Las Vegas Review-Journal

Heller enters as vulnerable front-runner

- VICTOR JOECKS COMMENTARY

IN theory, Dean Heller should be the runaway favorite for the Republican gubernator­ial nomination. In reality, it’s going to be a very competitiv­e race.

On Monday, Heller is expected to announce that he’s running for governor at a Carson City event. Heller’s resume should make him a shoo-in. He spent much of the past three decades winning elections, including statewide races for secretary of state and U.S. Senate. His deep political roots should enable him to raise significan­t amounts of money, too. That’s usually a winning combinatio­n in a primary.

But Heller isn’t a juggernaut. In 2016, he said he was “100 percent against Clinton, 99 percent against Trump.” Not great in a state where then-candidate Donald Trump won the

2016 Republican presidenti­al caucus by more than 20 percentage points.

Trump did back Heller during his 2018 Senate run and helped prevent a primary challenge from Danny Tarkanian. But that always appeared to be a marriage of convenienc­e.

“I just could never get my base excited on him,” Trump said after Heller lost in 2018.

That leaves a massive opening, but the remaining candidates each have what appear to be fatal flaws.

Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo is the strongest challenger. He’s won twice in heavily Democratic Clark County, albeit in a nonpartisa­n race. He has a reservoir of goodwill from his leadership after the Oct. 1 tragedy. He’s scored high-profile endorsemen­ts, including from former Lt. Gov. Mark Hutchison.

But he’s soft on guns — probably the worst issue on which a Republican candidate can be sideways with the base. He’s voiced supported for bans on high-capacity magazines and said he would remain neutral on the 2016 background check initiative.

North Las Vegas Mayor John Lee has a number of conservati­ve accomplish­ments, including putting school choice in action with the Southern Nevada Urban Micro Academy. But he was a Democrat for decades. If he wants to be governor, he should run for the 4th Congressio­nal District and try again after holding that seat.

Joey Gilbert is a fitter, less-famous version of Trump. He’s currently suing Gov. Steve Sisolak over the governor’s mask mandate for schools. He was part of a successful effort last year to lift restrictio­ns on religious gatherings. Convention­al wisdom is that he’s too extreme, but those who liked Trump’s brashness may find him appealing.

The true wildcard is businessma­n Guy Nohra. Normally, someone with zero name ID who moved here just a few years ago wouldn’t stand a chance.

But public finance records suggest Nohra is worth several hundred million dollars. That can get you into the conversati­on, if he’s willing to spend.

Plus, he has an intriguing story. He was born in Lebanon. As a teen, he fought in his country’s civil war in defense of his Christian faith. His parents eventually sent him to America, where he achieved great success as a venture capitalist focused on biotech.

It’s easy to make the case why each of these candidates will lose. But absent another surprise candidate, one of them is going win.

It’s going to be a fascinatin­g ride.

Victor Joecks’ column appears in the Opinion section each Sunday, Wednesday and Friday. Contact him at vjoecks@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-4698. Follow @victorjoec­ks on Twitter.

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