Is Eddie Lorton Running to Win — or Just to Be Seen and get Attention?
Is Eddie running a campaign designed to win… or a campaign designed to get attention?
Jan 16, 2026
Reno voters deserve competitive campaigns. Not just people on a ballot, but candidates who are actually trying win and to govern.
That may sound obvious, but it matters — because when someone repeatedly runs for office without building anything that resembles a real campaign, voters are left with a legitimate question:
Is this a campaign designed to win… or a campaign designed to get attention?
Eddie Lorton is now on his fifth run for Reno mayor. After four attempts, patterns matter. And the pattern here is not one of a campaign evolving, improving, or professionalizing. It is one of stasis.
Let’s look at what a serious modern campaign requires — and how Lorton’s operation compares.
What a Serious Campaign Looks Like in 2026
A credible mayoral campaign today is not mysterious. The basics are well-known:
A voter database (to identify and target supporters)
An email list (for message control and mobilization)
A text program (now one of the most effective GOTV tools)
A current policy platform (so voters know what you would do)
A professional staff or consultants (for compliance, messaging, field, and strategy)
Fundraising infrastructure
A field operation (canvassing, phone banking, turnout)
A coalition strategy (building relationships across groups and constituencies)
These are not luxuries. They are table stakes.
Without them, a campaign is not competitive — it is performative.
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What Lorton Has Done
Eddie Lorton has not done much. In his last run, he:
Put up yard signs — many of them personally.
Ran some Facebook video advertising.
Appeared at public events and spoke when given the chance.
Those are actions. They are visible. They signal that someone is “in the race.” But they are also the lightest-weight elements of campaigning. They generate awareness, not organization. Visibility, not votes. Presence, not turnout. They are the frosting — without the cake.
What Eddie’s Contributions and Expense Report Tells Us
Candidates have filed their 2025 Contributions and Expense Reports, and we can learn a lot from them. Eddie’s campaign is self-funded. Of the $163,329 he has on hand, $150,000 is his own, much of which he could take back after the race. Only $15,5126 is from donors. This is despite having had several fund-raising events.
The donors are 109 friends of Eddie’s, not organizations, prominent people, corporations, or PACs. They contributed an average of $140 and a mean of $50. Washoe GOP has not contributed to Eddie’s campaign. The Washoe GOP Chairman, Bruce Parks, personally gave $60, which is not a game-changer.
See, Contributions and Expense Report - Eddie Lorton
How His Campaign Falls Short
Eddie’s campaign is static. It does not have the look of an aggressive campaign that is in it to win. Despite putting up $150,000, Eddie isn’t spending it.
What remains notably absent:
No voter outreach infrastructure.
Eddie has only spent $1,695 on advertising. There is no ongoing email program, no text messaging, and no evidence of voter targeting or data-driven outreach.
No current platform.
There is no detailed, updated policy platform explaining what he would do as mayor or how he would do it. He just posts unintelligible gripes on Facebook.
No professional campaign operation. There is no evidence of paid staff, consultants, or a formal campaign structure.
No meaningful fundraising effort. There is no sign of sustained fundraising or donor network building, only a few events at friends’ houses that bring a few regulars.
An outdated web presence. His website is stale and does not reflect a current or organized campaign.
No coalition building. Over time, he has publicly clashed with multiple civic and political figures, limiting the partnerships necessary to govern — or even to win.
No implementation plans. When he proposes “reforms,” they are typically framed as grievances or aspirations rather than as policy proposals with pathways, timelines, or institutional mechanics.
This is not what a campaign that intends to win looks like.
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Why the “Four Runs” Matter
If this were Lorton’s first run, some of this could be chalked up to inexperience. If it were his second run, maybe it would be fair to call it a learning curve. But this is his fifth run.
By now, a candidate who intends to win would have built:
An expanding supporter base
A refined message
A professional team
A donor network
Institutional knowledge
Instead, we see the same pattern repeated: appearances, signs, videos, and symbolic presence — but not the infrastructure required to convert attention into votes. At a certain point, the lack of structure stops being a startup problem and becomes a strategic choice.
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A Campaign of Expression, Not Execution
Viewed this way, Lorton’s campaign begins to resemble something else:
Not a machine designed to win an election and govern a city, but a vehicle for personal expression, protest, and visibility.
This is different from asking voters to entrust you with a $1+ billion municipal organization, thousands of employees, and the future of a city.
Governing is operational. It requires building systems, managing complexity, negotiating coalitions, and executing policy — not just identifying problems or expressing dissatisfaction.
Campaigns should reflect that reality. This one does not.
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Why This Matters for Reno
Non-competitive campaigns are not harmless. They:
Crowd the ballot
Dilute serious challengers
Create noise without governance
Absorb attention without building solutions
Confuse voters about what is actually on offer
In a city facing real issues — housing, infrastructure, public safety, fiscal sustainability, redevelopment — Reno does not need symbolic campaigns. It requires candidates who are structurally capable of winning and governing.
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The Bottom Line
A serious campaign leaves a trail of infrastructure. A symbolic campaign leaves a trail of appearances. After four attempts, Eddie Lorton’s campaign is still looking like performance theater. And that is a fair — and necessary — thing to say out loud.