Welcome to this weekโ€™s Reno News & Review.

Statistical analyst Nate Silverโ€™s website, FiveThirtyEight, lists a metric called the โ€œvoter power index,โ€ defined as โ€œthe relative likelihood that an individual voter in a state will determine the Electoral College winner.โ€ Until very recently, Nevada was listed second on that list. (At least once this year, it was at the very top.) The power ratings are adjusted based on recent polls, and Nevada fell a bitโ€”at press time, down to sixth, right behind Pennsylvaniaโ€”after the first presidential debate, the aftermath of which saw Clinton get a sizable bump in the polls.

But the presidential race is still very competitive in the state, just as it has been in other recent presidential elections. Nevada is a hotly contested swing state. Thatโ€™s why we got a lot of visits from the nominees.

And hereโ€™s something Northern Nevadans need to remember: Clark County is likely to go blue, and the rural counties will likely all go red. So Washoe County will likely determine which presidential candidate will get the stateโ€™s electoral college votes.

At this point, itโ€™s hard to imagine a voter who might still be undecided. It seems like the two sides are fairly well entrenchedโ€”the outcome will likely come down to turnout.

But there are also those undecided voters who are torn between voting for Clinton and voting for a third-party candidate. I can perhaps understand the appeal of voting for Gary Johnson or Jill Stein, who wonโ€™t even be on the ballot here, but you get either of them away from the core issues of their respective parties and ask them difficult questions about foreign policy, for example, and they often appear out of their depth.

And as the swing county in a swing state, we Washoe County residents have real voting power. And, just in case you never read Spider-Man comics, with great power comes great responsibility.

Brad Bynum

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