Paul Laxalt, a conservative Republican known as President Ronald Reagan’s “first friend,” counted Democrats among his friends and worked both sides of the aisle to forge legislation in Congress. He reflected the relatively moderate politics of the day, and saw life in more grays and far fewer blacks and whites.
His campaign signs featured the slogan “One of Us.’’ The son of a Basque shepherd, he was raised in Carson City, and exposed to people of all political stripes at his mother’s boarding house. He attended public schools and developed a relationship with Reagan when they were governors of neighboring states in the late 1960s.
Adam Laxalt was raised in Alexandria, Virginia, and attended a private college preparatory school there. He began living full-time in Nevada in 2011 and was elected to a term as state attorney general in 2014. Compared with his grandfather, he’s an ultra-conservative who sees the world in black and white.
Among other actions, he joined Republican attorneys general in other states by signing Nevada onto lawsuits supporting abortion restrictions and by opposing a multi-state investigation into ExxonMobile’s alleged role in downplaying climate change.
Paul Laxalt was no fan of corporations and had an ability to disagree without being disagreeable. Though they split on many policy issues, Democrat Harry Reid viewed him as a man of utmost integrity in the Senate. “If Ronald Reagan needed honest advice, he went to Paul,’’ Reid told the New York Times.
Conversely, Adam Laxalt was one of the earliest and strongest supporters of The Big Lie _ that the 2020 election was stolen from President Donald Trump. As co-chair of Trump’s Nevada campaign, he led efforts to overturn Joe Biden’s 2020 victory in the state with groundless lawsuits and bogus claims of voter fraud debunked by Nevada’s top election official, a fellow Republican. He thinks those who participated in the Jan. 6 riots are patriots.
Adam Laxalt and Trump have plumbed new depths in American politics with lies that have fueled an attack on democracy and rising fears of political violence. They should not be rewarded with Nevada’s Senate seat, but they will win if Democrats are no-shows in the election like for the 2014 mid-terms when Laxalt narrowly captured the attorney general’s race.
Adam Laxalt says he supports Christian values, but should heed what the Bible says matters most to God: love, character and honesty. He should consider the seven “things’’ in Proverbs 6: 16-19 that God finds “detestable’’: “haughty eyes, a lying tongue, hands that shed innocent blood, a heart that devises wicked schemes, feet that are quick to rush into evil, a false witness who pours out lies and a man who stirs up dissension among brothers.’’
The passage offers wise guidance to voters in Nevada’s Senate race.
_ Martin Griffith was a political and legislative reporter for the Reno Gazette-Journal from 1979 to 1984, and an Associated Press newsman in Reno from 1985 to 2015.
The opinions expressed above are not necessarily those of the Sierra Nevada Ally. Our newsroom remains entirely independent of our opinion page. Published opinions further public conversation to fulfill our civic responsibility to challenge authority, act independently of corporate or political influence, and invite dissent.
Founded in 2020, the Sierra Nevada Ally is a self-reliant 501c3 nonprofit publication with no paywall, a member of the Institute for Nonprofit News, offering unique, differentiated reporting, factual news, and explanatory journalism on the environment, conservation, and public policy, while giving voice to writers, filmmakers, visual artists, and performers. We rely on the generosity of our readers and aligned partners.
NewsMatch 2022 is a fundraising initiative sponsored by The Institute for Nonprofit News (INN). We are a full member of INN, one of only two such publishers in Nevada. Between November 1, 2022, and December 31, 2022, your gift will be matched dollar-for-dollar.
As an added bonus, we were also recently selected to receive additional partner matching funds to add to the 1:1 match provided by NewsMatch 2022. The Loud Hound Partner Fund awarded us these additional 1:1 matching funds to cover important civic, environmental, cultural, and political issues that impact our citizens’ lives.
Join us and triple your support of the Sierra Nevada with a gift today.
We are on a journey of steady growth and innovation. In 2023, we will expand our newsroom and launch new creative partnerships to amplify our residents’ voices and surface community members’ stories, questions, and concerns. Our goal – provide information relevant to our readers’ needs.
Support for The Sierra Nevada Ally with a gift anytime between November 1st and December 31st. Donate here.
On behalf of all of us at the Sierra Nevada Ally, thank you for your generous support.