The governor's race in a vital swing state is set to provide a major test for the GOP's ability to ditch President Donald Trump and his toxic agenda, while still being able to retain his voters, according to a new report on Politico.
On Thursday, Politico released a report digging into the hotly contested, neck-and-neck gubernatorial race in Nevada, a state that swung between Democrats and Republicans across the last several presidential races and played a key role in deciding each race. Republican Joe Lombardo is seeking reelection, up against a Democratic challenger in the state's Attorney General Aaron Ford. As the report explained, proximity to Trump has proven a major hindrance for the incumbent.
"Nevada Gov. Joe Lombardo is trying to run a reelection campaign befitting the neon-drenched, sagebrush-pocked desert he has for five decades called home," the report detailed. "President Donald Trump is making that hard."
Politico continued: "The Republican governor started the year with a sevenfold fundraising advantage, double-digit net favorability ratings and the tailwinds of a swing state the GOP presidential candidate carried for the first time in two decades. Five months later, he finds himself in a neck-and-neck race with Democrat Aaron Ford, the state’s attorney general, yoked to a highly unpopular president, a wobbling economy and a Middle Eastern war that has sent gas prices in the state soaring from $3.50 to $5 a gallon, among the highest in the nation."
Lombardo's campaign is primed to provide "one of the earliest and most instructive tests of whether Republicans in battleground states can separate themselves from Trump’s political fortunes without alienating his coalition," a test that will prove essential for the GOP's ability to compete in the 2026 midterms and beyond, while Trump's agenda proves more and more unpopular with voters. Democrats are making a big played to link Lombardo to Trump's disastrous economic performance, a message all the more impactful given how badly Nevada has suffered during his second term.
"Stung by tariffs that have chilled travel from Canada and Mexico and an immigration crackdown that has made international visitors wary of coming to the United States, Las Vegas saw 7.5 percent fewer guests last year — the worst non-pandemic decline since the city started tracking in 1970 — a heavy blow to a state economy still so reliant on tourism," Politico explaiend. "Nevada’s unemployment rate remains among the highest in the nation, and the hospitality workers who form the backbone of the Las Vegas economy are seeing reduced hours, smaller tips and layoffs."
"Is your life better today than it was two years ago?” Ford asked in an interview. “The answer is going to be absolutely no.”
"Just last month, Lombardo said that Trump was doing a fantastic job as the war with Iran has skyrocketed our gas prices,” Nevada State Democratic Party Chair Daniele Monroe-Moreno told the outlet in an interview. “Talking to folks in the Tahoe area, there’s a gentleman, I mean, he paid $7 a gallon for gas. What that does to your budget, your limited budget — and if you’re a hospitality worker whose hours have been limited, now you’re bringing home less money but you’re paying more for groceries and now gas."
The Republican Party now views the state as a key "bellwether" for testing the durability of the GOP coalition in a political world without Trump, given its unique "mix of working class Latino voters, transient independents and tourism-dependent economy."
“Nevada is the perfect petri dish, it’s the perfect focus group that’s going to be a gauge. It’s going to be a bellwether state the way that Ohio used to be for 100 years,” GOP strategist Mike Madrid explained. “This is the new Ohio for this next chapter in American political history.”