Democratic party leaders in the US state of Florida are proposing a repeat presidential primary on 3 June.
The state's leaders sent a memo to national party leaders and the two Democratic presidential hopefuls outlining the plan.
In the memo the party says its members had re-examined every potential alternative again and they only fair, open, practical and feasible option was to re-run the primary.
It proposed a vote be held on 3 June, which will cost between $10m to $13m, though it did not address the contentious question of who would foot the bill.
Democratic national party leaders stripped Florida and Michigan of delegates to the party convention because the two states violated party rules by moving the dates of their presidential primaries forward to January.
But the primaries were held regardless, even though Democratic presidential hopefuls largely respected pledges not to campaign in the two states.
Barack Obama and John Edwards, who has since dropped out of the race, had their names removed from the Michigan ballot.
Hillary Clinton won resounding victories in both states amid record voter turnout.
A staggering 1.75 million Democrats voted in Florida on 29 January, with Clinton routing Obama 50% to 33%.
Even if Florida delegates are restored through a revote or some other mechanism, neither Mrs Clinton nor Mr Obama appears likely to cross the finish line of 2,025 delegates needed to win the Democratic nomination.
But Democrats are haunted by the prospect of denying a voice to voters in Florida, the battleground state that controversially decided the 2000 election.