Senate candidates hiding?
By STEVE SEBELIUS
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
October 12, 2014
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
October 12, 2014
It’s not that Nevada’s Republican state Senate candidates can’t debate their opponents; it’s that they’re choosing not to debate.
I’ve
covered state Senate Minority Leader Michael Roberson, R-Henderson, for
years. He’s always answered my questions with vigor and has had no
trouble with arguing the issues with me, often at length. He could do
the same with his Democratic rival, prosecutor Teresa Lowry, if he
wanted to.
I
sat down this summer with Republican attorney Becky Harris, who’s
running against state Sen. Justin Jones, D-Las Vegas. In an interview,
she gave solid, direct answers to most of my questions and parried my
follow-ups with aplomb. She could do the same in a televised debate with
Jones. But her campaign is saying no.
I
don’t know Patricia Farley, the GOP nominee running in the open Senate
District 8 against Assemblywoman Marilyn Dondero Loop, D-Las Vegas, but I
assume she’s fully capable of holding her own as well.
But
the odds are, we won’t see any of these candidates face off before
Election Day. And that’s too bad. Debating one’s opponent is part of the
process of running for office, as routine as pounding lawn signs into
yards or knocking on doors to introduce yourself to voters.
But
this time around, the loquacious Roberson — who has enlivened many a
Senate floor session with his rhetorical gifts since getting elected in
2010 — is suddenly silent.
And
the two candidates he’s helping run for office are following his lead.
So the voters who are not lucky enough to answer the door when their
candidate comes knocking won’t ever hear them talk about issues in their
own words.
And
that’s too bad. Because I’d love to hear Roberson respond to Lowry’s
charge in a recent mailer that his vote against a background check bill
means he doesn’t mind if ex-felons and domestic abusers can quickly and
easily buy guns with no official record.
I’d
love to see Harris defend herself against charges that she was involved
with writing a restrictive anti-abortion law in Utah. Harris’ campaign
failed to make her available to answer that question, but she says in a
mail piece that Jones is lying and that she “supports the historic Roe
v. Wade decision” and that “she opposes criminalizing abortion.”
The
Jones campaign points to Harris’ work as a law clerk during the 1991
Utah Legislature, when she was a student at Brigham Young University’s
law school. That was the year the Utah Legislature approved a law that
contained a loophole the ACLU claimed could result in criminalizing
abortions. (The law was later amended.)
Of
course a law-school student working as a clerk could not be held
responsible for a law overseen by the Legislature’s lawyers and approved
by lawmakers. But the Jones campaign counters that a 1990 paper Harris
wrote in law school — in which she suggested the state was a better
guarantor of the rights of the fetus than were parents — is proof she
held anti-abortion views, at least back then.
Great
topic for a debate, even in libertarian Nevada, where a pro-choice
stance was enshrined by a voter referendum in state law. But no debate
will ever be had.
Roberson, Harris
and Farley are not the losers here; this strategy may even help them
win. Lowry, Jones and Dondero Loop aren’t losing anything, either.
They’re still sending mail and meeting (some of) the voters. And we in
the press aren’t losing, either; we’re still covering the race.
The
real losers are the voters who won’t get a chance to hear directly from
the people who claim to want to represent them. Those voters need to
carefully consider whether anybody — regardless of the office or the
political party — who won’t debate is worthy of a vote.
Steve
Sebelius is a Las Vegas Review-Journal political columnist who blogs at
SlashPolitics.com. Follow him on Twitter (@SteveSebelius) or reach him
at 702-387-5276 or ssebelius@reviewjournal.com.
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