David Damore In The News

Fusion
The map of the presidential election has taken on familiar shades over the last few decades. Red states tend to stay red. Blue states tend to stay blue. There are just a few states, the swing states—states such as Nevada, Colorado, and Florida—where the outcome isn’t obvious. Those are the true battleground states, and so they get the most attention from presidential candidates.
Wall Street Journal
Key swing states such as Nevada, North Carolina and Florida have seen some of the weakest income growth in the country since the last non-incumbent presidential contest in 2008, new census figures show.
Las Vegas Sun
On June 16, 2015, two months after Hillary Clinton declared her candidacy for the U.S. presidency, Donald Trump did the same.
Washington Examiner
Donald Trump is in deep trouble with Hispanic voters. They're on course to vote in equal or greater numbers for Hillary Clinton this November than they did for President Obama four years ago.
Las Vegas Review Journal
Latino voters in Nevada overwhelmingly favor Democrat Hillary Clinton over Republican Donald Trump for president, but they are less familiar with the major party candidates running to replace Harry Reid in the U.S. Senate and haven’t solidified their voting plans, according to a new poll.
Las Vegas Sun
Nevada airwaves have become an all-out warzone for the state's Senate race, as the contest becomes increasingly important in the battle for control of the upper house and as conservative scions who've shunned Donald Trump, such as the billionaire Koch brothers, unleash their resources lower on the ticket.
Learning English
Donald Trump is making America’s immigration policy the top issue of his presidential campaign.
Las Vegas Sun
“The policemen, the firemen, the construction workers, the lathers, the sheetrock workers, the electricians, the plumbers. That’s where my support is,” Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump said this year at a New Hampshire town hall. “Every poll shows it.”