Nevada Republicans Pick Candidates to Face Democratic Incumbents in U.S. House
Full results for the four seats in the state's delegation to the U.S. House of Representatives.
The Democratic and Republican primaries occurred today in Nevada to select candidates for the November general election. That included the races for all four seats in the state’s delegation to the U.S. House of Representatives for regular two-year terms.
For the 118th Congress (which runs from January 2023 to January 2025), Nevada is served by 3 Democrats and 1 Republican in the U.S. House of Representatives. All four incumbents ran for re-nomination today. It only takes a plurality of the vote for a candidate to receive their party’s nomination.
For the 1st District:
Incumbent Dina Titus won the Democratic primary unopposed.
Mark Robertson won the Republican primary with 48.2% against Flemming Larsen with 39.1%, Jim Blockey with 5.1%, Michael Boris with 4.4%, and Evan Stone with 3.2%. 29,161 votes counted.
For the 2nd District:
No candidate qualified for the Democratic primary.
Incumbent Mark Amodei won the Republican primary with 64.4% against Fred Simon with 35.6%. 67,145 votes counted.
For the 3rd District:
Incumbent Susie Lee won the Democratic primary with 91.8% against RockAthena Brittain with 8.2%. 36,811 votes counted.
Drew Johnson won the Republican primary with 32.0% against Dan Schwartz with 22.3%, Elizabeth Helgelien with 20.6%, Martin O’Donnell with 20.4%, Steven Schiffman with 1.8%, Steve London with 1.5%, and Brian Nadell with 1.4%. 32,796 votes counted.
For the 4th District:
Incumbent Steven Horsford won the Democratic primary with 89.5% against Levy Shultz with 10.5%. 38,626 votes counted.
John Lee won the Republican primary with 48.4% against David Flippo with 45.1% and Bruce Frazey with 6.4%. 33,878 votes counted.
All 435 seats in the U.S. House of Representatives will be contested in the 2024 general election happening on Tuesday, November 5. The outcome will determine political control of the lower legislative chamber in the U.S. Congress.