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Reid said he would eliminate multiple state departments and reduce other departments' funding. For example, he has called for a 33 percent cut $150 million in the state's Corrections Department. A recent poll showed Sandoval favored over Reid, 51 percent to 37 percent. Reid has tried to close the gap by portraying Sandoval as an inexperienced, empty suit beholden to lobbyists. "If he doesn't have the strength to stand up for them, how will he ever stand up for you?" Reid said. Reid has also sought to link Sandoval to Gov. Jim Gibbons, Nevada's unpopular governor who lost to Sandoval in the Republican primary. Sandoval, meanwhile, has dismissed Reid as a tax-happy Democrat who has made empty promises to protect public education. "If you are telling everybody what they want to hear you are lying to somebody," Sandoval said.
[Associated
Press;
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