SBLT - Sitenotice Banner-02.png

Greg Kidd (Nevada)

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Greg Kidd
Image of Greg Kidd

No Political Party

Candidate, U.S. House Nevada District 2

Elections and appointments
Next election

November 5, 2024

Education

Bachelor's

Brown University, 1981

Graduate

Harvard Kennedy School, 2002

Personal
Birthplace
New Haven, Conn.
Religion
Agnostic
Profession
Organizer
Contact

Greg Kidd (No Political Party) is running for election to the U.S. House to represent Nevada's 2nd Congressional District. He is on the ballot in the general election on November 5, 2024.[source]

Kidd completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2024. Click here to read the survey answers.

Biography

Greg Kidd was born in New Haven, Connecticut. He earned a bachelor's degree from Brown University in 1981, a graduate degree from Yale University in 1984, and a graduate degree from Harvard Kennedy School in 2002. His career experience includes working as an organizer.[1]

Elections

2024

See also: Nevada's 2nd Congressional District election, 2024

Nevada's 2nd Congressional District election, 2024 (June 11 Republican primary)

Incumbent Mark Amodei, Lynn Chapman, Javi Tachiquin, and Greg Kidd are running in the general election for U.S. House Nevada District 2 on November 5, 2024.

Candidate
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Mark_armodei.jpg
Mark Amodei (R)
Silhouette Placeholder Image.png
Lynn Chapman (Independent American Party)
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/JavierTrujilloProfile.jpg
Javi Tachiquin (L)
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/GregKidd24.jpeg
Greg Kidd (No Political Party) Candidate Connection

Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Republican primary election

Republican primary for U.S. House Nevada District 2

Incumbent Mark Amodei defeated Fred Simon Jr. in the Republican primary for U.S. House Nevada District 2 on June 11, 2024.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Mark_armodei.jpg
Mark Amodei
 
64.2
 
44,098
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Fred-Simon.PNG
Fred Simon Jr.
 
35.8
 
24,592

Total votes: 68,690
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Withdrawn or disqualified candidates

Endorsements

Ballotpedia is gathering information about candidate endorsements. To send us an endorsement, click here.

Campaign themes

2024

Ballotpedia survey responses

See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection

Candidate Connection

Greg Kidd completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey in 2024. The survey questions appear in bold and are followed by Kidd's responses. Candidates are asked three required questions for this survey, but they may answer additional optional questions as well.

Expand all | Collapse all

I was born in New Haven, CT. I left high school early to work as a nursery school aide. I later attended Brown University, earning a BA in History. I was an avid cyclist, qualifying for the US National Championships both as a junior and senior. I subsequently obtained an MBA from Yale University.

Next, I joined Booz Allen Hamilton, helping to bring modern banking services to underserved rural communities. I also worked with Outward Bound and the National Outdoor Leadership School.

In 1990, I founded a courier dispatch company called Dispatch Management Services Corporation. I grew it from a small bike messenger firm to be the world's largest on-demand dispatch company, with revenues of $250M, a 5,000+ workforce, and a 1998 Nasdaq IPO.

I received a degree in public policy from the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, and then joined the Federal Reserve as a senior analyst.

I made angel investments and advised companies including Twitter and Square, then served as Chief Risk Officer for Ripple Labs. At GlobaliD I helped manage risk with technology that eliminates the need for usernames and passwords, and reduces the dangers of identity theft. I have also supported litigation concerning public access to public data.

My campaign is self-funded and is dedicated to a Nevada which is "Free, Fair, and Wild." I'm looking to prepare Nevadans for the next 100 years through innovation, financial resilience, and widening opportunity.

