by Dennis Myers
Marjorie Sill 1923-2016 “It’s a work of joy,” said Marjorie Sill of Reno. “There’s so much negative going on in the world right now. I love the positive.” It was 2014, and Sill was talking about wilderness areas in the state. But she might well have been talking about a myriad of other things. She loved the upbeat, once writing this newspaper to thank us for the Aug. 5, 2010 edition: “Thank you for including several positive articles. … So much of the news now is so negative and discouraging that one almost hates to read a paper or watch a news broadcast.” A resident of Nevada for more than half a century, Sill worked against coal-fired power plants and military land withdrawals. She and her scientist husband, Richard, worked on preservation of Pyramid Lake and Lake Tahoe. As a wilderness advocate, she watched Nevada’s wilderness areas go from 700,000 acres to more than two million. “We in Nevada are fortunate to have so much public land that is open to everyone,” she wrote earlier this year in the Reno GazetteJournal. “Some of this land is in special categories—national parks, national monuments, national wildlife refuges, designated wilderness— siLL but most of it is just for people who want to visit and enjoy our beautiful far-flung lands in whatever way they choose.” Her life will be marked by a gathering at 1 p.m. on Dec. 2 at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship.
Second thoughtS Some of our readers were shocked when we published a cover story in which University of Nevada, Reno journalism professor emeritus Jake Highton made the case for Donald Trump’s candidacy (“The Trump card,” RN&R, June 30). Highton wrote that Hillary Clinton was “beholden to corporate power” and “an unabashed hawk” while Trump wanted to stop corporations who get away with “tax murder” and would reduce U.S. military commitments. But as the campaign unfolded, Highton found that in the end he could not do it. After more and more reports piled up on Trump’s record, Highton wrote in his Sparks Tribune column this week that “contrary to my earlier advice in print, I can’t vote for Trump with a clear conscience. Trump has alienated far too many people and whole organizations. The last straw was criticizing women and groping them. I have long been pro-feminist, an ardent proponent of women’s rights. I supported the Equal Rights Amendment that was never ratified. So how will I vote for president today? ‘None of these candidates,’ an option we are fortunate to have in Nevada.” Incidentally, we also offered to publish a piece by a Republican who supported Clinton, but none ever came forward.
Behind the curve Nate Silver: “States where we could most use 1-2 more high quality polls: 1) Nevada 2) Michigan 3) Ohio 4) New Mexico 5) Minnesota.”
–Dennis Myers
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Two Clinton workers walked precincts in Sparks. Clinton teams crisscrossed the valley with door-to-door visits. PHOTO/DENNIS MYERS
Feet on the ground Ambivalence is the Democrats’ word of the week nevada democrats and liberals won sweeping victories in the 2016 election, but their pleasure at the wins was sharply reduced by the election of Donald Trump as president. It is the first time since 1976 that Nevada went against the national presidential result. Nevada voters gave Democrats easy wins for a U.S. Senate seat, three of four U.S. House seats, the Nevada Assembly majority, and eight of 11 Nevada Senate seats up for election. At press time, a ballot measure providing for background checks in some gun purchases was leading, though more than 500 precincts—many of them in the small counties—out of 1,883 were still unreported. Measures dealing with public utilities and taxation of medical devices held commanding leads. A measure to regulate legal marijuana which drew opposition from nearly everyone with an official title in the state and attracted $2 million in
opposition from billionaire Sheldon Adelson nevertheless prevailed with ease. Washoe sales tax and Clark gas tax increases passed with comfortable margins. In a closely watched and bitter Reno City Council race, incumbent Jenny Brekhus led her opponent by a comfortable six percent, overcoming opposition from developers and fellow city councilmembers. In one Washoe County Assembly race, former Democratic assemblymember Richard “Skip” Daly appeared to have reclaimed his seat from Republican incumbent Jill Dickman by three votes out of 31,355, or 0.009 percent of the total, possibly teeing up a recount. The resurgence of Democrats in the Nevada Legislature portends trouble for initiatives pursued by Republicans, who scored historic gains in the 2014 election. At the time, when the GOP at the 2015 legislative session enacted
some of its base’s favored programs such as school grants to parents who took their children out of public school, Democrats said they would reverse or repeal those initiatives when they returned to power. They will likely be closely watched now to see if they follow through. Clinton’s win by about two percent of the vote followed opinion surveys showing her and Trump nearly tied in the Silver State. Her ground game—getting out the vote— worked at top efficiency as volunteers walked door to door in droves. “I’ve had another Clinton worker in my apartment complex every day for a week,” said a Reno college instructor. Trump had little ground game, relying mostly on paid media, an innovation which Nevada political analyst Fred Lokken said could change the way U.S. politics is run. In Las Vegas, the Nevada AFL-CIO said “union volunteers and staff were knocking at a rate of nearly 15,000 doors per day” for a total of half a million households. In Reno, a coalition of several groups said they had knocked “on more than 29,000 doors in Washoe County this election cycle.” The Culinary Union said nationally, its “members knocked on over 338,000 doors and talked to over 74,000 voters. The North American hospitality workers union sent nearly 400 members from 25 union locals in 17 states to battleground states.” In Nevada, the number of households contacted by Culinary precinct workers was not known but 300 members walked precincts in Reno and Las Vegas over the past 10 weeks. A Politico survey found 17 percent of voters had been contacted by the Clinton campaign, only eight percent by the Trumpets. With 91 percent of normally Republican Washoe County’s votes counted, Clinton led by 1.2 percent. She led by more than 10 percent in Clark County, which contains most of the state population. One action by the Trump campaign against Las Vegas Latino precincts drew wide attention. A lawsuit filed in a Nevada district court asked for records from four early voting sites that reportedly stayed open the evening of Nov. 4 to allow everyone to vote be