Friday, April 1, 2022

The Morning: Battleground Nevada

A look at a big 2022 Senate race.

Good morning. We look at Nevada, one of the states that will determine Senate control in this year's midterm elections.

Voters in Las Vegas on Election Day in 2020.Bridget Bennett for The New York Times

Family aspirations

Nevada, perhaps more than any other state, has showcased the potential for a more diverse America to move the country's politics to the left. Rising numbers of Asian American and Latino residents have helped Democrats win the state in the past four presidential elections. The party also holds both of Nevada's Senate seats.

Data for each group since 2000 reflects only one race or ethnicity. | Source: U.S. Census Bureau; Social Explorer

Now, however, Nevada highlights a more worrisome trend for Democrats: their struggles with working-class voters, including voters of color. Those struggles are threatening the Democratic dream of a lasting majority produced by demographic change.

"Senator Catherine Cortez Masto, a Nevada Democrat and the country's first Latina senator, is one of the party's most endangered incumbents," my colleagues Jennifer Medina and Reid Epstein write, in a profile of the campaign. The race is one of several competitive Senate campaigns this year for Democratic incumbents, with others in Arizona, Georgia and New Hampshire. Losing any would endanger Democrats' Senate control.

Some of the Democrats' challenges this year reflect the usual struggles of a president's party in the midterms, when opposition voters tend to be more energized. Yet Cortez Masto, who's a former Nevada attorney general and protégé of the late Senator Harry Reid, is also battling more enduring trends.

Nevada is a working-class state, where about one-quarter of adults have a four-year college degree — and Democrats have increasingly become the party of highly educated professionals. In 2020, this dynamic hurt the party among Latinos, who shifted modestly toward Donald Trump. Nearly 30 percent of Nevadans are Latino.

Moderate Democrats tend to blame progressives for these problems, and progressives tend to blame moderates. I think both sides have a point, and today's newsletter will use Nevada as a case study.

The left's point

"I don't know what the government does for us, even when they say they want to help," Margarita Mejia, 68, a retired hotel worker in Las Vegas, told The Times.

Mejia has often voted for Democrats, but she said that she sat out the election in 2020. When asked if she knew the name of the Nevada senator running for re-election this year — Cortez Masto — Mejia said no.

President Biden was elected on an agenda designed to combat this apathy. It promised tangible help for working-class families, with policies to lower the cost of prescription drugs, eyeglasses, dental care, pre-K and more. Polls show many of these policies, including the tax increases on the rich that would pay for the bill, are highly popular.

But a small number of Democratic centrists in the Senate have kept even a scaled-down plan from passing so far. The most prominent have been Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema. They describe the bill as too radical.

(Manchin and Sinema have also cited the risk of inflation, but the economist Larry Summers — who has warned loudly about inflation — explained on Ezra Klein's podcast why that fear is misplaced.)

In opposing the bill, the senators are embracing an elite version of centrism that most Americans reject, as Jonathan Chait of New York Magazine has noted. Manchin has blocked economic programs that would help many of his constituents, and Sinema is blocking taxes on the rich. Both appear to be blocking new corporate regulations.

Obviously, there are substantive arguments in favor of an economy in which the wealthy pay low taxes and corporations are lightly regulated. But most working-class voters do not buy those arguments. By adopting them, a small number of congressional Democrats have made Biden look weak, as The Times's Jamelle Bouie has written.

They have also left voters like Mejia unsure what Biden and the federal government have done for them. No wonder many see politics as disconnected from daily life.

The southwest valley of Las Vegas.Bridget Bennett for The New York Times

The center's point

To raise her profile with Latino voters, Cortez Masto recently released a Spanish-language biographical video, showing family photos set to uplifting music. The narrator starts by explaining that Cortez Masto's grandfather and father served in the military and ends by saying that she defends workers and supports small businesses "because they carry the aspirations of our families."

These themes — family, military service, economic underdogs — are a mix of populist and conservative. They are also a reminder of why the Democratic Party has turned off some voters, including Latinos, with an increasingly liberal message over the past decade. That liberal message tends to downplay the country's distinctiveness and highlight Americans' differences rather than their similarities.

"Hispanics appear to be increasingly turned off by progressive mottos and movements," Mike Madrid, a Republican consultant, wrote for Times Opinion.

After Latino voters shifted toward Republicans in 2020, Equis Research, a public-opinion firm focused on Latinos, spent months trying to understand why. Equis concluded that while most Latino voters did not particularly like Trump — and opposed some of his policies, like family separation and corporate tax cuts — they preferred his approach on several big issues.

Many were uncomfortable with some Democrats' openness to socialism (and were bombarded with Republican ads about it). Many agreed with Trump about the importance of border security. Some thought the Democrats ignored actual Latino concerns (as opposed to political activists' impression of those concerns).

Above all, many Latinos liked Trump's emphasis on reopening the economy, Equis found. Asked if they approved of his policy of "living without fear of Covid," 55 percent of Latinos said yes. Even now, with highly effective vaccines and treatments available, some liberal Democrats continue to favor indefinite Covid restrictions.

"I'm super Mexican, but just the way he wanted to keep jobs here, and the way he wanted to promote the economy, that was something admirable," said a 33-year-old Texas woman who voted for Obama, skipped the 2016 election and voted for Trump in 2020.

The common theme is that the same highly progressive agenda that's popular with college graduates and Democratic activists is souring many working-class Latinos on the party. Like many other demographic groups, Latinos are politically diverse, and most still supported Biden in 2020. But the decline in their support helps explain why the party fared worse than expected.

If that decline continues, it will mean trouble for Democrats, in Nevada and beyond. Cortez Masto's biographical ad suggests she understands the problems that both the political left and center are causing, whether or not she can solve them.