  • I take our freedoms seriously, including a woman’s right to choose. That right should be enshrined in state and federal constitutional protection. In the absence of a Federal law, this civil right has been turned into a zoning issue. “You can get an abortion in this state but not that one.” This needs to be changed at the Federal level. People should be in charge of their own bodies. Not only do women deserve a right to high quality reproductive health services, but when I’m elected, I’ll work hard to attract more health care practitioners and I’ll expand the pool of exceptional medical professionals to provide the women of NV-02 the comprehensive health care they deserve.
  • I propose a Nevada Permanent Fund to realize the value of our mineral resources rather than letting them slip out the door to non-Nevada and non-US entities. Let’s invest in ourselves. The Alaska Permanent Fund has over $74 billion and has paid out about $1,600 annually per resident. Norway has done the same with its oil and gas – if a dollar is coming out of their country, they add 25 cents, which they invest. It has about double the population of Nevada – and last year it earned $213 billion from that fund. Nevada has $0 because our fund doesn’t exist. This is why we are in 50th place in educational achievement in our schools, and why we have chronic shortfalls in health, housing, roads, and other infrastructure in our 2nd District.
  • I propose to start an "Inclusion Bank" by and for the Latinos, Native Americans and other underserved groups for this 40% plurality in the state. Its loan portfolio should focus on economic development, supporting the Lithium Loop and small businesses, as well as providing non-usurious personal loans and non-predatory overdraft fees. I don't want Chase funding these initiatives; I want local banks who know the local players to provide funding. I want a non-ripoff bank right here in our state. This means supporting the Postal Banking Act, which allows local post offices to serve as local banks. I also support making Nevada a licensing hub for innovative financial services companies much as South Dakota has done.

The economic transformation that we can bring to Nevada is massive. Our district sits on what may be the largest lithium deposit in the world, worth about $1.5 trillion. That's more than the 18 billion barrels of oil that have been produced in Alaska since 1980. We need the physical and financial infrastructure to allow us to benefit from the entire lithium development lifecycle. We should also have a digital ID that can be on mobile phones and that is valid for state purposes (like drivers licenses, voter registration, and so on). ID systems must be inclusive, electronic, and easy. Everyone should have this as a birthright. Medical records will transfer easily from provider to provider; you’ll have proof that you voted only once.

Hamilton. He made our country financially reputable in the eyes of all other countries.

"Forrest Gump", "It's a Wonderful Life", and "Dave". Each is a study in what is the best, and the worst, of America.

Amoral Man, by Derek DelGaudio. It explores the morality of ethical cheating

(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction by the Rolling Stones

Coping with the overzealous U.S. regulatory bureaucracy

I don't think people should be penalized for being successful at running for office. I think the best way to enforce term limits is through the ballot box. What the Republicans have is: after three terms as a committee chair, you have to rotate out. I support term limits for certain key positions. It doesn't mean you should have to leave Congress, but you should have to give up your power and rotate through so that we don't end up with ossified leadership. I do agree that for something like the presidency, a two-term limit is good because it prevents authoritarian, dictatorial outcomes. I just think you have to trust the electorate to recognize when somebody's been in Congress too long, but it's really more of a party issue and how parties elevate people.

What happened to the cow that jumped over the barbed wire fence?
Udder disaster

Absolutely. Remember George Washingtons words on factions (parties). George Washington warned us what would happen if we put parties before people, district, state and nation. Let’s not choose a candidate who has personified George Washington’s biggest fear and warning. Vote for the true nonpartisan who will work from the middle to offset the toxic party polarization. Let’s get our parties working together to get things done.

Financial Services,; Foreign Affairs; Transportation and Infrastructure; Science, Space, and Technology; Small Business; Select Committee on the Strategic Competition Between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party

Note: Ballotpedia reserves the right to edit Candidate Connection survey responses. Any edits made by Ballotpedia will be clearly marked with [brackets] for the public. If the candidate disagrees with an edit, he or she may request the full removal of the survey response from Ballotpedia.org. Ballotpedia does not edit or correct typographical errors unless the candidate's campaign requests it.



Campaign website

Kidd's campaign website stated the following:

Reproductive Health

In the absence of a Federal law, this civil right has been turned into a zoning issue. “You can get an abortion in this state but not that one.” This needs to be changed at the Federal level. People should be in charge of their own bodies.

Not only do women deserve a right to high quality reproductive health services, but when I’m elected, I’ll work hard to attract more health care practitioners and I’ll expand the pool of exceptional medical professionals to provide the women of NV-02 the comprehensive health care they deserve.

