2010 United States Senate election in Nevada

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2010 United States Senate election in Nevada

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Nominee Harry Reid Sharron Angle
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 362,785 321,361
Percentage 50.29% 44.55%

County results
Reid:      40–50%      50–60%
Angle:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%

U.S. senator before election

Harry Reid
Democratic

Elected U.S. Senator

Harry Reid
Democratic

The 2010 United States Senate election in Nevada took place on November 2, 2010. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator and Majority Leader Harry Reid won re-election to a fifth and final term.[1]

Democratic primary

[edit]

The Democratic primary took place on June 8, 2010. Reid won by a large margin over a field of political unknowns.

Candidates

[edit]
  • Harry Reid, incumbent U.S. Senator
  • Alex Miller
  • Eduardo Hamilton
  • Carlo Poliak[2]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Dates administered Harry Reid Barbara Buckley
Mellman Group[3] June 17–29, 2008 51% 20%

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[4]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Harry Reid (incumbent) 87,401 75.3%
Democratic None of these 12,341 10.6%
Democratic Alex Miller 9,717 8.4%
Democratic Eduardo Hamilton 4,645 4.0%
Democratic Carlo Poliak 1,938 1.7%
Total votes 116,042 100.00%

Republican primary

[edit]

The Republican primary also took place on Tuesday, June 8, 2010.

Candidates

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]

Lowden

[edit]
Notable individuals and organizations endorsing Sue Lowden

Tarkanian

[edit]
Notable individuals and organizations endorsing Danny Tarkanian

Angle

[edit]
Notable individuals and organizations endorsing Sharron Angle

Polling

[edit]

Includes current candidates who have polled at least 2% in at least one poll.

Dates administered Poll source Tarkanian Lowden Angle
August 21, 2009 Mason Dixon/LVRJ[39] 33% 14% 5%
October 8, 2009 Poll[40] 21% 23% 9%
December 2009 Mason Dixon/LVRJ[41] 24% 25% 13%
January 7, 2010 [42] 28% 26% 13%
February 24, 2010 Mason Dixon/LVRJ[43] 29% 47% 8%
April 11, 2010 Mason Dixon/LVRJ[44] 27% 45% 5%
April 26–28, 2010 Research 2000[45] 28% 38% 13%
May 13, 2010 Mason Dixon/LVRJ[46] 22% 30% 25%
May 28, 2010 Mason Dixon/LVRJ[46] 23% 30% 29%
May 31 – June 2, 2010 Research 2000[47] 24% 25% 34%
June 2, 2010 Suffolk University[48] 26% 24% 33%
June 1–3, 2010 [49] 24% 23% 32%

Results

[edit]
Results by county:
  Angle
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
  Lowden
  •   30–40%
  Tarkanian
  •   30–40%
Republican primary results[4]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Sharron Angle 70,452 40.1%
Republican Sue Lowden 45,890 26.1%
Republican Danny Tarkanian 40,936 23.3%
Republican John Chachas 6,926 3.9%
Republican Chad Christensen 4,806 2.7%
Republican None of these 3,091 1.8%
Republican Bill Parson 1,484 0.8%
Republican Gary Bernstein 698 0.4%
Republican Garn Mabey 462 0.3%
Republican Cecilia Stern 355 0.2%
Republican Brian Nadell 235 0.1%
Republican Terry Suominen 224 0.1%
Republican Gary Marinch 179 0.1%
Total votes 175,738 100.00%

General election

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Campaign

[edit]

In January 2009, the GOP began running an advertisement attacking President Barack Obama's proposed stimulus plan and Reid for his support of the legislation.[54] Since becoming Minority Leader (in 2004), his approval ratings had dropped below 50%.[55] A November 2007 poll showed Reid's approval rating at 39%, with 49% of voters disapproving.[56]

After the primaries, the first poll showed Angle leading by a double-digit margin. CQ Politics changed their analysis of the race from leaning Republican to a toss-up because of Angle's sharply conservative views and tendency to commit verbal gaffes; however, CQ added that if the voters treat the election as a referendum on Reid, then Angle will likely win.[57]

In 2009, Reid had been endorsed by some prominent Nevada Republicans.[58] Immediately after the primary, the Republican mayor of Reno, Bob Cashell, who had backed Lowden in the Republican primary, endorsed Reid for the general election, calling Angle an "ultra-right winger."[59][60] Other Republicans expressed doubt about supporting Angle, citing her reputation for ideological rigidity from her years in the state legislature.[61]

