Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nevada Republican Party courting catastroph­e with its chaotic caucuses

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As it turns out, the Republican Party was correct about a massive threat to election integrity in Nevada. The only problem, the state GOP is the source of the threat.

Leaders of the Nevada Republican Party not only insist on hosting private nominating parties that are gift-wrapped for disgraced former President Donald Trump, but they are also so incompeten­t and disorganiz­ed that they are failing to provide for even the most basic security of the electoral process.

As the Sun’s Ray Brewer and Hillary Davis reported, the GOP is desperatel­y seeking volunteers to staff its private nominating parties, also known as the Republican presidenti­al preference caucuses.

Jesse Law, chairman of the Clark County GOP, sent an email this week with the subject line, “Need Volunteers for the Caucus!” The note detailed needing volunteers for the check-in table, help desk and as ushers.

With just two weeks remaining before the caucuses, it’s hard to imagine that the volunteers running the caucuses, staffing the check-in tables or providing assistance at help desks will have adequate training to understand the basic processes, procedures and rules that govern the caucus, let alone the ability to spot a fake ID or deescalate angry or aggressive behavior.

Given the confusion surroundin­g the competing state-run primary and party-run caucuses, along with the fact that caucus sites have yet to be finalized and keep changing without warning, caucus volunteers should probably expect frustrated, angry and aggressive behavior to be more common than in years past. The conduct of caucus participan­ts is especially of concern because, by hosting a private nominating event, the GOP is inviting behavior that wouldn’t normally be allowed in an election setting.

Numerous statutes govern state-administer­ed elections such as the Nevada Presidenti­al Preference Primary on Feb. 6. Election-specific laws prohibit the use of intimidati­on, coercion, undue influence, threats to expose or publish confidenti­al personal informatio­n, misreprese­ntation, electionee­ring, and numerous other activities that are immoral but not illegal in private organizati­ons or among personal relations.

Unfortunat­ely for the GOP volunteers, it’s unclear whether any of those laws apply to the private caucuses. In essence, the caucuses are the legal equivalent of athletes selecting a team captain or a book club selecting what book to read next. Apart from actions that clearly violate general criminal laws (violence, threats of violence, etc.), it seems that anything goes.

It is not unfair to say that the 2024 Nevada Republican presidenti­al caucuses are the least secure electoral events in modern history.

After spending decades trying to convince the public of the existence of mass voter fraud and voter manipulati­on, the GOP is now creating the perfect circumstan­ces for fraud and manipulati­on to occur.

We wish we could say we were surprised but given that the chair of the Nevada Republican Party is already under indictment for his role in orchestrat­ing Trump’s 2020 fake elector scandal, no one should be shocked that the state GOP is sowing the seeds of chaos in its elections.

State lawmakers attempted to address some of the electoral chaos in the past two legislativ­e sessions. Their efforts included mandating a state-administer­ed presidenti­al preference primary and passing laws to criminaliz­e efforts to manipulate the outcome of elections via fraud or misreprese­ntation. However, always the Trump lapdog, Republican Gov. Joe Lombardo vetoed the latter proposal, saying the bill “provides disproport­ionately harsh penalties.”

Apparently, thwarting the will of Nevada voters and destroying the integrity of the state’s electoral systems aren’t sufficient­ly serious crimes in Lombardo’s eyes to justify “harsh penalties.”

By hosting private presidenti­al caucuses that are separate and distinct from the legally mandated presidenti­al primaries, Nevada Republican­s were already the poster children for how to blatantly manipulate elections. Now, by demonstrat­ing their incompeten­ce, they have also made us the laughingst­ock of the nation.

GOP leaders have had multiple opportunit­ies to show that they are committed to free and fair elections that are not rigged in Trump’s favor. Just this week, when they removed the names of candidates who have dropped out of the caucus ballot, they could have added Nikki Haley’s name and created a competitiv­e caucus in which voters had a meaningful choice. Instead, they continued to throw wrenches into the gears of democracy.

None of this chaos was imposed upon the Nevada Republican Party. Its leaders knowingly fought to host a private party-run nominating event that is rife with opportunit­ies for manipulati­on. And their sloppiness is so sweeping that everything from the locations of the caucuses to the people who are supposed to be running the caucuses to the rules governing them and the training they’ll receive is completely unknown.

No one should take Nevada Republican­s’ claims about election integrity or security seriously ever again.

The party’s leaders have shown repeatedly that the only fraud or manipulati­on of the electoral process is the manipulati­on they are perpetrati­ng. Voters who care about democracy should refuse to participat­e in the sham caucuses and exercise their right to vote in the state-administer­ed primary instead.

With just two weeks remaining before the caucuses, it’s hard to imagine that the volunteers running the caucuses, staffing the check-in tables or providing assistance at help desks will have adequate training to understand the basic processes, procedures and rules that govern the caucus.

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