- Las Vegas tourism fell 7.5% in 2025 — the steepest non-pandemic annual drop since records began in 1970 — with Canadian visitors down 17.4% as tariff tensions and the Iran war pushed foreign tourists away and left service workers with fewer tips to tax-exempt.
- Gas prices have risen more than $1.50 since the Iran war began; average tax refunds were $337 higher this year due to the tip and overtime deductions, but many workers report the extra cash was swallowed by higher costs for groceries, healthcare, housing, and fuel.
- Only 27% of respondents in a March Bipartisan Policy Center poll said the new tax cuts helped them, while 77% of voters say Trump’s policies have increased their cost of living, per a CNN/SSRS poll from late April and early May.
- Nevada Republicans, including retiring Rep. Mark Amodei, are acknowledging that “national economic headwinds” are complicating midterm prospects, with the state’s three competitive House seats now harder to flip despite the tax breaks.
What Happened?
Nevada voters headed to the polls Tuesday in state primary elections, with the economic backdrop significantly cloudier than Republicans had hoped when they made no-tax-on-tips the centerpiece of their 2026 midterm pitch. The policy — inspired by a Las Vegas cocktail waitress who pitched Trump during his 2024 campaign — helped him become the first Republican to carry Nevada in two decades. But a year into his second term, the economic math isn’t adding up for many workers. Las Vegas tourism dropped 7.5% in 2025, the worst non-pandemic year since 1970. Gas is above $6 per gallon. While the average tax refund rose $337 thanks to tip and overtime deductions, workers report those gains have been offset by higher prices across the board. The Culinary Workers Union is calling it a “Trump Slump.”
Why It Matters?
Nevada is a bellwether for Trump’s economic message in 2026. The state has three competitive House seats, and Democrats are targeting all of them — particularly Nevada’s 3rd Congressional District, where Trump-backed video game composer Marty O’Donnell is challenging incumbent Susie Lee. If Republican strategists can’t make the no-tax-on-tips argument land in the state where the policy was literally invented, that’s a warning sign for their national midterm message. Consumer sentiment hit a new low in May per the University of Michigan, and more than 77% of voters say Trump’s policies have increased their cost of living — a number that suggests the policy benefits of the tax bill are being overwhelmed by the macro costs of the Iran war and tariffs.
What’s Next?
Tuesday’s primary results will set up the November general election matchups. The most closely watched race is NV-3, where O’Donnell faces a primary before taking on Lee in the fall. Republican strategist Robert Uithoven said O’Donnell will need “a nearly flawless campaign” and improvement in national economic trends to win. Democrats are running explicitly on cost-of-living frustrations, with Rep. Lee framing the race as a referendum on tourism and consumer spending rather than tax rates. The results will be an early read on whether the economic damage from the Iran war is costing Republicans in purple states they need to hold their House majority.
Source: Bloomberg













