Las Vegas Review-Journal

Top Dems talk guns, wage hike at debate

Governor hopefuls outline difference­s

- By Ramona Giwargis Las Vegas Review-journal

Nevada’s two leading Democratic governor candidates turned up the heat during a debate Monday, jabbing each other on campaign finance, gun control and the minimum wage.

The hot topics drove a wedge between the two hopefuls, further aligning the candidates with the moderate and liberal wings of the Democratic Party just three weeks before the primary election.

Clark County Commission­er Steve Sisolak supports raising the pay floor from the current $8.25 an hour but doesn’t want a large increase right away. Raising the minimum wage to $15 too quickly “will put small businesses out of business,” he said.

“Minimum-wage jobs were never meant to support a family or provide for a person’s well-being,” Sisolak said during an hourlong televised debate hosted by KLAS-TV, Channel 8, in Las Vegas. “If you raise everyone to $15, then people making $15 have to go to $20, and $20 to $25 … It would cripple our economy.”

Sisolak also supports a “carveout,” a system in which employers can pay less than minimum wage to workers who get tips.

Sisolak’s more liberal opponent and colleague on the commission, Chris Giunchigli­ani, said she would never support that.

Giunchigli­ani said she and her

DEBATE

mother worked as waitresses for decades, and she wants to see wages raised to $15 soon.

“I do support a $15 wage, and that’s not enough or families,” Giunchigli­ani said. “They reinvest those dollars back into the system and generate more than what we’re paying them.”

Sisolak and Giunchigli­ani both said they support measures to ban assault rifles and bump stocks and enforce background checks. Giunchigli­ani blasted Sisolak for accepting money from a gun company and receiving an “A-minus” grade from the National Rifle Associatio­n.

Sisolak said his positions on gun control have evolved over the past 20 years, and he criticized Giunchigli­ani for taking money from strip clubs and brothels.

When asked to raise their hands if they promised not raise taxes as governor, neither candidate moved. Giunchigli­ani said she’s a “budget hawk” and would find ways to prioritize funding for education, mental health and cultural programs. Sisolak said “everything is on the table” and that the state has to increase revenue.

Both candidates fielded uncomforta­ble, personal questions that made them wince. Sisolak, who voted as a county commission­er to award grants to the nonprofit Nevada Partnershi­p for Homeless Youth, was asked whether he should have disclosed that he was dating a woman who worked there before voting.

Sisolak said he’s “proud” to support the organizati­on, both personally and through his role as a county commission­er. Disclosure of the personal relationsh­ip was not required, he said.

”I was not married to the individual. We were not engaged. There was nothing like that,” he said. “I didn’t think it was significan­t, it was material.”

Giunchigli­ani was asked whether she regrets hiring her late husband as a consultant and paying him through her campaign.

“My husband was the best political mind in the state of Nevada,” she said, adding that he used the money to pay other contractor­s and that the couple did not share a checking account. “I was a client, just like Steve Sisloak was a client.”

Both candidates said they’d beef up the state’s sexual harassment policies in the aftermath of accusation­s involving powerful Nevada figures such as casino mogul Steve Wynn and U.S. Rep. Ruben Kihuen. Both also said they support raises for educators and smaller class sizes.

Contact Ramona Giwargis at rgiwargis@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-380-4538. Follow @ Ramonagiwa­rgis on Twitter.

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