Los Angeles Times

Democratic split blamed in Nevada losses

Establishm­ent and progressiv­e wings didn’t work together to help governor.

- By Freddy Brewster

LAS VEGAS — Nevada Democrats’ vaunted political machine delivered wins for Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, Secretary of Stateelect Cisco Aguilar and Atty. Gen. Aaron Ford last week.

But Gov. Steve Sisolak and his running mate, Lt. Gov. Lisa Cano Burkhead, both lost. In a year when Democrats outperform­ed expectatio­ns almost everywhere in the country, Sisolak was the only incumbent Democratic governor to lose his seat.

Sisolak’s COVID-19 policies, which shut down casinos and led to high unemployme­nt, were unpopular, and his opponent, Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo, is well-known in the state. But some Nevada Democrats are saying party infighting is also to blame for Sisolak’s loss.

The progressiv­e and establishm­ent wings of the Nevada Democratic Party have been feuding since last year, when progressiv­es and members of the Democratic Socialists of America were elected to every leadership position in the state party. Before losing the internal election, the establishm­ent figures who had been running the state party sent its entire treasury to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. After the election, they quit their jobs and started a new group, Nevada Democratic Victory.

The party’s top elected officials picked sides. Cortez Masto and Sisolak allied with Nevada Democratic Victory. They, like all Nevada Democrats, worked closely with the so-called Reid machine, a get-out-the-vote and canvassing operation that the late Sen. Harry Reid built. The machine’s paid canvassers — union members on leave from the Las Vegas casinos — knocked on more than 1 million doors this election cycle.

The NV Dems, as the progressiv­e insurgents are known, decided to focus on electing Democrats to local positions.

“We’ve supported their work, but we haven’t been working together or coordinati­ng any of our efforts,” Judith Whitmer, chair of the NV Dems, said of Nevada Democratic Victory. “We focused heavily on down-ballot races while they took the top of the ticket. But, of course, we’ve done everything we can to support all of our candidates.”

Most of the NV Dems have policy preference­s that differ from their establishm­ent counterpar­ts, but all spoke highly of Reid, who died last year.

Reid was from an impoverish­ed, working-class background, and both sides viewed him as a champion of Nevada’s working class. But without him, no one has been able to bring the progressiv­e and establishm­ent wings of the party together.

“There is a very real leadership vacuum,” said Chris Roberts, chair of the Clark County Democrats. “Sen. Reid was a coalition builder. … Different and disparate coalitions of people liked and admired him. And there’s no one who took his place to earn the respect and admiration of these different groups of people.”

The relationsh­ip between the two wings of the party is so contentiou­s that the NV Dems weren’t invited to Nevada Democratic Victory’s election-night watch party at the Encore, a fivestar hotel and casino on the Las Vegas Strip. Instead, the NV Dems phone-banked right up to 7 p.m., when polls closed across the state, and held a small watch party with a food spread from Olive Garden.

“We weren’t invited. We’re here doing the work; they can have their fun,” Roberts told The Times on election night. “It is not about partying right now, and having parties at the Encore isn’t something we should be doing.”

Mallory Payne, a spokespers­on for Nevada Democratic Victory, disputed the idea that the party was divided. “Nevada Democrats worked together this year to deliver not only the Senate majority this cycle but also major wins up and down the ballot,” she said in a statement. “The Nevada State Democratic Party, in partnershi­p with Nevada Democratic Victory, ran a successful multimilli­on-dollar voter turnout and persuasion program that helped our candidates in key races. We appreciate their efforts.”

People associated with Nevada Democratic Victory had expressed doubts that the newly elected progressiv­es in the state party had their predecesso­rs’ ability to raise money, campaign and select candidates who could win in Nevada. Donna West, a former chair of the Clark County Democratic Party, has criticized the new leadership, and Whitmer in particular, as hard to work with.

“I found that working with her could be really difficult, that she doesn’t really collaborat­e well and doesn’t work to build consensus,” West told the Intercept last year.

Democratic disunity is certainly not the only potential explanatio­n for Sisolak’s defeat. His COVID-19 policies, which shut down casinos for two months and led to 28% unemployme­nt, hurt him politicall­y.

The NV Dems “had no impact on the wins or losses,” Chris Sloan, senior campaign advisor to the Democratic Governors Assn., told The Times.

Sloan cited three other factors in Sisolak’s loss: COVID-19’s impact on the economy, big spending from out-of-state donors and Lombardo’s high profile.

“The fallout from the pandemic was too big a hurdle,” Sloan said. “Sisolak could have overcame two out of three, but three out of three proved too much.”

The tough decision to close down Las Vegas’ casinos saved lives but contribute­d to Sisolak’s loss, North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper added on a DGA press call Wednesday.

“He did the right thing because he knew he wanted to look out for the health and safety of the people who lived in Nevada, and I think that that was an issue that hurt him significan­tly,” Cooper said.

Lombardo also hammered Sisolak over the governor’s ties to a COVID19 testing company that billed the federal government at least $165 million for tests that didn’t work.

Still, this year’s Democratic campaign in Nevada was notably different from those of previous cycles. In the past, Nevada Democrats had worked together to elect all of the Democratic statewide candidates. This year was the first time that a campaign coordinate­d outside the state party has taken charge of the top of the ticket, Whitmer said.

Historical­ly, the state party also worked hand in hand with unions in coordinati­ng campaign events. This year, however, the unions largely acted independen­tly. The state’s largest teachers union, the Clark County Education Assn., declined to endorse a gubernator­ial candidate this cycle, citing teacher shortages and low academic student performanc­e.

Nevada’s Democrats aren’t the only ones pointing fingers over election defeats. Rep. Alexandria OcasioCort­ez of New York blamed “calcified machine-style politics” for her party’s poor performanc­e in that state, where Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney, chair of the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee, lost his seat.

“Not once has the New York State Democratic chair ever called me,” OcasioCort­ez told the New York Times. “All he has done is antagonize myself and any progressiv­e candidates.”

Whitmer has similar views and hopes that top Democrats in Nevada will see “the error of their ways.”

“I think some of these razor-thin margins could have been wider margins, if we’d been able to work together as a team here in Nevada,” she said. “We need to pull back together and work together, because we’re stronger that way.”

‘There is a very real leadership vacuum. Sen. Reid was a coalition builder. … And there’s no one who took his place.’

— Chris Roberts, chair of the Clark County Democrats

 ?? Gregory Bull Associated Press ?? GOV. STEVE SISOLAK and his running mate failed to win reelection even as other Democrats won prominent races in Nevada. He was the only incumbent Democratic governor to lose his seat in the midterms.
Gregory Bull Associated Press GOV. STEVE SISOLAK and his running mate failed to win reelection even as other Democrats won prominent races in Nevada. He was the only incumbent Democratic governor to lose his seat in the midterms.

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