Las Vegas Review-Journal

▶ RISING STARS

- Contact Gary Martin at gmartin@ reviewjour­nal.com or 202-662-7390. Follow @garymartin­dc on Twitter.

Harris of California.

The keynote preceded the roll call of states, where Rep. Dina Titus of Nevada, standing at the “Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas” sign on the Strip with workers who are feeling the economic woe of the pandemic, cast 24 Nevada votes for Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-VT., and 25 votes for Biden.

“Working people are the backbone of our economy and the key to our recovery,” Titus said. “Joe Biden knows it’s not enough to praise them. We have to reward them. So let’s raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour.”

The rising stars of the Democratic Party took aim at policies of President Donald Trump.

“Donald Trump doesn’t understand we can’t fix our economy until we get a hold of the virus,” said Cancela, an adviser to the Biden campaign in Nevada and a Democratic activist who first helped with the re-election bid of then-sen. Harry Reid in 2010.

Cancela’s message has been one of empowermen­t. She has worked to increase the participat­ion of Latinas and people of color in politics and business.

A UNLV law graduate who took the bar exam last week, Cancela was appointed to the state Senate in 2016 and elected in her own right in 2018.

In a collage of speeches, Cancela said that “in Nevada, we’re making drug prices more transparen­t so people with chronic illnesses don’t go broke while drug companies get rich.”

She was part of a large mosaic of faces and voices that were spliced to fill the screen for people watching on television because of the cancellati­on of live festivitie­s in Milwaukee, where the convention was scheduled to occur.

The weaving of images of the next generation was designed by Democratic leaders to showcase the talent of the party and excite younger voters to turn out at the ballot box to elect Biden.

The president will bask in the glow of his own four-day spectacle at the White House next week and accept his party’s nomination for re-election. Republican­s also plan to showcase their rising stars in the party.

“I think we’re going to do great,” Trump told reporters Tuesday.

The Democratic event was headlined by dignitarie­s like former President Bill Clinton, who jabbed Trump on the U.S. response to the novel coronaviru­s. But the program also included the voices of Americans like Angie Taylor, of Reno, a pastor and cancer survivor who is voting for Biden because of his plans to restore health care accessibil­ity.

Cancela joined a distinguis­hed list of upcoming Democratic party officials, a group that displays racial, ethnic and gender diversity, convention organizers said in announcing the lineup.

Abrams recently lost a close gubernator­ial race in Georgia and was considered a vice presidenti­al candidate until Biden picked Harris to fill out the ticket. Lamb, a Marine and former federal prosecutor, won a swing congressio­nal district in Pennsylvan­ia that helped Democrats regain control of the chamber.

Harris and Biden are scheduled to accept their party’s nomination in Wilmington, Delaware, this week.

 ?? Brian Snyder The Associated Press ?? Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-cortez, D-N.Y., seconds the nomination of Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-VT., via video feed Tuesday during the second night of the virtual 2020 Democratic National Convention in Milwaukee, Wis.
Brian Snyder The Associated Press Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-cortez, D-N.Y., seconds the nomination of Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-VT., via video feed Tuesday during the second night of the virtual 2020 Democratic National Convention in Milwaukee, Wis.
 ??  ?? Yvanna Cancela
Yvanna Cancela

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