Why You Should Attend Caucus on February 3 

Caucus night is one of the most important moments in the entire election year — and it starts right in your neighborhood. On February 3, local Republicans will gather to:

  • shape the future of our party,
  • discuss what matters most in our communities, and
  • choose the people who will represent them at future conventions.

This isn’t just a meeting. It’s the beginning of how we win.

If you want to make sure our party stays focused on conservative values, strong leadership, and winning elections — your voice needs to be in the room.


What Is a Caucus, Really?

A caucus is where grassroots Republicans take action. It’s where neighbors come together to:

  • elect precinct leaders,
  • propose resolutions,
  • and choose delegates to represent them at the next level.

Caucus night is the most local, most accessible way to influence the direction of our party — and it’s where the decisions that shape the election year begin.

Why Becoming a Delegate Matters

If caucus night is where the work starts, delegates are the ones who carry it forward.

Delegates help decide:

  • which candidates earn endorsements
  • what the party platform looks like
  • which ideas and priorities are pushed forward
  • who leads the party at the local and district level

How to Become a Delegate

Why Caucus for Eric Pratt :
 Strong proven conservative leader
 Principled decision-making
 Proven winner
 Results focused

But winning takes more than signs and social media.

Winning takes people showing up when it counts — and caucus night is where it starts.

The Secretary of State's website will have all the Caucus locations posted.


    Primary Election Day is Tuesday, August 11
Vote by mail or in person
June 26 through August 10

Register in advance
by July 21 to save time on Election Day
    General Election Day is Tuesday, November 3, 2026

Vote by mail or in person
September 18 through November 2
Register in advance by October 13 to save time on Election Day