party has not specified a desired primary date. The party is leaving the primary date decision up to lawmakers.
The chairman of the Michigan Republican Party, Robert Schostak, says he is not too concerned with being penalized for the decision:
“The penalties are somewhat unclear. They haven’t been determined by the committee in finality. But if we would be penalized by losing delegates and we were trading that for relevancy, my sense is that the Legislature and the state committee that would be ultimately deciding on this are okay with it.”
Both the Republican and Democratic parties in Michigan were penalized in 2008 for holding an early primary. The parties were stripped of half their convention delegates.
The primary election is estimated to cost $10 million. Taxpayers would foot the bill.