There is no U.S. Senate race in Nevada.
There is no U.S. Senate race in Nevada. Nevada will elect four members to its U.S. House delegation.
The open seat NV-2 is rated by The Cook Political Report as “Solid Republican.” David Flippo (R) leads the money race with nearly $1.5M. He is primarily self-financing his campaign. Four women, three Democrats and one Republican, are running for the seat: Teresa Benitez-Thompson (D), Kathy Durham (D), Morgan Wadsworth (D), and Andrea Lowe (R). Lowe has reported less than $1,000. About one-quarter of Thompson’s and Durham’s funds come from small contributions. Of the women candidates, Teresa Benitez-Thompson has raised the most with $57,120.
Representative Dina Titus (NV-1) and Susie Lee (NV-3) are running for reelection. Both are Democrats. Titus has raised $498,952 and Lee over $2.2M. Small contributions do not play a substantial role in their campaign receipts. Only 9% of Lee’s contributions are from small contributions with 8% for Titus.
This statistic is the average total amount raised to date from individuals (including self-financing).
Democratic women have the highest average proportion of funds from small contributions (50%) compared with the other candidate gender and party groups of U.S. House candidates from Nevada. Carrie Buck, a Republican woman challenging Titus, has the highest proportion of small contributions (41%) of all the women running for the U.S. House from Nevada.
This statistic is the average amount from self-financing as a proportion of total raised (from individuals including the candidate) by candidate subgroup. Primary challengers to incumbents are excluded.
This statistic is the average amount of contributions $200 or less as a proportion of total raised (excluding self-financed contributions) by candidate subgroup.