Nevada Democratic Party

The Nevada State Democratic Party is the affiliate of the Democratic Party in the U.S. state of Nevada. It has been chaired by Daniele Monroe-Moreno since March 2023.

Nevada State Democratic Party
ChairpersonDaniele Monroe-Moreno
Senate Majority LeaderNicole Cannizzaro
Speaker of the Nevada AssemblySteve Yeager
Headquarters2320 Paseo del Prado
Las Vegas, Nevada
Membership (2022)Increase709,541[1]
IdeologyModern liberalism
National affiliationDemocratic Party
ColorsBlue
Statewide Executive Offices
3 / 6
Nevada Senate
13 / 21
Nevada Assembly
28 / 42
U.S. Senate
2 / 2
U.S. House of Representatives
3 / 4
Website
www.nvdems.com

It is currently the state's favored party, controlling all but one of Nevada's four U.S. House seats, both U.S. Senate seats, three out of six statewide offices, and both houses of the state legislature. However, the party does not control the statewide offices of the governorship, lieutenant governorship, and controllership, which are currently held by Republicans Joe Lombardo, Stavros Anthony, and Andy Matthews, respectively.

History

The state of Nevada has had 22 political parties over the years.[2] Only six of these parties lasted up until the 2004 elections. The Democratic Party and the Republican Party remain as the top two in the state.

With the help of Abraham Lincoln in 1864, Nevada became the 36th state in America. Lincoln's Republican influence was considerable among the Nevada state citizens during his presidency. The first two general elections in Nevada, held in 1864 and 1867, were dominated by the Republican Party. In 1871, the Democratic Party started to gain momentum and won four of the six constitutional offices: governor, lieutenant governor, state treasurer and attorney general.

Towards the beginning of the 1900s, the Silver Party was formed, bringing many Republicans and Democrats together from the western states. The party was so-named because of the federal government's shortage of silver coins in 1873. The Silver Party played a prominent role in Nevada's politics in the 1894 and 1898 elections. The Silver Party later formed the Silver Democratic Party. The Silver Democratic Party was prominent in Nevada until the election of 1906. After the election of 1906, the Democratic and Republican parties became the two primary parties in Nevada.

During the Great Depression of 1929, the two primary parties split many constitutional and federal offices. After the Great Depression, the citizens of Nevada preferred the Democratic Party over the Republican Party. Democrats were well received by Nevada and won most of the statewide and federal races from 1932 until 1995.

March 2021 DSA Takeover

In March 2021, The Intercept reported on a five-year intra-party conflict in the Nevada Democratic Party, waged between supporters of former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and members of the party's progressive wing since the 2016 Democratic presidential primaries. Following sweeping gains of leadership positions by progressive candidates backed by the local Democratic Socialists of America chapter on March 6, the entire Nevada Democratic Party staff resigned, taking severance for themselves and diverting the rest of the party's coffers to the reelection of Senator Catherine Cortez Masto.[3] On March 4, 2023, a "unity" slate of candidates were elected, ending the DSA takeover.[4]

Platform and structure

The current platform for the party was ratified in 2020. The topics that are covered include the military, veterans, healthcare, civil rights, education, elections and government, voting rights, environment and energy, foreign policy, jobs and the economy, and working Nevadans.[5]

A priority for Nevada Democrats in the 2010s and 2020s has been increasing the minimum wage. In 2019, Democratic governor Steve Sisolak signed a bill passed by a Democratic legislature to raise Nevada's minimum wage to $12 an hour.[6][7][8][9][10]

The party has a formal set of by-laws that form the party structure. These by-laws contain nine articles with many sections in each article.[11]

Executive Board

[12]

  • Chair: Daniele Monroe-Moreno
  • 1st Vice-Chair: Daniel Corena
  • 2nd Vice-Chair: Francisco Morales
  • Secretary: Travis Brock
  • Treasurer: Leilani Hinyard

National Committee Representatives

[13]

  • National Committeeman: Alex Goff
  • National Committeewoman: Allison Stephens

Current Democratic officeholders

The Nevada Democratic Party controls three of the state's six statewide offices, a majority in the Nevada Senate, and a majority in the Nevada Assembly. Democrats also hold both of the state's U.S. Senate seats and three of the state's four U.S. House of Representatives seats.

Members of Congress

U.S. Senate

Democrats have controlled both of Nevada's seats in the U.S. Senate since 2018:

U.S. House of Representatives

Out of the four seats Nevada is apportioned in the U.S. House of Representatives, three are held by Democrats:

DistrictMemberPhoto
1stDina Titus
3rdSusie Lee
4thSteven Horsford

Statewide offices

Democrats control three of the six elected statewide offices:

