The Washoe GOP’s Candidate List is Confusion

Washoe GOP’s Last-Minute Meeting Raises Questions About How Endorsements Are Decided and who gets to Participate and what the Washoe GOP is trying to do.

Michael Leonard

Mar 31, 2026

The Washoe GOP leadership wants you to believe its candidate list reflects fairness and transparency. It’s not. It’s about control. It’s about tribal loyalty.

Mike Clark and Troy Regas went to the Washoe GOP HQ to ask Chairman Bruce Parks why they are not on the ballot and why they were excluded from the presentation process.

Let’s Start With the Mayor’s Race

Here’s who the Washoe GOP put forward for Reno Mayor. On paper, that might look balanced. In reality, it’s confusing.

Kathleen Taylor is a sitting Reno City Councilmember. She has name recognition, a voter base, and a real path to victory. But what about the others?

Lorton is a repeat candidate with four losses and working on a 5th, and they got his name wrong. It’s George “Eddie” Lorton as he will tell you.

The other two are unknown names, Ross and Zink. Who has heard of them?

So the question becomes:

Why isn’t the party consolidating behind its strongest candidate, Kathleen Taylor?

Is Eddie Lorton Running to Win — or Just to Be Seen and get Attention?

Lorton is running the same campaign strategy that saw him lose 4 times before, but the GOP supports him because he is friends with Chairman Bruce Parks, people tell me.

Because This Is About Control

If the Washoe GOP endorsed Taylor outright, three things would happen:

  1. Donors would consolidate

  2. Activists would align

  3. The race would simplify

In other words, momentum would build. But momentum creates independence for Taylor. And independence threatens Washoe GOP Chairman Bruce Parks’s control.

Robert Beadles, the trackergate guy, and Eddie Lorton, the perennial candidate, stand together at the Washoe GOP Central Committee Meeting.

Link: Beadles reveals himself as ‘John Doe’ in GPS tracker case

A Divided Field Is Easier to Manage

By putting four names on the board, the local party accomplishes something more useful than picking a winner: It keeps everyone dependent.

  • No candidate becomes dominant.

  • No faction wins outright.

  • Everyone still needs party leadership.

That’s not indecision. That’s design.

The Pattern Repeats Across the Ballot

This isn’t just about the mayor’s race.

Look at the broader endorsement list:

  • Incumbents missing

  • Viable candidates excluded

  • Some races left blank

  • Others flooded with long-shot names

Even their own language gives it away:

“Candidates that are not recognized as Republicans by this Central Committee will not be on the ballot.” “Recognized” by whom?

That’s not a neutral standard. That’s a gate. It’s Bruce’s gate. And whoever controls the gate controls the outcome.

Link: Republican Candidate List for Endorsement

Notable Exceptions - County Commissioners

For Washoe District 2 Commissioner, they left out the incumbent, Mike Clark, who is popular with voters but not aligned with Washoe GOP Chairman Bruce Parks, according to what I have been told.

Link: https://commissionermikeclark.com/

🎙️ Mike Clark Speaks Out: What They’re Not Telling You About Washoe County Governance

Mike has been independent and outspoken, and apparently, Bruce Parks doesn’t like that, so he excludes Mike from the process.

For Washoe District 3 Commissioner, they left it blank and didn’t list Troy Regas, a popular figure in the community, about whom Bruce Parks has made unwarranted comments, I have heard.

Link: https://www.facebook.com/troy.regas/

Hell’s Angel, Business Owner and Candidate for Washoe District 3

Troy has a unique history and a large following due to his charitable work with the Toy Run, but Bruce Parks overlooks that and focuses on the controversy.

The Governor’s Race: Manufacturing Noise Around an Incumbent

If the mayor’s race shows hesitation, the governor’s race shows something else entirely: manufactured confusion.

Governor Joe Lombardo is the incumbent. He’s the only Republican in the race with statewide name recognition, an existing donor network, and a realistic path to reelection. Normally, this would be the easiest call on the ballot.

Instead, the Washoe GOP lists Lombardo alongside a crowded list of unknown candidates. Eight names. One viable candidate. That’s not neutrality. That’s noise.

Why Flood a Race That’s Already Decided?

There are two possible explanations:

1. Avoid taking a clear position

Even when the answer is obvious, endorsing forces alignment decisively. It draws lines. It creates winners and losers inside the party. Listing everyone avoids that confrontation.

2. Preserve internal leverage

As long as no one is fully consolidated behind Lombardo, local party leadership retains influence over messaging, access, and political favors. Clarity empowers the candidate. Confusion empowers the gatekeepers.

State District Partisan Offices - Nevada Senate

In what would be the most strange move, the Washoe GOP might support the eccentric radio personality Monica Jaye Stabbert, who is challenging the incumbent Senator Lisa Krasner. I can hardly wait to see what happens there.

Link: Lisa Krasner for Nevada

Congressional District 2: When Everyone Is Listed, No One Is Chosen

If the governor’s race is noise, Congressional District 2 is chaos. The Washoe GOP lists twelve candidates for a single seat. Ask yourself a simple question:

How many of these candidates actually have a path to winning?

This isn’t a Candidate list — It’s a Fog Machine

At this scale, the list stops being informative and starts becoming obstructive.

  • Voters can’t distinguish serious candidates from perennial ones

  • Donors can’t easily identify where to consolidate

  • Activists are left guessing about who actually matters

This isn’t helping Republicans win a congressional seat. It’s ensuring no one emerges cleanly from the pack.

Why Overcrowd the Field?

Because narrowing the field requires judgment, and judgment creates conflict.

By listing everyone, the party avoids making hard choices:

  • No candidate feels excluded

  • No faction feels slighted

  • No leadership decision can be blamed

But there’s a cost:

When you refuse to choose, you weaken everyone.

The Hidden Effect

A crowded field does more than confuse; it fragments.

  • Votes split

  • Momentum stalls

  • Strong candidates are forced to fight on multiple fronts

And in a race like this, fragmentation can decide everything.

When you flood a ballot with non-viable candidates, you:

  • Dilute voter focus

  • Undermine confidence in the process

  • Signal disorganization to the broader electorate

And most importantly:

You weaken your own incumbent by refusing to stand firmly behind them.

This invitation was posted on Facebook by Washoe GOP in the morning of the event.

What This Means for Reno Voters

If you’re expecting the local GOP to:

  • Identify the strongest candidate

  • Provide clear guidance

  • Build a winning coalition

It isn’t happening. What you’re seeing instead is a party managing itself, its factions, its loyalties, its internal disputes.

The Washoe GOP had a choice:

  • Unite behind strength

  • Or preserve internal control

They chose control.

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