Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Two GOP candidates seek assembly seat

Primary winner will face Democrat Munk

- By Bill Dentzer Contact Capital Bureau reporter Bill Dentzer at bdentzer@reviewjour­nal. com. Follow @DentzerNew­s on Twitter.

Republican­s Donnie Gibson, a businessma­n and constructi­on contractor, and Richard McArthur, a retired FBI agent, will meet in a primary for Nevada’s Assembly District 4 in northwest Las Vegas, with the winner facing incumbent Democrat Connie Munk, who is seeking her second term.

McArthur previously served three terms in the Assembly representi­ng the district, from 2008-2012 and 20162018. Munk defeated him by 120 votes out of 29,000 cast in 2018. Gibson, who said he decided to run last July, has the support of the Republican Assembly caucus. The two aren’t widely apart on most issues, with difference­s appearing mostly in Gibson’s critique of McArthur’s tenure in office.

Gibson said he got involved in the business of government during the 2015 legislativ­e session, joining constructi­on and contractin­g-related government affairs committees. Through that and subsequent sessions, he saw many bills “being passed off that are bad for business, not great for constructi­on industry, not good for employers, and some that quite frankly weren’t great for employees.

“I was just really taken aback by the people making the decisions that affect business and employment, really have no idea of what they’re making decisions and how it’s going to affect business,” he said.

His faith in the efficiency of smaller government extends to his views on education: he thinks the Clark County school system, the fifth-largest district in the country, is too large and should be broken up. His two children attended public school there, but he supports school choice and trade education.

“Being a business owner, I’m huge on competitio­n. And quite frankly, our education system needs competitio­n,” he said.

As for his opponent, he said McArthur “has held very hard lines” on issues in the Legislatur­e “to the point in the fight where he’s taken himself out of the conversati­on.”

“It’s an easy perspectiv­e to take a hard line” and lose a vote, Gibson said. It’s harder to acknowledg­e sharp difference­s on issues and “get out of my chair and go talk to those people and convince them why it is not a good thing for the state.” McArthur dismisses the criticism. “That’s the story they’ve been putting out for quite a while ever since he came in — I don’t work across the aisle, I vote ‘no’ too often,” he said. But the Democrats have been controllin­g up there (in the Legislatur­e) and I’m not in favor of all their bills. You know we pass 650 bills every time and I only voted ‘no’ about 100 times.”

He blames his 2018 loss on a conservati­ve third-party candidate who received 671 votes.

“The reason I run, and the reason I’ve always run is, I’ve been in Las Vegas for 40 years, and I just want it to be a good place to live, work, raise a family, feel safe, (provide) jobs for people, that sort of thing,” he said.

He lists his issues: limited government, low taxes, gun owner’s rights, school choice, voter ID. In the next session, the Legislatur­e will also be handling census-driven reapportio­nment. But bigger than that, it will be dealing with COVID-19’s impact on the state finances and economy.

“I think what people don’t realize is that Las Vegas is going to recover a lot more slowly than the rest of the country, because we depend on people to come here to come to this nice, fun city,” he said. “So we’re gonna have to consider about how we keep our businesses going.”

He said he has disagreed with Gov. Steve Sisolak’s directives to close nonessenti­al businesses, saying the governor “clamped down way too much way too soon.” And he takes the position the people dying from the virus have underlying conditions.

“But we need to open up for the rest of the people, because a lot of people who get this have very few symptoms,” he said.

 ??  ?? Donnie Gibson
Donnie Gibson
 ??  ?? Richard McArthur
Richard McArthur

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