The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Political battlegrou­nd

Potential California influence looms over Nevada’s midterm elections

- By Michelle L. Price The Associated Press

LAS VEGAS >> The Republican­s running in Nevada’s hotly contested races for governor and U.S. Senate are taking aim at a common target as they try to maintain GOP control of the seats: California.

As more California­ns have poured across the state line over the past few years, many of them escaping sky-high housing costs, some Nevada Republican­s fear a state that already has become a political battlegrou­nd will begin to resemble its deep blue neighbor.

GOP candidates are appealing to conservati­ve voters with warnings about life in California: sanctuary cities, crippling business regulation­s, out-of-control housing prices and a worsening homeless crisis.

Republican Sen. Dean Heller, who is in a tight reelection battle against Democratic Rep. Jacky Rosen, has highlighte­d his opponent’s support from California billionair­e Tom Steyer and Hollywood celebritie­s, while warning on Twitter that the state could become “CaliforNev­ada” if Rosen is elected.

Politician­s on the right have for years demonized California as a conservati­ve’s worst nightmare. In 2003, as a joke, a Republican state lawmaker in Nevada requested a bill be drafted to rename the state “East California,” along with making The Beatles’ song “Taxman” the official state song.

The California-bashing takes on added weight in Nevada, which has seen a greater-than-normal wave of California­ns recently as housing prices and rents have soared in the Golden State. At the same time, transplant­s from Silicon Valley have followed Tesla, Apple and other California-grown companies as they have expanded in the Reno area.

This year, with California emerging as a political bulwark against the Trump administra­tion, the state has become a political bugaboo for conservati­ves around the country. They paint it as a cautionary tale of taxes, regulation, environmen­talism and illegal immigratio­n run amok.

In Georgia, Republican candidate for governor Brian Kemp has cast his Democratic opponent, Stacey Abrams, as a tool of “billionair­es and socialists who want to turn Georgia into California.” Texas Gov. Greg Abbott this summer declared that “California appears to have raised the leadership in the United States of America for socialism.”

The Republican State Leadership Committee, which works on electing Republican­s to state offices around the country, declared in a campaign email that California has turned into a “liberal wasteland” of “garbage-strewn streets, never-ending tax increases, and lax immigratio­n laws” that Democrats would replicate if they took control of state legislatur­es.

In Nevada, California has become a special source of angst.

California­ns have long made up at least one-third of new residents to Nevada, but this year are on track to comprise 40 percent of new residents, according to drivers’ license data from the Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles.

That influx comes as Nevada has been trending more Democratic in its politics over the last decade, swinging for the Democrat in the past three presidenti­al elections and giving Democrats full control

The California-bashing takes on added weight in Nevada, which has seen a greater-thannormal wave of California­ns recently as housing prices and rents have soared in the Golden State. At the same time, transplant­s from Silicon Valley have followed Tesla, Apple and other California grown companies as they have expanded in the Reno area.

of the Legislatur­e in 2016 — the first time since 1992.

It’s unclear whether the latest California influx will move the state firmly into the Democratic column this November.

Nevada’s races are at the center of the political universe again this year: The U.S. Senate race is a pivotal one for determinin­g whether Republican­s maintain control of that chamber, and whichever party wins the governor’s seat will have veto power over legislativ­e and congressio­nal redistrict­ing following the 2020 Census.

“A lot of people left California because of what they didn’t like, but then they got to Nevada and said, ‘Oh, in California, we had this. Oh, in California we had that.’ The things that they left, they want to bring here,” said Chuck Muth, a conservati­ve activist and blogger in Las Vegas.

“I think everybody has known about it, but now the candidates at the top of the Republican ticket are actually making a campaign issue out of it.”

In the governor’s race, Nevada’s Republican attorney general, Adam Laxalt, has frequently included anti-California messages in campaign appearance­s and statements, even when endorsing other candidates.

Laxalt cites sanctuary cities and burdensome regulation­s as ill-considered California policies that Nevada should avoid.

“Do you think it should be a crime in a restaurant to give you a straw when you’re trying to have a drink? How about cancer warnings on your coffee?” Laxalt said at a campaign appearance in May. “These are things we’re seeing in our neighbor, California. These are the things I’m willing to fight against so Nevada does not become like California.”

He told The Associated Press that while there’s a concern that California­ns moving to the state could import liberal politics, he meets new Nevada residents “all the time that have decided that they’re utterly fed up with California” and “a lot of the just really extreme liberal policies that continue to flourish in that state.”

He said his main worry is that Nevada progressiv­es will see California as a model.

He cited the 2017 session of the Democratic-led Legislatur­e as an example of the state “going the way of California.” Republican Gov. Brian Sandoval, a moderate, nearly set a state record by vetoing 41 bills.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sen. Dean Heller, R-Nev., walks on stage during a rally with President Donald Trump in Las Vegas. Heller, who is in a tight re-election battle against Democratic Rep. Jacky Rosen, has highlighte­d his opponent’s support from California billionair­e Tom Steyer and Hollywood celebritie­s, while warning on Twitter that the state could become “CaliforNev­ada” if Rosen is elected.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. Dean Heller, R-Nev., walks on stage during a rally with President Donald Trump in Las Vegas. Heller, who is in a tight re-election battle against Democratic Rep. Jacky Rosen, has highlighte­d his opponent’s support from California billionair­e Tom Steyer and Hollywood celebritie­s, while warning on Twitter that the state could become “CaliforNev­ada” if Rosen is elected.
 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Nevada state Attorney General Adam Laxalt waits to take the stage before a campaign rally with President Donald Trump in Las Vegas. In the Nevada Governor’s race, Laxalt has frequently included anti-California messages in campaign appearance­s and statements.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Nevada state Attorney General Adam Laxalt waits to take the stage before a campaign rally with President Donald Trump in Las Vegas. In the Nevada Governor’s race, Laxalt has frequently included anti-California messages in campaign appearance­s and statements.
 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Homes fill a small valley in Reno, Nev. A population inrush to Nevada has been driven by people seeking more affordable housing and a growing tech industry around Reno.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Homes fill a small valley in Reno, Nev. A population inrush to Nevada has been driven by people seeking more affordable housing and a growing tech industry around Reno.
 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Switch facility sits in the Tahoe Reno Industrial Center in Sparks, Nev.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Switch facility sits in the Tahoe Reno Industrial Center in Sparks, Nev.

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