Nevada state Sen. James Settelmeyer enters race for Mark Amodei's open congressional seat
Nevada state Sen. James Settelmeyer announced Friday that he will run for the U.S. House seat being vacated by Rep. Mark Amodei, making him the only candidate in the race with elected office experience at the state or national level. Amodei, the state's sole Republican in Congress, announced his retirement last month after 15 years representing northern Nevada's 2nd Congressional District.
Settelmeyer, the co-majority whip of the state Senate representing Churchill, Douglass, Lyon, and Storey counties, declared his candidacy after the filing window for candidates seeking office opened this week. He joins nine other Republicans vying for the seat in a June party primary. Four Democrats have also filed. The filing period closes March 13.
A Seat Republicans Cannot Afford to Lose
The math here is unforgiving. Republicans currently hold 218 seats in the House. Democrats hold 214. There are three vacancies, following the resignations of Reps. Milkie Sherrill of New Jersey and Marjorie Taylor-Greene of Georgia, along with the death of Rep. Doug LaMalfa of California. It takes 218 to secure a majority, which means Republicans are operating with a four-seat advantage and zero margin for carelessness.
Nevada's 2nd District, covering northern Nevada including Reno and Carson City, is not supposed to be a battlefield. Amodei first won the seat in 2011 and held it comfortably. But open seats change the calculus. Democrats are eyeing the district, and many recent polls show them with a slight advantage heading into the November 2026 elections nationally, as Just The News reports.
That makes the Republican primary more than a local contest. It's a stress test for the House majority itself.
Amodei Exits on His Terms
Amodei, who served in both the state Senate and Assembly before heading to Washington, framed his departure as a matter of timing, not frustration. In a February press release, he struck a tone of gratitude:
"Serving the people of Nevada has been the honor of my lifetime."
He pointed to his record as rooted in constituent engagement rather than Beltway posturing:
"Nobody is prouder of our Nevada congressional district than me. Thank you for the honor. Every achievement worth doing began with listening to Nevadans and fighting for our values."
And he made clear that the decision was deliberate, not reactive:
"I came to Congress to solve problems and to make sure our State and Nation have a strong voice in the federal policy and oversight processes. I look forward to finishing my term. After 15 years of service, I believe it is the right time for Nevada and myself to pass the torch."
There's something worth noting in that phrasing. "Pass the torch" implies he expects capable hands to receive it. Whether ten Republican primary candidates produce that result or fracture the field remains an open question.
A Crowded Primary and a Hungry Opposition
Ten Republicans competing for one seat is a double-edged sword. On one hand, it signals enthusiasm. On the other hand, it risks a bruising primary that leaves the eventual nominee battered and underfunded heading into a general election where Democrats smell opportunity.
Settelmeyer's advantage is simple: he has actually governed. State-level legislative experience, a whip title, and a district footprint that overlaps with the congressional map give him a credibility baseline that first-time candidates will have to overcome with energy, money, or both.
The general election campaign is expected to feature major debates over immigration policy, health care, and the economy. Those are issues where Republicans should hold a natural advantage in a district like this one, but only if the nominee emerges from the primary with a coherent message and enough resources to deliver it.
What's Actually at Stake
This race isn't just about Nevada. Every open Republican seat in 2026 is a test of whether the party can hold ground while governing. Retirements are normal. Losing seats you've held for over a decade because you couldn't manage a primary is not.
Republicans have 435 House seats to contest and a majority thin enough that three vacancies already make the margin feel precarious. The 2nd District should be a hold. Settelmeyer's entry gives the party a candidate with a governing record in a field that could otherwise devolve into a name-recognition lottery.
The filing window closes March 13. The primary comes in June. And somewhere between now and November, Republicans will find out whether passing the torch means keeping the flame alive or watching it flicker out.





