Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Early voting

- Contact Ramona Giwargis at Rgiwargis@reviewjour­nal.com or 702380-4538. Follow @RamonaGiwa­rgis on Twitter. Contact Colton Lochhead at clochhead@reviewjour­nal.com or 775-461-3820. Follow @ColtonLoch­head on Twitter. Staff writer Meghin Delaney contribute­d to

The breakdown on the early turnout in Nevada

MORE than 620,000 Nevadans have cast ballots ahead of Tuesday’s midterm election, far surpassing voter turnout in the last midterm.

More than 550,000 of those are from in-person early voting, with the remaining ballots by absentee and mail-in, according to numbers from the Nevada secretary of state’s office. The totals far surpass the turnout of past midterm election years like 2014 (267,000) and 2010 (379,707).

Democrats hold a statewide vote lead of about 22,300. About 41.4 percent of the Nevadans who have cast a ballot so far are Democrats, 37.9 percent are Republican­s, and the remaining 20.8 percent are registered nonpartisa­ns or third-party members.

As of 11 a.m. Saturday, the secretary of state’s office had not reported Friday early voting totals for Elko, Esmeralda, Mineral and White Pine counties. Those counties lean Republican, so the Democrats’ statewide lead going in Election Day could be slightly smaller.

Democrats are turning out at a significan­tly higher clip than in 2014, when Republican­s won nearly every competitiv­e race. But they have not built quite the lead that was seen in presidenti­al election years like 2012 and 2016, when Democrats had 40,000-plus leads heading into election day.

Although Democrats have a voter registrati­on edge of about 72,000 over Republican­s, GOP voters are turning out at a higher percentage

— 45.5 percent compared to 43.5 percent of Democrats.

Potential Hof replacemen­t

Some prominent Nye County Republican­s are jockeying for the Assembly District 36 seat if brothel owner Dennis Hof wins posthumous­ly on Tuesday.

Although Hof, who won the GOP nomination in June, died last month, his name is on the ballot. If he wins, county commission­ers from Nye, Lincoln and Clark counties will appoint a replacemen­t from the Republican party.

Nye County Republican Central Committee Chairman Joe Burdzinski announced Wednesday that he wants the job.

“I’ve been asked by Nevada State Republican Party Chairman Michael McDonald, and a number of assemblyme­n statewide, party leaders and numerous voters here in Nye County, to consider seeking the appointmen­t of Assembly in District 36, in the event that Dennis Hof gets elected,” Burdzinski said in a statement. “After careful personal considerat­ion, including discussion­s with my supportive family, I will be actively pursuing the appointmen­t for Assembly District 36.”

Speculatio­n has swirled that Assemblyma­n James Oscarson, who was unseated by Hof in the primary election, might also be a frontrunne­r for the seat.

Fight against Child

An immigratio­n advocacy group is upping its efforts to prevent Clark County School Board Trustee Kevin Child from getting re-elected.

On Thursday, Make the Road Nevada held a press conference denouncing the trustee and encouragin­g voters to cast their ballots for political newcomer Irene Cepeda.

“The time is now to stop mincing words,” director Leo Murrieta said.

The increased efforts were spawned by a Review-Journal report which shed new light on a litany of complaints filed against the trustee. New records released by the district under court order show that more than two dozens employees were interviewe­d about Child’s harassing and intimidati­ng behavior.

Former Superinten­dent Pat Skorkowsky took steps to try to limit Child’s access to schools in the wake of the complaints. Child had maintained the complaints against him were contrived in an effort to keep him from asking tough financial questions of the district and to keep him from winning re-election to a second term.

News and notes

■ Citizens for Responsibl­e Energy Solutions endorsed Sen. Dean Heller’s re-election bid, saying he has demonstrat­ed leadership in advancing clean energy policies.

■ The Republican Governors Associatio­n released a TV ad accusing Democrat Steve Sisolak of planning to raise property taxes if he wins.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States