Beyond ‘Showgirls and Slot Machines’
Nevada prepares for its most meaningful caucuses
Clark County Commissioner Chris Giunchigliani is canvassing door to door on an uncharacteristically chilly and cloudy Saturday in a Las Vegas subdivision of stylish ranch houses about two miles east of the Strip. Stumping for Sen. Hillary Clinton ahead of Saturday's Democratic caucuses, she listens to voters whose demographics and pet issues make it clear the campaign isn't in Iowa or New Hampshire anymore. A Hispanic casino buffet server talks about her precarious mortgage. An Anglo retiree gives her an earful about the planned nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain. And a mother of three vents about school overcrowding in this fast-growing area, and then asks Giunchigliani—twice—to explain how this newfangled caucus thing works. "This is all so new to us," notes Denise Formander, 34.
It's new to everyone in Nevada. The state has been a presidential battleground in general elections in the past, but for the first time the caucuses are front and center in the Democratic presidential selection process. Indeed, in a state more accustomed to attention for the antics of high rollers and celebrities, the Jan. 19 event has transformed a political nonevent into what Las Vegas Sun political columnist Jon Ralston dubbed "the little caucus that could." As a result, Giunchigliani's constituents are working hard to get up to speed. "This is the most exciting moment in Nevada political history," Giunchigliani said. "We just have to make sure we get it right."
Clinton and Sen. Barack Obama have crisscrossed the state in recent days, appealing to constituencies that were nonexistent in the first two major battlegrounds. A third of Nevadans are black or Hispanic. It's the nation's fastest-growing state, rapidly urbanizing around Las Vegas, where voters are preoccupied by growth issues like school overcrowding (in Clark County a new school opens every month to relieve the pressure), the availability of drinking water and the credit crunch in this fast-rising housing market. The race is considered too close to call. Obama leads Clinton 32-30 in a Reno Gazette-Journal poll released Monday, the only one taken since the New Hampshire primary. John Edwards, who has focused on South Carolina but will attend Tuesday's MSNBC debate in Las Vegas, trailed with 27 percent. That represents a significant tightening; in early December polls showed Clinton with a double-digit lead.
This is the first time Nevada's caucuses may have a real bearing on the broader nomination fight. Moved to the early part of the primary calendar largely by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, the caucuses will be held in about 1,750 precincts statewide. Democratic Party activists hope for a turnout of 45,000 voters, or 10 percent of the state's registered Democrats. The prior record was a mere 9,000 in March 2004, when it was held long after Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry had sewn up the nomination and was an affair so small that all of Clark County caucused on one high-school football field. Voters here are eager to show the rest of the country that their votes matter too. "This is our chance to show we're about more than showgirls and slot machines," says Marta Fuentes, 26, who met Hillary Clinton as she canvassed a working-class Hispanic neighborhood.
With a week to go, Giunchigliani patrolled the neighborhood, visiting homes of possible Clinton voters. She makes sure they know where the caucus precinct site is located, at a local school. The issues she hears about are the same whether she is walking through the largely Hispanic neighborhoods of apartment buildings off Maryland Parkway or in the more upscale Paradise Palms subdivision of half-acre lots—believed to be the first subdivision in Clark County. Giunchigliani says that while the economy is generally healthy, voters here are worried about high gas prices, the mortgage mess and whether the nation's flagging economy will hurt local tourism.
The Nevada Republican Party is also holding caucuses on Jan. 19, but the leading GOP candidates have largely ignored Nevada and none has announced any plans to visit. The only campaigning of note was a round of push-poll phone calls received by hundreds of Nevadans on Sunday that asked leading questions designed to encourage support for former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, who came in third in the Gazette-Journal poll, with 16 percent. Sen. John McCain of neighboring Arizona was in the lead, with 22 percent of the vote, followed by former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani at 18 percent. Despite a large Mormon population in the state, Mitt Romney polled a disappointing fourth.
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Member Comments
Posted By: JohnGaltlaketahoe @ 01/17/2008 5:48:00 PM
Comment: I think this story with its sub-head of "Nevada prepares for its most meaningful caucus" needs to back up just a second.
The judicial system of Nevada was invited to interrupt this debate in favor of the very conflicts of interest that is the bi-partisanship committed to exluding vable candidates of the American electorate.
This Clinton McCain Obama Edwards Giuliani crap has gone on too long now. Let the games begin and let the American electorate decide who enters this race until November 2008. Working backwards, bi-partisanship has funded the Iraq war, allowed torture, secret rendiition, domestic espionage, SEC and FCC violations, civil rights violations all obstructions of justice.
Under the authority given them by their consitutional oath to serve, protect, and defend the the Constitution of the United States, the House and Senate Committee's on the Judiciary must indict and impeach this entire Executive Branch before November, 2008.
Posted By: slyxster @ 01/17/2008 4:43:15 PM
Comment: To Yamaka, you have your facts wrong. He doesn't want to use Gold as the standard, but competing currencies. As for the Federal Reserve, we don't need it, and monetary policy would fall back on Congress like it did before 1913, which is what the constitution mandates anyways. Plenty of details are available on his positions at his website, and in interviews that last more than 30 seconds.
Posted By: annevilla @ 01/17/2008 2:01:23 PM
Comment: "OBAMA PORTRAIT MUSIC VIDEO" on Youtube - Don't Miss It!
For those of you who still have not heard:
There is a WONDERFUL and INSPIRING music video on Youtube.com entitled "Obama Portrait Music Video by Bjarne O."
You can use the free downloaded high-quality stereo version from the composer's website in DVD form to show at house parties and fundraisers. Even people who knew nothing at all about Obama have been moved: either a thrilling introduction, or further inspiration for those of us who already know and fight for Obama.
The music soundtrack, which incorporates excerpts from the famous 2004 speech, can also be downloaded separately in high-quality.
It is an uplifting and informative campaign tool - so please, SPREAD THE WORD!
http://youtube.com/watch?v=mCPwbozpIzM
YES WE CAN
Anne