State
Year
2026
Annotation (Primary)

There is no U.S. Senate race in Nevada.

Key Stat(s)

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.

Data Type
National View