I take our freedoms seriously, including a woman’s right to choose. That right should be enshrined in state and federal constitutional protections

Job Growth, Economic Development, and the Permanent Fund

I’m offering a comprehensive plan to bring better jobs to Nevada. We need to capture the benefit of our solar and mineral wealth from the sun to the socket and from the ground to the gigafactory. If we do, we’ll be the richest state in the nation per capita rather than an also-ran. We need to plan for, and to create, an ecosystem of lithium mining, processing, manufacturing, and recycling — all in our state!

So I am proposing a Nevada/District Permanent Fund to realize the value of our mineral resources rather than letting them slip out the door to non-Nevada and non-US entities. Let’s invest in ourselves. The Alaska Permanent Fund has over $74 billion and has paid out an average of approximately $1,600 annually per resident. Norway has done the same thing with its oil and gas – if a dollar is coming out of their country, they add 25 cents, which they invest. It has about double the population of Nevada – and last year it earned $213 billion from that fund. Nevada has $0 because our fund doesn’t yet exist. This is why we are in 50th place in educational achievement in our schools, and why we have chronic shortfalls in health, housing, roads, and other infrastructure in our 2nd District.

When I am elected, I will work with mining interests to dramatically expand our tax revenues to provide crucial funding so that every Nevadan can prosper.

Energy and the Lithium Loop

The greatest economic opportunity of our time is the race to build abundant low-cost energy to fuel the world’s next 100 years. Nevada is sitting on $1.5 trillion of lithium. When I am elected, I will catalyze Nevada’s lithium and geothermal power by putting our state at the center of the world’s energy transition. Nevada should be energy independent and a leader in energy generation, storage, and transmission for the country and the world. We already are number 1 in gold and silver for the continental US — but we can be the leader in energy too, including solar and geothermal, if we put our minds to it.

From a national security standpoint, our nation at risk if we have to send our lithium out of the country, only to bring it back in as usable material.

I support the Lithium Loop that will keep the processing, the manufacturing, and the recycling of existing lithium batteries into new batteries, here in our district. This will dramatically increase high-paying mining and manufacturing jobs and professional opportunities.

I am also an ardent environmentalist and a long-time supporter of outdoor education and wilderness training. I love Nevada’s wild and diverse ecosystem, from the breathtaking beauty of Lake Tahoe to our high desert and wide-open spaces. I will strike a balance between these two critically important considerations – the promise of energy and the importance of preserving our natural resources – while supporting this initiative.

Financial Services and the Inclusion Bank

I propose to start an "Inclusion Bank" by and for the Latinos, Native Americans and other underserved groups, so that there is a bank for this 40% plurality in the state. Part of its loan portfolio should focus on economic development, supporting the Lithium Loop and small businesses, as well as providing non-usurious personal loans and non-predatory overdraft fees.

Do you know what the Fed charges for wire transfers? Twenty-five cents. And if you've done a wire transfer, you probably pay $25. So that's a 10,000% markup. I don't want Chase funding it; I want local banks who know the local players to provide funding. I want a non-ripoff bank right here in our state.

This doesn’t mean building a lot of physical banks. It means supporting the Postal Banking Act, which allows local post offices to serve as local banks. ​ I also support making Nevada a licensing hub for innovative financial services companies (banks and fintechs) much as South Dakota has done.

A Digital ID

I support issuance of a digital ID that can be on mobile phones and that is considered valid for state purposes (like hunting passes, benefits payouts, drivers licenses, voting, and so on). I support a voter ID if you make it easy for folks to get hold of one. ID systems must be inclusive, electronic, and easy. Everyone should have this as a birthright. Medical records will transfer easily from provider to provider; you’ll have proof that you voted only once; you’ll be able to open a bank account, run a background check; you can show up at any local organization or event and pay with your phone – just like ApplePay and GooglePay, but applied to your civic life.

Nevada is behind other states. Let’s change that.

Taxes and Education

We should adjust our tax code when it falls most heavily on those least able to pay for the basics like food, gas, health, and education.

