LAS
VEGAS (AP) — Just past the roulette wheel and slot machines, the smoky
bars and blinking lights, Nevada Democrats are preparing to weigh in on
their party’s presidential nomination fight.
Seven
casino-resorts on the Las Vegas Strip stand among 200 caucus locations
statewide that will host the presidential caucuses on Saturday, the
third contest in a 2020 primary season that has so far been marred by
chaos and uncertainty in overwhelmingly white, rural states. The
exercise of democracy inside urban temples of excess is just one element
that distinguishes the first presidential contest in the West, which
will, more importantly, test the candidates’ strength with black and
brown voters for the first time in 2020.
“Nevada
represents an opportunity for these candidates to demonstrate their
appeal to a larger swath of our country,” said state Attorney General
Aaron Ford, a Democrat who is not endorsing a candidate in the crowded
field.
Nevada’s
population, which aligns more with the U.S. as a whole than the opening
elections in Iowa and New Hampshire, is 29% Latino, 10% black and 9%
Asian American and Pacific Islander.
The
vote comes at a critical moment for the Democratic Party as
self-described democratic socialist Bernie Sanders emerges as the clear
front-runner and a half dozen more moderate candidates savage one
another for the chance to emerge as the preferred alternative to
Sanders. The ultimate winner will represent Democrats on the ballot
against President Donald Trump in November.
Yet
on the eve of the caucuses, questions lingered about Nevada Democrats’
ability to report election results quickly as new concerns surfaced
about foreign interference in the 2020 contest.
Campaigning
in California, Sanders confirmed reports that he had been briefed by
U.S. officials about a month ago that Russia was trying to help his
campaign as part of Moscow’s efforts to interfere in the election.
“It
was not clear what role they were going to play,” Sanders said. “We
were told that Russia, maybe other countries, are going to get involved
in this campaign.”
He added: “Here’s the message to Russia: Stay out of American elections.”
Despite
the distraction, Sanders enters Saturday increasingly confident, backed
by strong support from Latinos and rank-and-file union workers who have
warmed to his fiery calls to transform the nation’s economy and
political system to help the working class.
In
a fiery speech the night before the caucuses, Sanders lumped the
“Democratic establishment” in with the corporate and Republican
establishment, saying they can’t stop him. He said the establishment was
“getting worried” about a multiracial coalition that wants higher wages
and health care.
The outlook was dire for virtually everyone else.
Long
before voting began, there was skepticism about Pete Buttigieg’s
ability to win over a more diverse set of voters after strong finishes
in overwhelmingly white Iowa and New Hampshire. It was the opposite for
Joe Biden, who struggled in Iowa and New Hampshire but looked to
Nevada’s voters of color to prove he still has a viable path to the
nomination.
The
two women left in the race, Elizabeth Warren and Amy Klobuchar, were
fighting for momentum, hoping to benefit from a sudden surge of outside
money from newly created super PACs. Billionaire Tom Steyer has invested
more than $12 million of his own money on television advertising in
Nevada, according to data obtained by The Associated Press, which
details the extent to which several candidates have gone all-in ahead of
Saturday’s contest.
The
pro-Warren Persist super PAC, created in recent days, is spending more
money in Nevada this week than any other campaign or allied outside
group. Persist, which hasn’t yet disclosed any donors and cannot legally
coordinate with Warren’s campaign, has invested $902,000 this week in
Nevada television on her behalf, according to spending data obtained by
The AP. That’s more than Klobuchar’s and Biden’s campaigns have spent
over the entire year.
New
York billionaire Mike Bloomberg, who dominated the political
conversation this week after a poor debate-stage debut, won’t be on the
ballot. He’s betting everything on a series of delegate-rich states that
begin voting next month.
“I
think right now predicting who’s going to win here in Nevada would be a
wild guess,” former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said in an
interview. “And if I were a gambler, which I’m not, I wouldn’t be
betting on who’s gonna win here in Nevada.”
The political world, meanwhile, hoped there would be a winner at all.
Saturday’s
caucuses are the first since technical glitches and human errors
plagued Iowa’s kickoff caucuses. Nearly three weeks later, state
Democratic officials have yet to post final results.
Nevada
Democrats have projected confidence in their process, although
Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez this week refused to
commit to releasing the full results on the day of the vote. He said a
number of factors, including early voting and potentially high turnout,
could affect the tabulation and timing of results. In addition, Nevada,
like Iowa, reports three sets of data from the multistage caucus
process.
“We’re
going to do our best to release results as soon as possible, but our
North Star, again, is accuracy,” Perez told The Associated Press this
week.
One potential complication: Early voting.
The
state party has added to its responsibilities by offering early voting –
something Iowa did not attempt. Nevada voters have been eager to
partake, given the alternative is to spend significantly more time
voting at a chaotic caucus site.
The
party said nearly 75,000 Democrats cast early ballots, and a majority
were first-time caucus-goers. In 2016, a total of 84,000 Nevada voters
participated in the Democratic caucuses.
A small, but significant number of the ballots cast early were disqualified.
Of
the more than 36,000 ballots that were cast through Monday, 1,124
ballots were voided largely because voters forgot to sign them,
according to the state party, which did not release the final numbers.
Party officials said they were reaching out to these voters and
encouraging them to caucus in person on Saturday.
Campaigning in Las Vegas on the eve of the caucuses, Trump sought to raise doubts about the process.
“I
hear their computers are all messed up just like they were in Iowa.
They’re not going to be able to count their vote,” Trump charged.
“They’re going to tell you about health care. They’re going to tell you
about our military and jet fighters and the missiles and rockets, but
they can’t count votes.”
Amid such concerns, Nevada Democrats tried to stay focused on the candidates and the issues they represent.
Reid,
who at 80 years old remains one of the most powerful Democrats in the
state, predicted that Sanders’ signature health care policy, “Medicare
for All,: could not win support in Congress. Yet he said he thinks the
fiery Vermont senator could bring Democrats together.
“I have no doubt that if Bernie Sanders is the nominee, the party will unite behind him and beat Trump,” Reid said. ___
Peoples reported from Washington. AP writers Christina A. Cassidy in Atlanta and Nicholas Riccardi contributed.
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