- Nevada Democratic Party
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Nevada Democratic Party Chairman Roberta Lange Senate leader Steven Horsford Assembly leader John Oceguera Headquarters 1210 S. Valley View Road, Suite 114
Las Vegas, NV 89102Ideology American Liberalism
Progressivism
Center-leftNational affiliation Democratic Party Official colors Blue Seats in the Upper House 11 / 21Seats in the Lower House 26 / 42Website NvDems.com Politics of the United States
Political parties
ElectionsThe Nevada Democratic Party is the state affiliate of the United States Democratic Party in Nevada. Its chair is Roberta Lange, and its Executive Director is Zach Zaragoza [1].
Contents
History[2]
The state of Nevada has had many political parties over the years. The total number of political parties that Nevada has had is 22. Only six of these parties lasted up until the 2004 elections. These six parties are the Democrat, Republican, Independent American, Green, Natural Law and Libertarian. 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. The offices won by the Democrats were governor, lieutenant governor, state treasurer and attorney general.
Towards the beginning of the 1900s, a political party was formed that brought many Republicans and Democrats together from the western states. This political party was known as the Silver Party 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.
Symbol
The symbol of the Democratic Party is the donkey. The animal became associated with the party in 1928 during Andrew Jackson's presidential campaign. Jackson was nicknamed a jackass by his opponents. He then decided that the image of a donkey would be a good symbol for his campaign posters, as it represented an animal that was strong-willed. Thomas Nast used the donkey as a Democratic symbol in newspaper cartoons and from then on the donkey was the symbol for the Democratic Party.
Convention platform [3]
The current platform for the Nevada Democratic Party was ratified in 2010. The topics that are covered are standard to the Democratic Party. Armed service/veterans, civil rights, education, elections and government, environment and energy, foreign policy, jobs and the economy and working Nevadans are the areas that are discussed.
Current Democratic officeholders
The Nevada Democratic Party controls four of the state's six statewide offices, a majority in the Nevada Senate and a majority in the Nevada Assembly. Democrats also hold one of the state's U.S. Senate seats and one of the state's three U.S. House seats.
Members of Congress
U.S. Senate
U.S. House of Representatives
Statewide offices
- Secretary of State: Ross Miller
- State Treasurer: Kate Marshall
- Attorney General: Catherine Cortez Masto
- Controller: Kim Wallin
Executive Board[4]
- Chair: Roberta Lange
- 1st Vice-Chair: James Brown
- 2nd Vice-Chair: Theresa Navarro
- Secretary: Marla Turner
- Treasurer: Jan Churchill
Nevada Democratic National Committee Members[5]
- Senator Steven Horsford
- Executive Director of Emerge Nevada Erin Bilbray-Kohn
- President of the Ramirez Group Andres Ramirez
County chairs (ex officio)[6]
- Carson City- Marty McGarry
- Churchill County- Nyla Howell
- Clark County- Chris Miller
- Douglas County- Cindy Trigg
- Elko County- Wendy Ispisua
- Esmeralda County - Vacant
- Eureka County- Vacant
- Lander County - Vacant
- Humboldt County - K.C. Harrison
- Lincoln County- Ron Hibble
- Lyon County- Claudia Conlon
- Mineral County- Tad Williams
- Nye County- Janice Bearss
- Pershing County- Roger Mancebo
- Storey County- George Foster
- Washoe County- Dorie Guy
- White Pine County- Marion J. (Sam) Hanson
Controversy[7] [8]
The Nevada Democratic Party was sued by Righthaven LLC for copyright infringement on July 9, 2010. The allegations were that the Nevada Democratic Party had posted stories from the Las Vegas Review-Journal on the party’s website without permission. Righthaven LLC is a partner of the Review-Journal that sues website owners that post unauthorized stories from the Las Vegas Review-Journal. Righthaven LLC wanted between $75,000 and $150,000 in damages and an order for the Democrat’s to stop infringing on the copyright. On September 14, 2010 the two parties reached a settlement.
References
History. [9]
History. [10]
- ^ http://www.nvdems.com/pages/about-us
- ^ http://nsla.nevadaculture.org/dmdocuments/NVPoliticalHistory2006.pdf
- ^ http://www.nvdems.com/index.php/posts/entry/blog/2010-ratified-convention-platform
- ^ http://www.nvdems.com/images/nsdp%20e-board%20list%20september%202008.pdf
- ^ http://www.gwu.edu/~action/2008/delegates/nvdems051708pr.html
- ^ http://www.nvdems.com/images/nsdp%20e-board%20list%20september%202008.pdf
- ^ http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2010/jul/09/nevada-democrats-face-r-j-copyright-lawsuit/
- ^ http://www.vegasinc.com/news/2010/oct/02/nevada-democratic-party-settles-copyright-lawsuit/
- ^ Hal K. Rothman. The Making of Modern Nevada. Fall 2010. September 8, 2011.
- ^ Joseph N. Crowley. Democrats, Delegates, and Politics in Nevada: A Grassroots Chronicle of 1972. 1976. October 12, 2011.
External links
Categories:- Democratic Party (United States) by state
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