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Nevada's first presidential primary attracts 16% of voters
LAS VEGAS — Tuesday’s Nevada presidential preference primary served as a test — both for the state in how to release results more quickly and handle its first presidential primaries, and for what happens when political campaigns choose to ignore the purple Silver State.
President Joe Biden easily secured his win of Nevada’s Democrats, and while the GOP primary’s results did not matter (as the party prepares for its Thursday’s caucuses in an all-but-guaranteed-win for former President Donald Trump) 13% of registered Republicans also participated, with the majority selecting “ none of these candidates ” over Nikki Haley.
In an interview with NewsWire on Wednesday, Haley said, “we knew months ago that we weren’t gonna spend a day or a dollar in Nevada because it wasn’t worth it, and so we didn’t even count Nevada. That wasn’t anything we were looking at. We knew that was rigged from the start.” Her campaign has vowed to press on.
- Still, around 182,000 voters participated in the primaries, about a 16% participation rate, according to Secretary of State Cisco Aguilar.
- Although the 2022 primary election had a 25% voter turnout, there is not really a way to compare Tuesday’s primary to others, Aguilar said, given that this is the first presidential primary the state has held since the Legislature voted in 2021 to do away with caucuses.
- The majority of voters also participated with a mail ballot, Aguilar said, showing an increased adoption rate of the 2021-era automatic mail ballot system.
- Nevada voters have voiced frustration over both a primary and caucuses taking place.
- On Tuesday, one Trump supporter called the situation nonsense.“It’s a waste of time,” said Philip Lorea, 70, of Summerlin.
- The state-mandated primaries served important purposes, he said.
- For one, it’s a crucial democratic value to give the opportunity for a voter to participate in the electoral process, he said.
Nevada represents what the U.S. looks like, he said, and it’s important to understand how the West feels.
- “I don’t think you can put a price on democracy and accessibility,” Aguilar said, “and the opportunity for Nevada to set the national stage about what’s important to voters.”
> The Nevada Republican Party did not return the Review-Journal’s requests for information on the exact costs to hold its caucuses. The party, however, received $330,000 from presidential candidates who paid the $55,000 fee to sign up, according to its latest financial disclosure report.
> The total costs for the use of 42 Clark County School District facilities reserved by Nevada Republican Party for the caucuses was $8,558. That cost includes the space rental, police services, custodian and administrative fees, according to a school district spokesperson.
- While Haley visited Nevada in October for a Republican Jewish Coalition annual leadership summit, her campaign has chosen to ignore Nevada, one of the Republican Party’s four early primary states.
- Haley had accused the caucuses of being rigged for Trump so she had signed up for the primary, but did not make much effort to encourage Nevadans to vote for her in the symbolic election.



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