One of the first general election ads attacked Angle for her stance on Social Security and Medicare.[62] In response, Angle explained that "the government must continue to keep its contract with seniors, who entered into the system on good faith and now are depending on that contract." In response to accusations that she was not mainstream enough for Nevada voters, Angle explained on a KXNT radio show that she was "more mainstream than the fellow that said tourists stink, this war is lost, and light-skinned no-Negro dialect", in reference to comments that had been made by Senator Reid.[63]

In September, Tibi Ellis, the chairwoman of the Nevada Republican Hispanic Caucus, who had been a spokesperson for Angle, criticized an Angle ad related to immigration. Ellis said, "I condemned this type of propaganda, no matter who is running them, where they blame Mexicans as the only problem and where they attack them as the only source of illegal immigration."[64]

Angle was endorsed by Nevada's largest newspaper, the Las Vegas Review-Journal.[65] Reid had the endorsement from Nevada's second largest newspaper, the Las Vegas Sun.[66] and the largest newspaper outside of Las Vegas, the Reno Gazette-Journal.[67]

On October 7, 2010, Republican State Senator and Minority Leader William Raggio endorsed Reid.[68][69] Dema Guinn, the widow of the late Republican Nevada Governor Kenny Guinn, endorsed Reid on October 8.[70]

Debate

[edit]

Angle and Reid only agreed to one debate, in which no other candidate would participate. It was held on October 14.[71] Junior Senator John Ensign played Reid during one day of debate preparation at the Trump Plaza in Las Vegas for Angle.[72]

Predictions

[edit]

Reid was initially considered vulnerable, with the non-partisan Cook Political Report rating the election as a tossup[73] and the Rothenberg Political Report rating the state as tossup.[74] A June 9, 2010, Rasmussen Reports post-primary poll showed Angle leading incumbent Senator Harry Reid by a margin of 50% to 39%.[75] However, a July 2010 poll showed Senator Reid leading Angle by 7 points, following nationwide attention to some of Angle's positions,[76] as well as the endorsement of Reid by prominent Republicans. The change of margin, 18% in less than a month, is the largest in Senate elections history.[76] On July 28, 2010, Rasmussen Reports moved the race from tossup to leans Democratic.[77] Later, it moved back to tossup. Polls generally had Angle up, and thus Reid seemed like the underdog. Journalist Jon Ralston correctly predicted Reid would win based on early voting numbers and Reid running a strong campaign.[78]

Source Ranking As of
Cook Political Report[79] Tossup October 26, 2010
Rothenberg[80] Tossup October 22, 2010
RealClearPolitics[81] Tossup October 26, 2010
Sabato's Crystal Ball[82] Lean R (flip) October 28, 2010
CQ Politics[83] Tossup October 26, 2010

Polling

[edit]

