GOPers Gearing Up For Battle Royal To Take Nev. Senate Seat Once Reid Retires

In this Thursday, June 2, 2016 photo, U.S. Rep. Joe Heck, left, R-Nev., speaks with Dr. Daliah Wachsa after a roundtable event in Henderson, Nev. Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid’s retirement has created a rare op... In this Thursday, June 2, 2016 photo, U.S. Rep. Joe Heck, left, R-Nev., speaks with Dr. Daliah Wachsa after a roundtable event in Henderson, Nev. Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid’s retirement has created a rare open seat that offers Republicans their one real shot at winning a state now held by the Democrats. With their slim Senate majority under siege around the country, Republicans are determined to replace Reid with one of their own, Heck, a wonkish and hard-working Army reservist. (AP Photo/David Becker) MORE LESS
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LAS VEGAS (AP) — In a state where the politics can be as raucous as the casinos, the race for U.S. Senate in Nevada is shaping up as a battle royal.

Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid’s retirement after three decades has created a rare open seat that offers Republicans their one real shot at winning a state now held by the Democrats. With their slim Senate majority under siege around the country, Republicans are determined to replace Reid with one of their own, Rep. Joe Heck, a wonkish and hard-working Army reservist.

But the canny Reid is just as intent on installing a Democrat to replace him. He recruited a former state attorney general, Catherine Cortez Masto, who would be the first Latina ever to serve in the U.S. Senate. Her candidacy is giving the state’s increasingly powerful and overwhelmingly Democratic Latino voting bloc an opportunity to send a message to GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump, whose threats to build a wall with Mexico and deport more than 11 million immigrants in the country illegally have rattled Hispanics there.

With special interest money already gushing into the race, the dynamics make for a super-charged throw-down in this state of bright lights and wild contradictions.

“It’s not lost on either side of the aisle that the Senate majority in 2017 could very well come down to this race,” Heck said in an interview in his clean and orderly campaign office. As volunteers worked the phones, Heck professed confidence, saying he has won three competitive races for his Southern Nevada House seat and insisted he would do it again for Senate.

“After eight years of Barack Obama and 30 years of Harry Reid people are truly ready for a change, especially in a place likeNevada where we’re still bouncing along the bottom in economic recovery,” Heck said.

Campaigning at El Tarasco Mexican restaurant, where colorful offerings included rose petal ice cream, Cortez Masto played up a different kind of change. She emphasized her Mexican roots, reminding supporters her grandfather emigrated from Chihuahua and she and her sister were the first in their family to graduate from college. In an interview, she was quick to link Heck to Trump.

“It is crazy to me that in this day and age we’re having this discussion about electing somebody who is full of hate and discrimination,” Cortez Masto said. “I have an opponent I’m running against, Congressman Heck, who is supporting him.”

It’s a line of attack that figures to be a staple of Democratic Senate campaigns around the country this year. In Nevada, Democrats are sending two people in parrot costumes and Trump hats to follow Heck around, intending to suggest he parrots Trump’s views. Despite blistering heat topping 100 degrees, the parrots jumped up and down outside a Hyundai dealership where Heck was campaigning one recent afternoon, before they were escorted off the lot.

Heck insisted such attacks won’t work.

“People know who Joe Heck is,” he said. “This idea of identity politics or guilt by association, I think the electorate is smarter than that.”

If Heck faces a challenge in being linked to Trump, Cortez Masto is confronting something similar in her connections to Reid, who is closely involved in her campaign and has put his still-formidable political machine behind her. Reid, 76, is a polarizing figure in the state, beloved by many Democrats but loathed by Republicans.

Cortez Masto, a cautious campaigner who has not previously faced a highly competitive race, is quick to change the topic when asked about him.

“Sen. Reid’s not on the ballot, and to me this is a race I’m focused on about the issues that people in my state, where I was born and raised, care about, because I will be representing them in Washington, not Sen. Reid,” Cortez Masto said.

Yet for both candidates in Nevada, as in other states with competitive Senate races, the outcome will depend partly on something they can’t control: how the presidential race plays out between Trump and the likely Democratic nominee, Hillary Clinton.

Republicans are optimistic Trump could win Nevada, but the state has gone Democratic in the past two presidential elections. Registered Democrats outnumber Republicans by some 65,000 voters, a figure Democrats and labor unions are working hard to increase even more.

With Trump as their nominee, Republicans face the prospect of a record Latino turnout. Activists point to increased voter registrations and citizenship applications as evidence Latinos are lining up to prevent Trump from becoming president.

“Heck is doomed,” Reid himself predicted when asked about the impact of the Latino vote.

After greeting supporters at El Tarasco restaurant on a recent afternoon, Cortez Masto headed across the street to an early-voting site where a life-size Elvis Presley cutout beckoned voters to the polls ahead of the state’s June 14 congressional primary.

Neither Cortez Masto nor Heck faces serious opposition in the primary, though in a taste of Nevada’s colorful politics one of Heck’s opponents is a hard-core conservative named Sharron Angle. She lost a winnable Senate race against Reid six years ago after a series of gaffes, including telling Latino school-children they looked like Asians. Angle doesn’t appear to have much money or support this time around, but she recently produced an ad depicting herself as a tiger and Heck as a bunny rabbit, and showing herself gripping Trump’s hand.

___

Follow Erica Werner on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ericawerner

Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  1. I do not have much faith in the good Dr.'s " prognosis —

    He needs be seeking a second opinion —

  2. I sure as “HECK” bet he dosent want my second opinion…sqwwwwwak he’s and idiot he’s and idot like drumpf sqwwwwwak

  3. As a Nevadan, when I went to vote for Sen. Reid (in the off-year election of 2010), after seeing the large Hispanic turnout, I was fairly sure that all the polls (with the exception of 1 group who seems to do the best in polling Nevada) were wrong in showing Reid losing. Ultimately he won fairly easily (for Reid). I suspect that Nevada (especially in a presidential election) will be very difficult for Heck. Despite his quote, he’s not well known (even within his own congressional district) and the Latino turnout for Clinton will probably be yuuuuuuuge as Trump would say. I think that this senate race may turnout to be a non-story.

  4. Avatar for pshah pshah says:

    Has it already been six years since Sharon Angle last graced my television?

    In the year of the Trump, it’d be fitting for her to somehow win the Republican primary.

  5. Actually, by the time of the election most polls showed Harry winning. At the time of the primary, Sharron “Second Amendment Remedies” Angle had an 11 point lead over Harry. A month later, Harry was up by 7 points over Angle. Early on, most pollsters considered Harry a dead duck, and a decent GOP candidate probably would have mopped the floor with Harry. But the Tea Party managed to get Angle the nomination, and the rest, as they say, is history.

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