Education is funded from property taxes. Nevada has the most antiquated property taxes in the country. It's based on a depreciating value, not market value. So Nevada has the worst spending per student in the country. And the worst outcomes. My seven-term opponent is spending the least and is proud of it. That's called 'backing a system that's failing.'

Federal Grants

I want the University of Nevada Wolfpack to garner more dollars from the CHIPS Act and other Federal research grants as well as sports championships!

My seven-term opponent continues to risk American security and Nevada’s prosperity by putting party over Nevadans. In 2022, Congress passed the Chips and Science Act establishing funds for semiconductor development and scientific research. He voted against it, then requested $3 billion of it to build a high-speed rail connection between Las Vegas and southern California.

Nevada has greatly benefitted from this program. The Biden Administration designated the University of Nevada at Reno as a Tech Hub, providing millions and establishing the Nevada Lithium Batteries and Other Electric Vehicle Material Loop which aims to manufacture lithium ion batteries from beginning to end in Nevada. And then the American Rescue Act provided $1 billion in Nevada to help boost affordable housing, lower housing costs, and keep homeowners and renters in their homes. My seven-term opponent voted against that one, too.

You don’t get to vote against the money but then show up for the ribbon-cutting.

Immigration

We must end the chaos at our Southern border. We need immigration reform rather than grandstanding in the House. That means the right levels of legal immigration and guest workers in key sectors, along with stiff controls against illegal entry and employers that exploit the situation. The House should have passed the bipartisan immigration bill, instead of refusing to bring it to the floor.

I support comprehensive bipartisan immigration reform. As a nonpartisan member of Congress, I will act as a bridge builder between both parties to take decisive and comprehensive action that secures our borders and respects legal immigration and human rights. I support permanent protection for dreamers and those who received temporary protected status.

Standing Up To Strongmen

We need to stand up to bullies in the world from a position of strength rather than coddling dictators and encouraging the kind of appeasement that led to WWII. This means supporting funding for Ukraine. I don’t want penny-wise-pound-foolish isolationism which will mean we'll end up having to use our own troops to clean up messes that eventually threaten our own security and well-being. Let's learn from, rather than hide from, history.

Trade and Wages

I want us to be strong in fair trade so we have markets to sell to, and low prices, rather than vanity trade wars and costly tariffs. We can do this with top wages for our current work force —in the high-tech realms but also for jobs in all basic trades, services, and vocations.

Reaching Across the Aisle

When Washington party politics produce gridlock and empty theatrics, we need a candidate who will vote across party lines. George Washington warned us what would happen if we put parties before people, district, state and nation. Let’s not choose a candidate who has personified George Washington’s biggest fear and warning. Vote for the true nonpartisan who will work from the middle to offset the toxic party polarization. Let’s get our parties working together to get stuff done.[2]

—Greg Kidd's campaign website (2024)[3]

Campaign finance summary


Note: The finance data shown here comes from the disclosures required of candidates and parties. Depending on the election or state, this may represent only a portion of all the funds spent on their behalf. Satellite spending groups may or may not have expended funds related to the candidate or politician on whose page you are reading this disclaimer. Campaign finance data from elections may be incomplete. For elections to federal offices, complete data can be found at the FEC website. Click here for more on federal campaign finance law and here for more on state campaign finance law.


Greg Kidd campaign contribution history
YearOfficeStatusContributionsExpenditures
2024* U.S. House Nevada District 2On the Ballot general$1,500,261 $1,061,467
Grand total$1,500,261 $1,061,467
Sources: OpenSecretsFederal Elections Commission ***This product uses the openFEC API but is not endorsed or certified by the Federal Election Commission (FEC).
* Data from this year may not be complete

See also


External links

Footnotes

  1. Information submitted to Ballotpedia through the Candidate Connection survey on May 27, 2024
  2. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
  3. Greg Kidd's campaign website, "Where I stand," accessed September 26, 2024


Senators
Representatives
District 1
District 2
District 3
Susie Lee (D)
District 4
Democratic Party (5)
Republican Party (1)