For more: Read the story by Jennifer and Reid, which notes that Cortez Masto's likely opponent oversaw Trump's effort in Nevada to overturn the 2020 election result.

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THE LATEST NEWS

State of the War
More on Ukraine
Ukrainian fighters in Irpin yesterday.Daniel Berehulak for The New York Times
Politics
Other Big Stories
Opinions

Biden should stop saying what the U.S. won't do to defend Ukraine, Steven Simon and Jonathan Stevenson argue.

Jaeah Lee on the rap song that helped sentence a 17-year-old to life in prison.

Your support makes our journalism possible.

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MORNING READS

A note to the New York Public Library with long-overdue books.An Rong Xu for The New York Times

No fee: People have returned tens of thousands of books to New York City libraries, and treasures are rolling in.

On the road: Pump your own gas? New Jerseyans would rather not.

Modern Love: When in pain, it helps to know someone who has experience treating it.

A Times classic: How pandemics end.

Advice from Wirecutter: Every home needs a basic tool kit.

Lives Lived: Nancy Milford wrote best-selling biographies of the Jazz Age women Zelda Fitzgerald and Edna St. Vincent Millay. Milford died at 84.

ARTS AND IDEAS

Olivia Rodrigo is nominated for seven Grammys.Chris Pizzello/Invision, via Associated Press

A Grammys primer

This Sunday is the 64th annual Grammy Awards, in Las Vegas. Here's what you need to know:

Who's nominated? The jazz pianist Jon Batiste earned the most nominations with 11, including album and record of the year. Doja Cat, Justin Bieber and H.E.R. have eight each.

Who's performing? The show is essentially one big concert, with Billie Eilish, Carrie Underwood, J Balvin and more taking the stage. Other highlights include a tribute to Stephen Sondheim.

Who's the artist to watch? Olivia Rodrigo, the 19-year-old singer-songwriter behind "Drivers License," is up for several awards. Our critics broke down the competition for record of the year — which pits Rodrigo against Abba and Tony Bennett, among others.

Anything else I should know? Kanye West was barred from performing because of his online behavior, though he is up for five awards. And producers have raced to put together a tribute to Taylor Hawkins, the drummer for Foo Fighters, who had been scheduled to perform before his death last week.

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PLAY, WATCH, EAT

What to Cook
David Malosh for The New York Times

The pastry qatayef is synonymous with Ramadan. This one has a creamy filling.

What to Watch

"Starstruck," on HBO Max, is a charming rom-com series that shows what comes after the fairy-tale ending.

Art

Preview the Whitney Biennial, which opens on April 6.

Late Night

The hosts discussed Putin.

Take the News Quiz
Now Time to Play

The pangram from yesterday's Spelling Bee was chiefly. Here is today's puzzle — or you can play online.

Here's today's Wordle. Here's today's Mini Crossword, and a clue: Not a single person (five letters).

If you're in the mood to play more, find all our games here.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. — David

P.S. Tara Parker-Pope, who founded The Times's Well section, is leaving to become an editor at The Washington Post.

"The Daily" is about Mariupol.

Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti, Ashley Wu and Sanam Yar contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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لقاء السفيرة ليندا توماس-غرينفيلد مع وزير الخارجية الأردني أيمن الصفدي

Department of State United States of America

ترجمة مقدمة من وزارة الخارجية الأمريكية



بعثة الولايات المتحدة لدى الأمم المتحدة
مكتب الصحافة والدبلوماسية العامة
31 آذار/مارس، 2022

البيان أدناه منسوب إلى المتحدثة الرسمية لبعثة الولايات المتحدة لدى الأمم المتحدة أوليفيا دالتون:

التقت سفيرة الولايات المتحدة لدى الأمم المتحدة ليندا توماس-غرينفيلد اليوم مع وزير الخارجية الأردني أيمن الصفدي. وأكدت السفيرة توماس-غرينفيلد مجددا على الشراكة الاستراتيجية للولايات المتحدة مع الأردن ونقلت اهتمام إدارة بايدن-هاريس بتوسيع تعاوننا الوثيق والمسبق. وناقشت السفيرة توماس-غرينفيلد الحاجة إلى مانحين إضافيين لتقديم مساهمات مالية لوكالة الأمم المتحدة لغوث وتشغيل اللاجئين الفلسطينيين (الأونروا) حتى تتمكن من الاستمرار في تقديم الخدمات الأساسية وكذلك شددت على دعم الولايات المتحدة لتنفيذ الأونروا للإصلاحات الضرورية. وتحدثت السفيرة عن رحلتها إلى مخيم الزعتري للاجئين في الأردن السنة الماضية وشددت على أهمية تجديد المهمة الإنسانية والمنقذة للأرواح لتفويض هذه السنة عبر الحدود إلى سوريا. كما شكرت السفيرة توماس-غرينفيلد الأردن على دعمه لأوكرانيا من خلال التصويت لصالح قرار الجمعية العامة الأسبوع الماضي بشأن المساعدات الإنسانية إلى أوكرانيا والتصويت في المحافل المتعددة الأطراف الأخرى وكذلك ناقشت مع الوزير الصفدي التطورات الأخيرة المتعلقة بغزو روسيا لأوكرانيا.

يمكنك الاطلاع على المحتوى الأصلي من خلال الرابط أدناه


https://usun.usmission.gov/ambassador-linda-thomas-greenfields-meeting-with-jordanian-foreign-minister-ayman-safadi/

هذه الترجمة هي خدمة مجانية مقدمة من وزارة الخارجية الأمريكية، مع الأخذ بالاعتبار أن النص الإنجليزي الأصلي هو النص الرسمي


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