Las Vegas Review-Journal

For Congress

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Democrats are eyeing a takeover of the U.S. Senate in this volatile election year and holding the Nevada seat being vacated by the retiring Harry Reid is a key part of their strategy. Sen. Reid’s hand-picked successor, former Nevada Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto, faces Republican Joe Heck, who has represente­d Nevada in the U.S. House for three terms.

Few politician­s can match Rep. Heck’s impressive resume. He is a medical doctor and is a brigadier general in the U.S. Army Reserve. Rep. Heck was last deployed to the Middle East in 2008 when he commanded a Baghdadare­a combat hospital. He offers a moderate and sensible viewpoint on most issues and has made it a priority to improve health care in rural Nevada. His experience in the medical field and the military would be a welcome asset to the upper chamber, as would be his willingnes­s to reach out across the aisle to find common ground.

Ms. Cortez Masto, meanwhile, shows no such inclinatio­n. She has long operated as a liberal partisan, even disobeying Nevada law when the governor directed her as attorney general to join a coalition of states opposed to Obamacare. During her time as the state’s top law enforcemen­t officer, her decisions too often wreaked of politics, culminatin­g in her indictment — eventually dismissed by a judge — of a sitting Republican lieutenant governor on the flimsiest of charges. Joe Heck is the far superior candidate. In Southern Nevada’s three congressio­nal races, two incumbents seek re-election while two hopefuls look to fill the seat vacated by Rep. Heck.

In Nevada’s 1st Congressio­nal District, Democrat Dina Titus, campaignin­g for a third term, faces a challenge from Republican Mary Perry, an attorney. Rep. Titus has a long background in Silver State politics and is a former political science professor at UNLV. She’s a strong supporter of open government and sunshine laws and has worked during her time in Washington to improve health care for veterans. We don’t agree with Rep. Titus on a variety of issues, but she’s honest, dedicated and intelligen­t, has a fierce independen­t streak and will look out for Nevada’s interests. The ReviewJour­nal recommends a vote for Dina Titus.

Democrat Jacky Rosen and Republican Danny Tarkanian each seeks to represent Nevada’s 3rd Congressio­nal District, a seat that opened up when Rep. Heck opted to run for the U.S. Senate. Mr. Tarkanian is a fiscal conservati­ve who supports tax reform and vows to represent the “people who don’t have a voice.” He favors the repeal of the sputtering Obamacare and advocates securing our borders as the first step in any immigratio­n reform proposal. Danny Tarkanian is our choice.

In Nevada’s 4th Congressio­nal District, incumbent Cresent Hardy is running for a second term against Democrat Ruben Kihuen, a state senator. Rep. Hardy has his work cut out for him in this Democratic-leaning district, but he has the correct instincts on fiscal and regulatory policy. He is a friend to small business and has worked to secure federal funding for Nevada highway projects. He also recognizes that the Beltway bureaucrat­s control too much land in the Silver State. We endorse Cresent Hardy.

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