Graphical summary

[edit]
Dates administered Poll source Sharron Angle (R) Harry Reid (D)
December 9, 2009 Rasmussen Reports[84] 47% 43%
January 7, 2010 [42] 45% 40%
January 11, 2010 Rasmussen Reports[85] 44% 40%
February 3, 2010 Rasmussen Reports[86] 44% 40%
March 3, 2010 Rasmussen Reports[87] 47% 43%
March 31, 2010 Rasmussen Reports[86] 51% 40%
April 27, 2010 Rasmussen Reports[86] 48% 40%
April 26–28, 2010 Research 2000[45] 44% 41%
May 28, 2010 Mason Dixon/LVRJ[88] 39% 42%
May 31 – June 2, 2010 Research 2000[89] 37% 42%
June 1–3, 2010 [49] 44% 41%
June 9, 2010 Rasmussen Reports[90] 50% 39%
June 22, 2010 Rasmussen Reports[91] 48% 41%
July 12, 2010 Rasmussen Reports[92] 46% 43%
July 12–14, 2010 Mason-Dixon[93] 37% 44%
July 16–18, 2010 Public Policy Polling[94] 46% 48%
July 27, 2010 Rasmussen Reports[95] 43% 45%
July 28–30, 2010 Mason-Dixon[93] 42% 43%
August 3, 2010 Reuters/Iposos[96] 44% 48%
August 9–11, 2010 Mason-Dixon[93] 44% 46%
August 16, 2010 Rasmussen Reports[97] 47% 47%
August 23–25, 2010 Mason-Dixon[98] 44% 45%
September 1, 2010 Rasmussen Reports[99] 45% 45%
September 7–9, 2010 Mason-Dixon[100] 44% 46%
September 11, 2010 FOX News/Pulse Opinion Research[101] 45% 44%
September 13, 2010 Rasmussen Reports[102] 48% 48%
September 10–14, 2010 CNN/Time Magazine[103] 42% 41%
September 18, 2010 FOX News/Pulse Opinion Research[104] 46% 45%
September 20–22, 2010 LVRJ/Mason-Dixon[105] 43% 43%
September 21–23, 2010 Public Opinion Strategies[106] 40% 45%
September 28, 2010 Rasmussen Reports[95] 47% 48%
October 2, 2010 FOX News/Pulse Opinion Research[104] 49% 46%
October 4, 2010 Magellan Strategies[107] 48% 43%
October 5, 2010 Rasmussen Reports[95] 50% 46%
October 7–9, 2010 Public Policy Polling[108] 45% 47%
October 9, 2010 Fox News/POR-Rasmussen[109] 49% 47%
October 11, 2010 Rasmussen Reports[95] 49% 48%
October 14, 2010 Las Vegas Review-Journal/Mason-Dixon[110] 47% 45%
October 17, 2010 Rasmussen Reports[95] 50% 47%
October 25, 2010 Rasmussen Reports[95] 49% 45%
October 20–26, 2010 CNN/Time/Opinion Research[111] 49% 45%
October 25–27, 2010 Mason-Dixon[112] 49% 45%
October 30, 2010 Fox News/Pulse Opinion Research[113] 48% 45%
October 31, 2010 Public Policy Polling[114] 47% 46%

Fundraising

[edit]
Candidate (party) Receipts Disbursements Cash on hand Debt
Sharron Angle (R) $27,797,915 $27,505,917 $291,999 $635,737
Harry Reid (D) $19,185,317 $22,325,360 $176,309 $419,093
Source: Federal Election Commission[115]

Results

[edit]

Despite Angle leading by three points in the polls the days leading up to the election, Reid defeated Angle by 5.74%, even defeating Angle in her own county, Washoe County. Reid also secured huge numbers out of the Democratic stronghold of Clark County, which covers the Las Vegas Metropolitan Area.

United States Senate election in Nevada, 2010[116][117]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Harry Reid (incumbent) 362,785 50.29% −10.84%
Republican Sharron Angle 321,361 44.55% +9.45%
n/a None of These Candidates 16,174 2.25% +0.65%
Tea Party of Nevada Scott Ashjian 5,811 0.81% N/A
Independent Michael L. Haines 4,261 0.59% N/A
Independent American Timothy Fasano 3,185 0.44% N/A
Independent Jesse Holland 3,175 0.44% N/A
Independent Jeffery C. Reeves 2,510 0.35% N/A
Independent Wil Stand 2,119 0.29% N/A
Total votes 721,381 100.0%
Democratic hold

County breakdown

[edit]
County Reid % Angle % Others/None of These %
Carson City 8,714 44.64% 9,362 47.96% 1,443 7.39%
Churchill 2,473 27.80% 5,639 63.40% 783 8.80%
Clark 253,617 54.41% 192,516 41.30% 20,030 4.30%
Douglas 7,530 34.57% 12,858 59.04% 1,392 6.39%
Elko 3,246 25.24% 8,173 63.56% 1,440 11.20%
Esmeralda 80 20.15% 268 67.51% 49 12.34%
Eureka 137 18.05% 524 69.04% 98 12.91%
Humboldt 1,600 32.12% 2,836 56.92% 546 10.96%
Lander 487 25.60% 1,201 63.14% 214 11.25%
Lincoln 442 22.68% 1,311 67.27% 196 10.06%
Lyon 5,659 32.39% 10,473 59.95% 1,339 7.66%
Mineral 855 44.93% 822 43.19% 226 11.88%
Nye 5,279 36.66% 7,822 54.32% 1,298 9.01%
Pershing 597 34.39% 915 52.71% 224 12.90%
Storey 843 39.50% 1,124 52.67% 167 7.83%
Washoe 70,523 49.91% 63,316 44.81% 7,448 5.27%
White Pine 703 21.51% 2,201 67.33% 365 11.17%

[118]

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican
[edit]

References

[edit]
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[edit]

Debates

Official campaign sites