The Race Changed: What Benitez-Thompson’s Entry Means for Greg Kidd
The primary race for Nevada’s 2nd District shifts from an open lane to a defining contest between establishment experience and outsider reform for Democrat contenders.
Feb 25, 2026
For weeks, Greg Kidd occupied a unique position in the race for Nevada’s 2nd Congressional District — a wealthy outsider with reform credentials, a recognizable name from his 2024 run, and the ability to define himself before a Democratic contender emerged. That changed last week.
Former Assembly Majority Leader Teresa Benitez-Thompson announced she is entering the race following Rep. Mark Amodei’s retirement, instantly transforming the Democratic primary from an open field into a contest between two different political models.
The implications for Kidd are significant. The terrain he was preparing to run on just shifted beneath his feet.
The End of the Open Lane
Before Benitez-Thompson entered, Kidd had a relatively clear path to positioning himself as the most prominent Democrat-aligned candidate, able to appeal to independents and moderates. His 2024 performance — earning more than a third of the vote as a nonpartisan — gave him credibility as a viable contender in a historically Republican district.
Now, he faces a candidate with deep institutional roots, strong name recognition in Reno, and a long record in state government, and better alignment with the Democratic political machine.
Benitez-Thompson is not a symbolic entrant. She is a former Assembly Majority Leader, a longtime legislator, and currently chief of staff to Attorney General Aaron Ford. She brings built-in networks across labor, education, and Democratic political infrastructure. That shifts the primary from a question of visibility to one of contrast.
Nevada ethics panel advances complaint over Aaron Ford’s ‘luxury’ trips
The Ford connection might have taken a major hit for Benitez-Thompson, judging from this article by Mark Robison at the RGJ.
Two Different Political Approaches
The emerging Democratic primary is shaping up as a contest between two archetypes:
Benitez-Thompson represents the institutional Democrat — experienced, coalition-oriented, and rooted in traditional political networks.
Kidd represents the outsider reform candidate — wealthy, policy-focused, and positioning himself as less tied to party structures.
This contrast will define the race.
Voters will not simply be choosing between two personalities. They will choose between two theories on how Democrats can compete in a district rated R+7 that has never elected a Democrat.
Greg Kidd Is Running Again: His plans for Nevada are not what you heard.
Where Benitez-Thompson Is Strong
Benitez-Thompson enters with clear advantages. She has long-standing ties to organized labor and education advocates, strong recognition among Democratic voters in Washoe County, and a legislative record she can point to on issues like school funding and social services.
Her messaging emphasizes cost of living, safety net programs, and bipartisan cooperation — themes designed to unify the Democratic coalition while appealing to moderates.
She also brings a compelling personal narrative as a social worker, a mother, and a longtime community figure. These strengths make her a natural consolidation candidate for the party’s traditional base.
Kidd’s Strategic Problem
Kidd can no longer run as the default Democrat-leaning candidate with the broadest appeal. That lane now belongs to Benitez-Thompson, whose legislative record and bipartisan messaging are designed to consolidate mainstream Democratic voters.
Benitez-Thompson’s entry forces Kidd to sharpen his identity.
If Kidd runs as a generic Democrat, he risks being overshadowed by a candidate with deeper relationships and a longer record of public service. If he leans too far into outsider rhetoric, he risks alienating the Democratic base he needs to win a primary.
This is the central tension of his campaign going forward.
Greg Kidd has already responded to the need to build his image and reach out to rural voters by taking a trip to Elko and attending the Cowboy Poetry event. Notice the western jacket, shirt, and fancy bolo tie. All he needs now is a pair of boots and some Wranglers.
Where Kidd Must Adapt
Kidd’s path forward requires differentiation, not imitation.
He will need to lean more heavily into themes that make his campaign distinctive — economic innovation, independence from party structures, and a future-focused vision. His strength lies in appealing to voters who are skeptical of career politicians and interested in new approaches to economic growth and governance.
Expect Kidd to emphasize his outsider status, his experience in technology and finance, and his ability to compete in rural areas where Democrats historically struggle.
The more Kidd defines the race as a choice between new thinking and traditional politics, the clearer his lane becomes. But it’s a fine line, and he might have to play both sides to some degree because of the politics in rural areas.
Kidd is now sporting a restored vintage 1972 Ford Bronco instead of the EV Bronco that he had in his first ads. I give him a like for that. Old Broncos are cool.
The Electability Argument Will Dominate
The central debate between the two campaigns will likely revolve around electability.
Benitez-Thompson will argue that her experience and bipartisan record make her the strongest candidate to build a broad coalition.
Kidd will argue that an outsider with independent appeal is better positioned to break through in a district that has never elected a Democrat.
This argument will resonate because it speaks directly to the structural reality of NV-02: Democrats cannot win with base turnout alone. They must expand the map.
Greg Kidd and the Choice Between Managing Decline and Building Prosperity in Reno
The Rural Question
Both candidates are already signaling a focus on rural communities, which dominate the district geographically and politically.
Benitez-Thompson is emphasizing outreach and representation for rural counties that feel overlooked.
Kidd, however, may have an opportunity to compete more aggressively in these areas if he can position himself as less ideological and more economically focused.
Whoever can reduce the Republican margin outside Washoe County will have the strongest general election path.
A Primary Changes the Timeline
With a credible institutional candidate now in the race, the Democratic primary will no longer be a quiet prelude to the general election.
It will be a defining contest that shapes messaging, fundraising, and coalition building over the next year.
For Kidd, this means accelerating efforts to define his narrative before it is defined for him. Early positioning will matter.
Even with a competitive primary, the district’s structural math remains challenging for Democrats. The Cook Political Report rates the seat R+7, and rural turnout has historically created a Republican firewall.
But open seats create opportunity, and both candidates clearly believe 2026 offers the best chance in decades for a Democratic breakthrough.
Greg Kidd’s Failed Run for Congress: A $9 Million Lesson in How Not to Run a Campaign
The Bottom Line
Teresa Benitez-Thompson’s entry did not just add another name to the ballot. It transformed the Democratic primary into a contest over strategy, identity, and competing visions for winning a difficult district.
For Greg Kidd, the path forward is still viable — but it is narrower and requires sharper definition. He must now persuade voters not only that he can win, but that his approach offers something fundamentally different.
The race is no longer about whether Democrats will field a serious candidate. It is about which kind of candidate they believe can change the outcome.
Support independent journalism in Reno. Click to donate to: Mike’s Reno Report.