Las Vegas Review-Journal

Local Democratic Party seeing leadership shifts

- By Rory Appleton Las Vegas Review-journal

Several key leaders within the Clark County Democratic Party, including Chairwoman Donna West and a handful of executive board and committee heads, have resigned as progressiv­e leadership within both the county and state parties has swelled in recent months.

Gabrielle d’ayr, formerly the county party’s 1st vice chair, confirmed that she has officially taken over for West, a longtime Democratic political fixture in Southern Nevada. West submitted her resignatio­n to d’ayr in an email on June 30.

The newly minted chair also received a resignatio­n from Matt Kimball, the party’s 3rd vice chair, on June 30. Other recent departures include Treasurer Kara Freedman, who resigned Monday, several members of the party’s rules and bylaws committee and its legal counsel, Elizabeth Brickfield.

D’ayr declined to give the reasons these members cited for their resignatio­ns. Each are still members of the Democratic Party. West and Kimball did not respond to interview requests.

The resignatio­ns come after months of infighting between progressiv­es and “establishm­ent” Democrats over policy platforms.

Establishm­ent versus progressiv­es

Both the county and state parties emerged from their 2020 convention­s with establishm­ent figurehead­s and progressiv­e majorities on their executive boards, as supporters of Sen. Bernie Sanders outnumbere­d the more centrist candidates due to his large victory in the party’s February presidenti­al caucuses.

And although Sanders will not be the party’s nominee, his supporters are positioned to force their favored policies into platform discussion­s that they say they’ve been left out of for years.

Both d’ayr and her only remaining deputy, Second Vice Chair Judith Whitmer, are Sanders delegates, as are the two remaining members of the county party’s executive board: Recording Secretary Asbury Edens and Correspond­ing Secretary Sakina Turner.

Whitmer and d’ayr affirmed their support for presumptiv­e Democratic nominee Joe Biden and all other Democrats on the 2020 ticket in interviews on Monday. But both also stressed that a new wave of progressiv­e leadership will now have roles setting policy goals.

“I’m not really surprised the perception is that Bernie delegates have taken over,” d’ayr said. “But we are all Biden people now, regardless of what has happened, and we’re working to make sure there’s no gap to fill.”

D’ayr said she’s worked franticall­y over the past week to gain access to the party’s office, social media and bank accounts after the “surprising resignatio­ns.” She appointed new legal counsel, Las Vegas attorney Robert Kern, and is working to set up a special election for the leadership vacancies for the party’s next meeting.

“Nobody is thinking anything but we’ve got a lot of work to do to make sure Donald Trump is out of office and what can I do to help,” d’ayr said.

Pro-palestine planks removed

Whitmer and d’ayr agree that friction between the progressiv­es and establishm­ent members came to a head in May, when they say West changed the party’s agreed-upon platform to remove several pro-palestine planks without a new vote. Both spoke out against the decision publicly, even calling an executive board meeting, which West allegedly refused to attend, where the progressiv­e majority formally opposed the move.

West and the Nevada State Democratic Party refused to recognize this opposition or even explain the change, d’ayr and Whitmer said. West allegedly made the switch after receiving an angry phone call from “an elected official,” d’ayr and Whitmer said.

“Progressiv­es feel we need more representa­tion and input, so we were heavily involved in these plank proposals,” Whitmer said. “We want to support Democrats, but we want them to support our principles and the principles of the people.”

Whitmer said she worked to keep more than 1,000 of her fellow Sanders delegates as active members of the party, saying Biden and other Democratic candidates within this state will need progressiv­es’ support in November. This group ran a progressiv­e slate for the 10 vacant positions on the state party’s executive board, winning nine of them, including a victory over Kimball.

Progressiv­es now hold a majority on both the state and county boards. Whitmer soundly beat out Nevada State Democratic Party Chairman William Mccurdy II — who was backed by top elected officials including Reps. Susie Lee and Steven Horsford — to serve as chairwoman of the state’s delegation to the Democratic National Convention.

Sour grapes?

“The state party should be happy about this,” Whitmer said. “They accuse us of not wanting to do the work to get Democrats elected. But once we won, we now see these resignatio­ns because they don’t want to work with us.”

She said Nevada progressiv­es have been organizing for years to ensure a new level of cooperatio­n with the establishm­ent Democrats in charge of the local, state and national parties.

“Our primary goal was for everyone to have a seat at the table, and now we’ve earned it,” Whitmer said.

State party spokeswoma­n Molly Forgey said she looked forward to working with d’ayr and the remaining county executive board members, saying Mccurdy and state party leadership have worked hard since 2017 to “build a platform of unity” after a bitterly contested 2016 primary season.

Contact Rory Appleton at rappleton@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0276. Follow @Rorydoesph­onics on Twitter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States