USA TODAY International Edition

Dem with most donors in Vegas may be a good bet

- Jim Sergent

We already know the votes of hundreds of residents in Nevada.

Nevada’s Democratic presidenti­al caucus is Saturday, but throughout 2019, more Las Vegas residents put their money on Sen. Bernie Sanders and former Vice President Joe Biden than other Democratic hopefuls. President Donald Trump had the most donors of all candidates in Las Vegas.

Las Vegas will likely have a big say in Nevada’s results Saturday. Nearly a third of the state’s residents – and much of Clark County’s population – live there. In 2016, Hillary Clinton won Clark County by 10 percentage points in the general election, helping her to a 2 percentage point win in Nevada.

USA TODAY teamed with RentHop, an algorithm- driven apartment search service, to drill down to the neighborho­od level in 20 geographic­ally diverse, large cities to see which candidates had the most donors. The results mirror much of the red state/ blue state divide and represent the contributi­ons of a combined population of nearly 30 million people.

Will Vegas follow Des Moines?

Will Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and former Vice President Joe Biden take the top two spots in Nevada’s Democratic caucus on Saturday?

USA TODAY teamed with RentHop, an algorithm- driven apartment search service, to drill down to the neighborho­od level in 20 geographic­ally diverse, large cities to see which candidates had the most donors during all of 2019.

Sanders ( 461) and Biden ( 367) led the Democrats for unique donors in Las Vegas, whose residents represent a large portion of Nevada’s population. Former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg finished a distant third with 210 donors.

In addition to the 20 large cities, RentHop collected the 2019 donor data for Des Moines to see if the number of donor contributi­ons might align with the outcome of the Iowa caucuses. The contributi­ons and results were very close.

Buttigieg had just two more donors in Des Moines than Sanders. The Iowa caucus margin was equally close. Buttigieg finished with 26.2% ( 564 state delegate equivalent­s), beating Sanders by a 10th of a percent ( 562 SDEs).

Clearly, there are many asterisks associated with such an analysis – not the least of which are the results of the firstalignme­nt vote ( Sanders won handily), and size and demographi­cs of Des Moines relative to Iowa.

As for Las Vegas, all of these contributi­ons were made in 2019 – long before Iowa and New Hampshire voted – so those results could weigh on caucusgoer­s’ decisions this weekend.

Polling since the Iowa caucuses suggests that Buttigieg and former New York Mayor Mike Bloomberg have been the beneficiaries of Biden’s poor showing in the first two contests, according to Real Clear Politics. Bloomberg is not on the Nevada ballot.

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