Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

A teachers union ad has angered gubernator­ial candidate Steve Sisolak.

Demand to halt airing sent to Reno stations

- By Colton Lochhead

Steve Sisolak does not want Nevadans to see the latest attack that the state teachers union has launched against him.

Attorneys representi­ng the Sisolak campaign sent a letter last week demanding that television stations across the state immediatel­y stop airing an ad launched by the political arm of the Nevada State Education Associatio­n. Airing “misleading advertisin­g” could lead to “the loss of a station’s license,” according to the letter filed in Federal Communicat­ions Commission records for Reno TV stations KRNV and KRXI, both of which are owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group.

“This advertisem­ent is false, misleading, and deceptive. It attributes statements that are damaging to Mr. Sisolak’s reputation to third party news sources that, in fact, never made the statements,” wrote the attorneys for Perkins Coie, a Washington D.C.-based firm often used by the national Democratic Party. “It is your responsibi­lity to stop groups from using your airwaves to engage in this blatant deception. We demand that you immediatel­y cease airing this advertisem­ent on your station.”

Cease-and-desist demands to media outlets over ads can backfire on candidates, said University of Nevada, Reno political science professor Eric Herzik.

‘It’s like voters just get tired of that. It’s why voters are somewhat turned off by politics,” Herzik said. “I don’t think they have much effect at all, and I think they could even have a negative effect on the candidate.”

The state teachers union has en-

dorsed Sisolak’s primary opponent, fellow Clark County Commission­er Chris Giunchigli­ani, in the Democratic primary for governor.

Chris Daly, deputy executive director of government relations for the NSEA, told the Review-Journal on Friday that the new advertisme­nt raises concerns about Sisolak’s record on guns, public lands and education.

“Clearly, the Sisolak campaign is concerned that the spot is effective,” Daly said.

The ad features a woman who sees a Sisolak campaign ad on TV and looks him up on the internet. Various headlines appear, including “Sisolak Killed New Funding for Schools” and “Steve Sisolak Voted for Developmen­t Near Red Rock After Taking Campaign Cash,” with each including the logos of news outlets.

The one about school funding was credited to a KTNV, Channel 13, story dated Oct. 6, 2016, that detailed how Sisolak was key in preventing additional room tax levies to fund education as part of the Raiders Stadium tax deal.

The other ad is credited to a Feb. 22, 2017, Las Vegas Sun story about the Clark County Commission voting 5-2 to allow a developer to build 5,000 homes near Red Rock National Conservati­on Area. The “taking campaign cash” part of the ad is in reference to Sisolak receiving $10,000 in campaign donations from Harmony Homes Inc. in 2015.

The attorneys said the headlines shown in the ads are misleading because they are not the headlines used by the actual news outlets.

But Sue Matuska, an attorney representi­ng the NSEA’s political arm, countered in a response letter that the headlines and text in the ad are directly from the union’s website, while the logos of the news outlets were used to indicate where the informatio­n came from.

“Neither the advertisem­ent nor the headlines contained in it, therefore, are false, misleading, or deceptive,” Matuska wrote.

Sinclair Executive Vice President and General Counsel Barry Faber emailed the stations Wednesday to reiterate that they can continue to run the ad.

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Steve Sisolak

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