Was she hiding because her top donor wants to put rural Nevada out of business?

When Catherine Cortez Masto introduced Hillary Clinton in Las Vegas today, she mentioned her rural Nevada tour. How’d that go? Funny you should ask.

In a devasting editorial, the Lahontan Valley News (LVN) savaged Cortez Masto and her handlers for their attempts to mislead and dodge media across the entire state of Nevada from Ely to Carson City. No small feat.

Said the LVN: “This attempt of having a controlled trip across the Silver State is a slap in the face to all Nevadans who have an interest in this year’s Senate race; furthermore, it is a slap to all media outlets in rural Nevada who try to do a good job in reporting the news.”

Why would Cortez Masto and her handlers do this? Were they trying to hide the fact that she met with so few Nevadans and in some counties apparently only took pictures? Could it be that when she’s asked tough questions by media, this, this and this tend to happen?

Most likely it is because Cortez Masto doesn’t want rural Nevadans to know that her top campaign donor, the League of Conservation Voters (LCV), which is spending $2 million dollars on her behalf, is leading the charge to use the sage grouse to end ranching, farming, mining and off-roading across Northern Nevada and 10 other western states.

Northern Nevada is ground zero for the bird’s habitat and rather than focus on the primary threats of wildland fire and invasive species, LCV has joined with other radical environmental group to emphasize that “Most of the species range has been grazed, plowed, sprayed, burned, drilled, developed, driven over and mined…”

“By meeting with only a handful of Democrats and dodging media, Catherine Cortez Masto did not answer any tough questions about why her top donor wants to put Nevada’s mining, ranching, farming and recreating families out of work? The goal of her biggest backer is to end the Western way of life in Northern Nevada and to unilaterally lock up even more land like the Rhode-Island sized Basin and Range monument in Lincoln and Nye counties,” said Heck spokesperson Brian Baluta. “After being exposed like this, Cortez Masto will probably go back to avoiding rural Nevada like she has most of this campaign.”

Read more about Cortez Masto’s avoidance of the public and press:

Lahontan Valley News Editorial: Cortez-Masto’s ill-fated trip to rural Nevada

In one fleeting moment of her U.S. Senate campaign in Nevada, Democrat Catherine Cortez-Masto’s team dropped the ball … and that was no earthquake we heard.

Cortez-Masto, who is running for the seat currently held by Harry Reid, made a swing through the Silver State last week, but very few knew about her campaign stops … particularly most media outlets.

Her campaign handlers didn’t want the press — and the public — to know she was stopping in communities such as Ely, Elko, Winnemucca and Fallon. It was only by a fluke that the Elko and Lovelock newspapers, for example, learned of her whirlwind stop. Cortez-Masto traveled across Nevada to kick off her Middle Class Tax Cut Tour. Her press team, hardly a neutral source for disseminating information, wrote most news accounts.

The Elko Daily Free Press learned of her stop — only by accident — when a member of the local Democratic Party notified the newspaper without the blessing of her staff. The Daily Free Press then initiated emails with the Cortez-Masto camp to obtain more details. According to the newspaper’s editor, the information provided to him had the wrong day so the Daily Free Press had to hunt down the correct information.

Likewise, the Humboldt Sun in Winnemucca never received notification of her stop as did the editor of the Ely Times. A member of the Lovelock Democrats — not anyone from Cortez-Masto’s team — notified that town’s newspaper of the event, and as a result, a reporter attended her greet and meet.

The LVN learned of her tour on Thursday, the same day of her stop in Fallon. The LVN made a few calls afterward and learned the Cortez-Masto camp told local Democrats, some of the finest people anyone would meet, they did not want the LVN to attend her event. Their answer to them was a resounding NO.

We find this disturbing that a candidate for the U.S. Senate would want to shun the press from her stops across Nevada. What is even more disturbing, her actions are also shutting the door on many Nevadans who may have wanted to hear her plan on the $1,000 tax cut.

The Cortez-Masto handlers, instead, told the local Democrats to make a few calls and invite “their Democratic friends”; as a result, the LVN learned only 16 attended the event. Churchill County has 2,401 registered Democrats, 2,385 of whom who had no idea of what was going on.

The LVN reached out the Cortez-Masto camp and received this message: “I’m sorry you missed the event, we tried reaching out to you but were unsuccessful.” In normal speak, no, we did not receive a press release and no one called or left a message.

Also, we were asked a question: “Are you not on our press list?” The LVN checked its emails for the past two months and not one email from her campaign was received.

Later the same day when the Cortez-Masto team headed to Carson City, a staff member gave the Nevada Appeal two hours notice to ask for a reporter to cover the candidate’s event. That, too, is unacceptable.

This attempt of having a controlled trip across the Silver State is a slap in the face to all Nevadans who have an interest in this year’s Senate race; furthermore, it is a slap to all media outlets in rural Nevada who try to do a good job in reporting the news.

If her staff wants to play games, then they reap what they sow in rural Nevada.

http://www.nevadaappeal.com/news/opinion/23219586-113/editorial-cortez-mastos-ill-fated-trip-to-rural-nevada

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