State legislature

County chairs

Election results

Presidential

Nevada Democratic Party presidential election results
ElectionPresidential TicketVotesVote %Electoral votesResult
1864George B. McClellan/George H. Pendleton6,59440.16%
0 / 2
Lost
1868Horatio Seymour/Francis Preston Blair Jr.5,21844.61%
0 / 3
Lost
1872Horace Greeley/Benjamin G. Brown (Liberal Republican)6,23642.57%
0 / 3
Lost
1876Samuel J. Tilden/Thomas A. Hendricks9,30847.27%
0 / 3
Lost
1880Winfield S. Hancock/William H. English9,61352.40%
3 / 3
Lost
1884Grover Cleveland/Thomas A. Hendricks5,57843.59%
0 / 3
Won
1888Grover Cleveland/Allen G. Thurman5,14941.94%
0 / 3
Lost
1892Grover Cleveland/Adlai E. Stevenson7146.56%
0 / 3
Won
1896William Jennings Bryan/Arthur Sewall8,37681.21%
3 / 3
Lost
1900William Jennings Bryan/Adlai E. Stevenson6,34762.25%
3 / 3
Lost
1904Alton B. Parker/Henry G. Davis3,98232.87%
0 / 3
Lost
1908William Jennings Bryan/John W. Kern11,21245.71%
3 / 3
Lost
1912Woodrow Wilson/Thomas R. Marshall7,98639.70%
3 / 3
Won
1916Woodrow Wilson/Thomas R. Marshall17,77653.36%
3 / 3
Won
1920James M. Cox/Franklin D. Roosevelt9,85136.22%
0 / 3
Lost
1924John W. Davis/Charles W. Bryan5,90921.95%
0 / 3
Lost
1928Al Smith/Joseph T. Robinson14,09043.46%
0 / 3
Lost
1932Franklin D. Roosevelt/John N. Garner28,75669.41%
3 / 3
Won
1936Franklin D. Roosevelt/John N. Garner31,92572.81%
3 / 3
Won
1940Franklin D. Roosevelt/Henry A. Wallace31,94560.08%
3 / 3
Won
1944Franklin D. Roosevelt/Harry S. Truman29,62354.62%
3 / 3
Won
1948Harry S. Truman/Alben W. Barkley31,29150.37%
3 / 3
Won
1952Adlai Stevenson/John Sparkman31,68838.55%
0 / 3
Lost
1956Adlai Stevenson/Estes Kefauver40,64042.03%
0 / 3
Lost
1960John F. Kennedy/Lyndon B. Johnson54,88051.16%
3 / 3
Won
1964Lyndon B. Johnson/Hubert Humphrey79,33958.58%
3 / 3
Won
1968Hubert Humphrey/Edmund Muskie60,59839.29%
0 / 3
Lost
1972George McGovern/Sargent Shriver66,01636.32%
0 / 3
Lost
1976Jimmy Carter/Walter Mondale92,47945.81%
0 / 3
Won
1980Jimmy Carter/Walter Mondale66,66626.89%
0 / 3
Lost
1984Walter Mondale/Geraldine Ferraro91,65531.97%
0 / 4
Lost
1988Michael Dukakis/Lloyd Bentsen132,73837.92%
0 / 4
Lost
1992Bill Clinton/Al Gore189,14837.36%
4 / 4
Won
1996Bill Clinton/Al Gore203,97443.93%
4 / 4
Won
2000Al Gore/Joe Lieberman279,97845.98%
0 / 4
Lost
2004John Kerry/John Edwards397,19047.88%
0 / 5
Lost
2008Barack Obama/Joe Biden533,73655.15%
5 / 5
Won
2012Barack Obama/Joe Biden531,37352.36%
6 / 6
Won
2016Hillary Clinton/Tim Kaine539,26047.92%
6 / 6
Lost
2020Joe Biden/Kamala Harris703,48650.06%
6 / 6
Won

Gubernatorial

Nevada Democratic Party gubernatorial election results
ElectionGubernatorial candidateVotesVote %Result
1864
1870Lewis R. BradleyWon Y
1874
1878
1882Jewett W. Adams7,77054.32%Won Y
1886Jewett W. Adams5,86947.59%Lost N
1890Theodore Winters5,79146.73%Lost N
1894Theodore Winters6786.47%Lost N
1898George Russell2,05720.55%Lost N
1902Endorsed John Sparks (Silver)N/AN/ADid not run
1906Endorsed John Sparks (Silver)N/AN/ADid not run
1910Denver S. Dickerson8,79842.66%Lost N
1914Emmet D. Boyle9,62344.65%Won Y
1918Emmet D. Boyle12,87552.08%Won Y
1922James G. Scrugham15,43753.88%Won Y
1926James G. Scrugham14,52147.00%Lost N
1930Charles L. Richards16,19246.75%Lost N
1934Richard Kirman Sr.23,08853.94%Won Y
1938Edward P. Carville28,52861.86%Won Y
1942Edward P. Carville24,50560.26%Won Y
1946Vail Pittman28,65557.42%Won Y
1950Vail Pittman26,16442.36%Lost N
1954Vail Pittman36,79746.90%Lost N
1958Grant Sawyer50,86459.92%Won Y
1962Grant Sawyer64,78466.84%Won Y
1966Grant Sawyer65,87047.84%Lost N
1970Mike O'Callaghan70,69748.10%Won Y
1974Mike O'Callaghan114,11467.38%Won Y
1978Robert E. Rose76,36139.68%Lost N
1982Richard Bryan128,13253.30%Won Y
1986Richard Bryan187,26871.92%Won Y
1990Bob Miller207,87864.81%Won Y
1994Bob Miller200,02652.68%Won Y
1998Jan Laverty Jones182,28142.04%Lost N
2002Joe Neal110,93522.01%Lost N
2006Dina Titus255,68443.92%Lost N
2010Rory Reid298,17141.61%Lost N
2014Bob Goodman130,72223.88%Lost N
2018Steve Sisolak480,00749.39%Won Y
2022Steve Sisolak481,99147.03%Lost N

References