Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Edwards challenged for fourth term

Mesquite council member Black seeks Assembly position

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

We need people who understand the process right away. It’s much more important now because of what we’re going to be faced with, especially in terms of the budget. Chris Edwards Assembly District 19 incumbent

We need to shrink our bureaucrac­y there and put some administra­tors back in the classroom. I think we also really need to be advocating for school choice. Annie Black Assembly District 19 challenger

Republican Chris Edwards, seeking his fourth term representi­ng Nevada’s Assembly District 19 in northeast Clark County, faces a challenge from Mesquite Councilwom­an Annie Black in a GOP primary that, with no Democrat in the November race, will determine who takes the seat.

The district is among the most conservati­ve in the state. Black says Edwards isn’t conservati­ve enough, while Edwards points to rankings from the American Conservati­ve Union, among other groups, that say otherwise. (Edwards received an 80-80 percent rating, what the group calls its “Award for Conservati­ve Achievemen­t.”)

Black charges that Edwards has been soft on holding the line on tax and fee increases. Edwards rejects that, adding that he has the legislativ­e experience Black lacks to help the state work through the significan­t budgetary upheaval caused by the pandemic.

“We need people who understand the process right away,” Edwards said. “It’s much more important now because of what we’re going to be faced with, especially in terms of the budget.”

Black ran for state Assembly in 2010; last year she threw in for state GOP chairman. She was elected to Mesquite City Council in 2018.

A realtor since graduating high school, she is also working to launch a surgical supply business, an effort the COVID-19 crisis has disrupted.

“I feel like we deserve to be represente­d by a true conservati­ve,” she said, listing her desire to cut spending, taxes, fees and regulation­s.

Discussing the Legislatur­e’s 2015 enactment of the commerce tax, Black said Edwards worked to get the bill out of committee although she acknowledg­ed he ultimately didn’t vote for it.

Edwards said he supported an amendment that brought the bill to the floor where he voted against it.

“So she does not understand the difference between amending a bill and approving a bill,” he said.

Democrats currently control both houses of the Legislatur­e; if they hold onto that advantage next term, it’s not likely many Republican-backed budget initiative­s would get far.

But Black said she would vote to repeal the commerce tax and modified business tax, eliminate business license fees, cut sales tax, reduce vehicle registrati­on fees to a flat $50 per vehicle, and roll back the minimum wage. She says the state Republican Party has “been on a steady nosedive” because it has abandoned fiscally conservati­ve principles.

She wants to streamline education as well.

“We need to shrink our bureaucrac­y there and put some administra­tors back in the classroom,” she said. “I think we also really need to be advocating for school choice.”

“If there’s anything that the coronaviru­s has taught us, it’s that homeschool­ing is an interestin­g prospect,” she adds. “And I love that idea. I mean, it’s a hard thing if you’re working to do it. But I think it’s an interestin­g idea that maybe looking at some unconventi­onal education options that we haven’t looked at.”

Edwards wants to “take a much more aggressive posture” on education “because let’s face it, we have not taken the dramatic actions necessary to get the dramatic improvemen­ts we need.” The impact “rolls downhill to businesses that don’t have employees they can actually hire that would be qualified. And businesses don’t want to come to the state if the education system isn’t better.”

Challengin­g Black again on conservati­ve credential­s, he said she was “coming from the angle of being the extreme right wing … . I try to be a Reagan conservati­ve, and I think that the people in the district like that.

His biggest concern heading into a possible fourth term is the “economic disaster that we’re faced with” from the ongoing pandemic.

Among other impacts, he cites the potential blow to state employees across the board, who never got back everything that lost in budget cuts during the Great Recession.

“We have got to have people focused on salvaging everything we can, doing things as smartly as we can, in order to make sure that the pain is minimized as best we can,” he said, touting his edge over Black in experience. “And that’s going to be important for the people of the district and the people of the state.”

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