Caucus-race Definition
(US, idiomatic) A political competition; the game of campaigning and one-upmanship to get votes and be elected.
Other Word Forms of Caucus-race
Noun
Origin of Caucus-race
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From caucus (“regular party committee meeting of elected MPs”) + race (“contest between people”); a reference to Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, chapter III "A Caucus-Race and a Long Tale", being a nonsensical satire thereof: all participants have to run in circles until until an arbitrary end is called and everyone is declared a winner; Alice has to give prizes to them all, and being declared a winner too she is solemnly taken and awarded back her own thimble.
From Wiktionary
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From caucus (“special party meeting for vote allocation”) + race (“contest between people”).
From Wiktionary
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