Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nevada Republican­s boo Heller at debate

Past disagreeme­nts with Trump were an issue for many in attendance

- By Sam Metz

RENO — Hundreds of exuberant Republican­s booed and jeered at former Sen. Dean Heller on Thursday night as he attempted to brandish his conservati­ve credential­s and position himself as close to former President Donald Trump at the first debate leading up to Nevada’s Republican gubernator­ial primary in June.

Unlike the seven other Republican primary hopefuls who took the stage, Heller’s remarks on crime, schools and virus mandates did little to placate the maskless audience, which laughed when the veteran politician claimed he was “the only proven conservati­ve” in the race to take on Democratic Gov. Steve Sisolak in November.

Republican­s hope nationwide dissatisfa­ction with President Joe Biden’s economic and social agenda coupled with pandemic frustratio­ns will drive voter turnout and return them to power in Washington, D.C., and swing states such as Nevada. But Heller’s reception reflects the uphill battle many one-time moderates running in the midterms now face as they try to tack rightward on polarizing issues such as election administra­tion and immigratio­n.

Heller began the debate by attributin­g what he said was unpreceden­ted voter enthusiasm to the “Trump effect.” And amid booing, he told the audience multiple times that he had spoken to the former president only a couple of hours prior.

Heller shrugged off the heckling and said after the debate that it likely came from supporters of Joey Gilbert, a Reno attorney who opposes vaccines and was outside the U.S. Capitol when it was under siege a year ago.

“They know who’s in front in this

race, and they’re gonna boo the front-runner at every chance they get,” he said.

Four years after losing Nevada’s 2018 Senate race to Democrat Jacky Rosen by 5 percentage points, Heller has positioned himself as close to Trump and highlighte­d their work on the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. But Republican activists continue to remember his opposition to Trump’s efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act and the resulting enmity between the two.

Conservati­ve firebrands such as Gilbert and Las Vegas City Councilwom­an Michele Fiore received warmer receptions from the party faithful in attendance Thursday at the Atlantis Casino Resort Spa in Reno, where organizers had candidates draw from a deck of playing cards to determine their seating on the debate stage.

Their claims about “critical race theory” being taught in schools, about voter fraud and Gilbert’s arguing that politician­s needed to “take the handcuffs off of our (police) officers and let them do their jobs” won applause.

So did their one-liners and digs at Sisolak and Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo, the sole Republican candidate who did not attend Thursday’s debate.

Critical race theory is an academic framework that connects the country’s history, including the legacy of slavery, to contempora­ry laws and racism. Administra­tors in Nevada have repeatedly denied it is taught, but it is frequently used as shorthand by parents opposed to incorporat­ing concepts such as equity and multicultu­ralism in school curriculum­s.

Fiore, Gilbert, Heller and Lombardo are among a long list of Republican­s hoping to unseat Sisolak, a first-term Democrat who won by 5.1 percentage points in 2018. They are betting that Republican­s’ economic message will resonate in Nevada, where the economy relies heavily on sectors such as tourism and live entertainm­ent that cannot easily transition to remote work. The state’s 6.8% unemployme­nt rate ranks 50th in the nation and 66,200 fewer workers are employed at casinos and hotels than before the pandemic.

“Given the disaster that the Sisolak administra­tion has been in the state, people are paying attention,” said venture capitalist Guy Nohra, another candidate. “I know our side is going to be really fired up. I could see it tonight. I could feel it tonight.”

 ?? JOHN LOCHER / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2018) ?? Then-president Donald Trump, left, embraces then-sen. Dean Heller, R-nev., during a campaign rally Sept. 20, 2018, in Las Vegas.
JOHN LOCHER / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2018) Then-president Donald Trump, left, embraces then-sen. Dean Heller, R-nev., during a campaign rally Sept. 20, 2018, in Las Vegas.

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