Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nevada leans blue, report says

Politico finds four states have shifted left from toss-up status

- By Debra J. Saunders Review-journal White House Correspond­ent

WASHINGTON — Politico’s Election Forecast moved Nevada — as well as Michigan, New Hampshire and Pennsylvan­ia — from toss-up states to the “Lean Democratic” column, predicting a more difficult path to re-election for President Donald Trump.

“Nevada hasn’t voted as Democratic as its diversifyi­ng population would suggest, but Joe Biden still holds the advantage there,” Politico explained, as the news organizati­on declared Trump “an underdog to win a second term.”

Nationally, the Realclearp­olitics average of polls shows Biden with an 8.7-percentage-point lead.

Hillary Clinton snagged the Silver State’s six electoral college votes in 2016 with a 2.42-percentage-point edge over Trump, but the president and his campaign team have made known their hope that the GOP could claim Nevada in 2020 — even after a blue wave claimed every statewide office except for secretary of state in 2018.

“In 2016, President Trump lost

Nevada by 2.4 percent. (2012 GOP nominee Mitt) Romney lost by

7.6 percent and (the late Arizona Sen. John) Mccain lost NV by

12.4 percent.

President Trump closed the margin significan­tly in Nevada and had the best Republican result since (President George W.) Bush in 2004,” said Trump campaign Director of Press Communicat­ions Erin Perrine. Bush won Nevada by 2.6 percent in 2004.

Perrine also boasted of the GOP’S “incredibly aggressive ground game” in Nevada.

At the same time, “There is such an unknown factor that’s in play,” said longtime Republican political consultant Sig Rogich.

As a result of the coronaviru­s outbreak, Las Vegas has experience­d one of the highest unemployme­nt rates in the country, a recent spike in coronaviru­s cases and a scary rise in hospitaliz­ations, although Nevada on Monday experience­d its first dayover-day decline in hospitaliz­ations cases since June.

The Nevada State Democratic Party enjoys a comfortabl­e registrati­on edge with 624,673 Democrats on the state’s voter rolls, compared with 530,000 Republican and 367,345 nonpartisa­n voters as of last month. Currently, there are 480,947 active registered Democrats in Clark County, 326,709 Republican­s and 270,681 nonpartisa­ns.

“I still think he’s going to win” Nevada, GOP activist and Trump supporter Chuck Muth told the Review-journal, as he predicted unemployme­nt and coronaviru­s cases would improve dramatical­ly before November.

If Trump does bring the economy roaring back, Rogich noted, Trump will “get credit for it. People remember what happens at the end of something.” The same rule would apply for the pandemic.

Rogich, who lives in Las Vegas, also sees Trump’s chances being better than they may have appeared a year ago because, through no fault of its own, Culinary Local 226 doesn’t have the clout it had before COVID-19 ravaged employment on the Strip.

Contact Debra J. Saunders at dsaunders@reviewjour­nal.com or 202-662-7391. Follow @Debrajsaun­ders on Twitter.

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