What Lombardo’s Endorsement of Kathleen Taylor Reveals About GOP Power in Reno
The race just changed for Kathleen Taylor and Eddie Lorton. One advanced and the other fell way back. It's also a setback for Bruce Parks and the Washoe GOP.
May 02, 2026
Governor Joe Lombardo’s endorsement of Reno City Councilmember Kathleen Taylor for Mayor is more than a routine political gesture. It marks a visible realignment between Nevada’s Republican establishment and the faction currently steering the Washoe County GOP under Chairman Bruce Parks.
It also represents a significant setback for Eddie Lorton, who had publicly aligned himself with the Parks faction and expected the governor’s support.
The endorsement lands in a municipal environment where party labels are technically nonpartisan but politically meaningful. In that context, a sitting governor choosing a candidate for Reno Mayor signals where the governing wing of the Republican Party sees credibility, stability, and viability.
A Realignment Moment in Reno’s Mayoral Race
With one endorsement, the quiet tension inside Republican politics in Washoe County snapped into the open.
When Joe Lombardo backed Kathleen Taylor for mayor, he didn’t just choose a candidate; he chose a side.
Because that decision directly contradicts the earlier backing of Eddie Lorton by the Washoe County Republican Party and its chairman, Bruce Parks.
Two Republican Parties, One Race
What’s now visible is something most voters never see:
There are effectively two Republican power centers operating at once.
1. The Establishment (Lombardo’s lane)
Focus: electability, stability, coalition-building
Tools: donors, consultants, institutional credibility
Strategy: win the office, govern predictably
2. The Parks faction (local party apparatus)
Focus: ideological alignment, grassroots control
Tools: endorsements, activists, party structure
Strategy: define the party’s identity
These two lanes usually overlap. In this race, they collide.
Two Christmas Parties Reveal a Washoe GOP Party Split
Not only is the Washoe GOP split from the State arm of the party, but they are also split internally, as I wrote in this article in December.
Why Lombardo Chose Taylor
The governor’s endorsement is not sentimental: it is strategic.
Backing Taylor signals:
A preference for a sitting officeholder
A bet on governance continuity
A desire for a mayor aligned with state-level priorities
It distances the administration from the Parks‑Beadles wing of the local party, which has been associated with internal conflict and ideological litmus tests.
It signals that the statewide Republican leadership is not deferring to the Washoe GOP’s internal endorsement process.
It signals that you have to win, or nothing else matters
In short, Lombardo is building a governing coalition, not a protest movement. And in doing so, he bypassed Eddie Lorton entirely.
The Republican Women's Organizations Don't Enforce Their Rules
The Republican Women’s organizations are run as little fiefdoms that are aligned with Bruce Parks and Eddie Lorton.
The Blow to Eddie Lorton
For Eddie Lorton, this is more than a missed endorsement: it is a structural setback.
He entered the race with:
Local Washoe GOP backing
A base of outsiders looking for change
Alignment with the Park-Beadles faction
An expectation of broader Republican alignment
That expectation is now broken. The consequences:
1. Loss of institutional pathway - Lorton is no longer the candidate who can unify Republican support. He is now the candidate that the state leadership declined.
2. Donor hesitation - Money follows signals, and the strongest signal just moved away from Lorton.
3. Narrative shift - Opponents don’t need to attack; they can point to the divide. Even his own party doesn’t agree with him. That is a quiet but powerful line.
The Washoe GOP’s Candidate List is Confusion
The Washoe GOP’s candidate selection process was confusing and exclusionary. I called out their endorsement of Lorton over Taylor at the time.
The Risk to the Washoe GOP
This isn’t just Lorton’s problem. By backing him early, the Washoe County Republican Party, under Bruce Parks and controlled by Beadles, made a bet. Now that the bet is being tested publicly.
When Lorton loses the primary, which is likely:
The loss becomes a judgment on the local party
Their endorsement power weakens
Their influence on candidates and donors declines
The chance of a leadership shakeup increases
They are no longer neutral referees. They are invested, participants.
The Field Reorders Itself
Against this backdrop, the rest of the field sharpens:
Kathleen Taylor → establishment consolidation
Devon Reese → competing for the same governing lane
Kate Marshall → challenger with statewide experience
Eddie Lorton → outsider, fringe-faction-backed
Taylor has moved up to the lead position while Lorton has all but dropped out.
Why Does the Washoe GOP Try to Silence Independent Journalism?
Bruce Parks doesn’t understand the function of independent journalism and thinks that he can own it.
What This Really Means
This endorsement didn’t just shift momentum; it changed the game.
It exposed:
A focus on Taylor’s incumbency and credibility
A fracture inside the GOP that is widening
A hierarchy of credibility among candidates
And an end to Eddie Lorton’s campaign
Taylor has moved up, but the race is no longer just about who wins as Reno’s Mayor.
It’s about which Republican faction, state-level establishment or local party apparatus, holds power going forward, and it might be the end of Eddie Lorton, Bruce Parks, and Robert Beadles.
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