Reno voters could decide the 2024 Senate battle on economic issues

Republican senatorial candidate Sam Brown speaks after filing his paperwork to run for the Senate, March 14 at the State Capitol in Carson City, Nev. Brown is seeking to replace incumbent Sen. Jacky Rosen.

Republican senatorial candidate Sam Brown speaks after filing his paperwork to run for the Senate, March 14 at the State Capitol in Carson City, Nev. Brown is seeking to replace incumbent Sen. Jacky Rosen. (Andy Barron, Reno Gazette-Journal)


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RENO, Nev. — It's no exaggeration to say the control of the U.S. Senate — and the White House — could be decided by "the biggest little city in the world."

Centered in Truckee River Valley, the desert town of Reno, Nevada, also sits at the center of the national debate over inflation, immigration and federal abortion bans.

Few places have felt the impacts of the rising cost of living more. One out of five people in Nevada are immigrants. The state has a long tradition of choosing increased access to abortion.

And with Reno being the seat of the perennially purple Washoe County, which has often tipped the balance in this swing state, few places will have as much say as to what is done to address these issues at the federal level.

"To the rest of the country, this is where the White House will be won and the Senate will be taken back," Republican Senate candidate Sam Brown told supporters on Tuesday. "We are the battleground of the nation."

Come November, Reno residents will cast some of the most impactful votes in the country as Democratic incumbent Sen. Jacky Rosen battles Brown over one of the four "toss-up" seats that will determine the state of divided government in Washington.

"Washoe has made or broken many, many, many races," Zach Guymon, a Las Vegas-based GOP strategist at Reformation Strategies, told the Deseret News. "This race is going to be close. And I think Washoe is gonna be the one that determines it."

But these voters, like the rest of Americans, have been hit with a wave of unprecedented developments in the presidential race over the past month, with the shift from President Joe Biden to Vice President Kamala Harris changing the calculus for down ballot races.

"When you're running in a presidential year, it's all about the top of the ticket," said Kenneth Miller, an assistant professor of political science at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. "People decide whether or not to participate in the election based on the biggest races."

The last week has made it clear, Democrats and Republicans have their eyes set on Nevada.

Former President Donald Trump sent his running mate, Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance, to the state on Tuesday to criticize Harris' role in overseeing immigration at the southern border. Meanwhile, the Harris campaign experienced a surge in volunteer support after she became the Democratic presidential candidate, with a message focused on abortion access.

Immigration and abortion have also formed the centerpieces for the campaigns of Nevada's Senate candidates. But when it comes to the Nevada voters who are "truly independent" or "even remotely persuadable," Guymon and Miller agree, the issues that matter most are kitchen table, not culture war.

What matters to Reno voters?

Rick Webster, who installs glass windows for a living, is not a "political guy." But he knows which issue will motivate his political preferences this fall.

"Inflation, for sure," he told the Deseret News in MidTown, Reno. "The biggest thing that's impacted me is the cost of living. Particularly here in Reno, housing costs have gone through the roof. It's impossible for a working man to buy a home."

While he refuses to vote for Trump, saying his activity surrounding the Jan. 6 Capitol riot should be disqualifying, Webster says he will vote for Brown in the Senate race if he continues to make the more compelling case on inflation and economic growth.

Mike Tozzi, a Reno transplant of six years, said he feels the strain of increased gas and food prices in his work at the local frozen food plant, Ponderosa Meat Company. Tozzi isn't very familiar with Brown, but he plans on voting for him, in addition to Trump, because he trusts Republicans to cut spending and, hopefully, inflation.

Sen. Jacky Rosen, D-Nev., rides an escalator to a vote on Capitol Hill, Sept. 6, 2023, in Washington.
Sen. Jacky Rosen, D-Nev., rides an escalator to a vote on Capitol Hill, Sept. 6, 2023, in Washington. (Photo: Alex Brandon, Associated Press)

"They're more business oriented," Tozzi said in the parking lot outside his workplace. "You need someone to actually implement the right way. You need a business person."

The cost of living has also had the most direct impact of any issue on the life of Lindsey Forbes, a lifelong Nevada resident, who works as the director of transfer recruitment at the University of Nevada. But it's the issue of abortion that has made her a firmly "decided" vote for Rosen this November.

"For me, women's health, and the choices that women have are really important to me," Forbes said. "It's important at the federal level to continue fighting for these rights."

Forbes said she also appreciates the first-term incumbent senator's willingness to work across the aisle on "moderate legislation that can withstand the test of time."

Read the entire story at Deseret.com.

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Brigham Tomco, Deseret NewsBrigham Tomco
Brigham Tomco covers Utah’s congressional delegation for the national politics team at the Deseret News. A Utah native, Brigham studied journalism and philosophy at Brigham Young University. He enjoys podcasts, historical nonfiction and going to the park with his wife and two boys.

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