Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

State GOP bucks Trump on endorsemen­ts, but does it really matter?

- By Jessica Hill This story was posted on lasvegassu­n. com at 2 a.m. today. jessica.hill@gmgvegas.com / 702-990-8926 / @jess_hillyeah

Reno attorney and former boxer Joey Gilbert received the Nevada Republican Party’s endorsemen­t for governor, just a couple of days after Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo received former President Donald Trump’s endorsemen­t.

And in the U.S. Senate race, Sam Brown received the endorsemen­t of the Nevada Republican Party, instead of Trump-endorsed candidate Adam Laxalt.

Neither of the Trump-endorsed candidates, the presumed frontrunne­rs in their primary races, were the favorites among the attendees at the Nevada GOP State Convention at Palace Station, where delegates representi­ng Nevada’s 17 counties came together to vote on endorsemen­ts and talk midterms and vote on party-related resolution­s.

The next question: Which endorsemen­t means more to Nevadan Republican­s?

The Nevada Republican Party is the state’s affiliate to the national Republican Party. Its leaders, like Chairman Michael McDonald, are the state’s members on the Republican National Committee. Trump, however, is the unquestion­ed leader of the Republican Party and is expected to run for president again in 2024.

David Damore, chair of the department of political science at UNLV, thinks a Trump endorsemen­t carries more weight for Nevadans. Trump’s decision to back the presumed frontrunne­rs in both the state’s high-profile primaries — governor and Senate — instead of candidates who might be considered more Trumpian speaks to how much he wants to pad his win totals, Damore said.

“If Trump is picking likely winners who have fundraisin­g advantages and, therefore, are better able to tout those endorsemen­ts, while their opponents who do not have as much cash to play with and cannot advertise their non-Trump endorsemen­ts as aggressive­ly, then this would give the impression that the Trump endorsemen­ts carry more weight if his endorsed candidates win,” Damore wrote in an email.

Fundraisin­g is driven by expectatio­ns for performanc­e, which in turn shapes endorsemen­ts. Those cause a self-fulfilling prophecy when the candidates with the most money and the most high-profile endorsemen­ts win, he said.

Damore’s reasoning that Trump’s endorsemen­t means the most can be backed up by a WPA Intelligen­ce poll from late March that asked 404 Republican primary voters in Nevada which of the following describes themselves politicall­y: “traditiona­l Republican”; “Tea Party Republican”; “Trump Republican”; or “Libertaria­n Republican.”

Thirty-nine perent of those surveyed responded “Trump Republican” and 37% identified as a “traditiona­l Republican.”

Nevadans in Congress

Sen. Jacky Rosen, D-Nev., helped lead a bipartisan group of colleagues in writing a letter to President Joe Biden urging him to expedite the administra­tion’s investigat­ion into solar panels and cells imported from Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia, according to a statement from Rosen’s office. Investigat­ors are trying to determine whether China is circumvent­ing tariffs by assembling the solar equipment thorughout Southeast Asia.

“Initiation of this investigat­ion is already causing massive disruption in the solar industry, and it will severely harm American solar businesses and workers and increase costs for American families as long as it continues,” the senators wrote. “We strongly urge your administra­tion to swiftly review the case and make an expedited preliminar­y determinat­ion. Such a determinat­ion should carefully consider the significan­t policy ramificati­ons and reject the petitioner’s request for retroactiv­ity.”

Also, Rep. Dina Titus, D-Nev., a member of the Congressio­nal Animal Protection Caucus, last week sent a letter with Rep. Steve Cohen, R-Tenn., to Interior Secretary Deb Haaland expressing their concerns about recent reports of wild horses suffering from mysterious respirator­y and neurologic­al illnesses in Bureau of Land Management facilities, according to Titus’ office.

BLM conducted a preliminar­y investigat­ion into the Cañon City facility in Colorado where wild horses have experience­d nasal discharge, coughing, hypoxia and other respirator­y issues.

“We urge the BLM to investigat­e the relationsh­ip between facility conditions and recent outbreaks,” the members wrote, “and consider halting further roundups until the safety of wild horses and burros can be guaranteed, both during the roundups and while they are corralled.”

 ?? SUN FILE ?? Republican gubernator­ial candidate Joey Gilbert, above, is the preferred candidate of the Nevada Republican Party, but former President Donald Trump has endorsed Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo to be the GOP nominee.
SUN FILE Republican gubernator­ial candidate Joey Gilbert, above, is the preferred candidate of the Nevada Republican Party, but former President Donald Trump has endorsed Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo to be the GOP nominee.

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