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Candidates who are on the ballot in a minimum of fifteen states. As of June 8, 2020, former Vice President Joe Biden became the presumptive presidential nominee by amassing enough delegates to secure the nomination. The nomination was made official at the 2020 Democratic National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Biden became the first Democratic candidate since Bill Clinton, and the third ever Democratic candidate, [c] to win the nomination without carrying either Iowa or New Hampshire, the first two states on the primary/caucus calendar. The primaries were initially scheduled to go through June 6.
The list is divided into two sections, reflecting the increasing importance of primaries and caucuses following the changes stemming from the McGovern–Fraser Commission. Only those candidates are included who were major contenders of the primaries and caucuses, and had held significant elective office or received substantial media coverage.
There are eight months left to go until the 2020 presidential election, but the competition to *maybe* replace Donald Trump in the White House has begun to diminish as more Democratic candidates ...
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By April 2019, more than 20 major candidates were recognized by national and state polls, causing the field of 2020 major Democratic presidential candidates to exceed the field of major candidates in the 2016 Republican Party presidential primaries as the largest presidential candidate field for any single U.S. political party in a single ...
For the first time since the start of the 2004 campaign, Democrats are entering the cycle without a dominant front-runner.
This page describes the stances held by Democratic candidates in the 2020 United States presidential election on a variety of policy issues (e. g., domestic and foreign issues). Only candidates still in the race during the 2020 Iowa caucuses are included.