LAS VEGAS — Nevada Democratic U.S. Sen. Jacky Rosen and Republican challenger Sam Brown painted each other as extremists, but fireworks were few during their only face-to-face debate in a presidential battleground state where the Nov. 5 election could determine control of both the White House and the Senate.
The election pits Rosen, a first-term senator seen as a political consensus-builder, against Brown, a retired Army captain who bears scars from battlefield injuries and is endorsed by former President Donald Trump.
Brown repeatedly aligned himself with Trump on domestic and foreign policy while calling Rosen a political insider and ''elitist,'' singling out her stands on immigration reform.
''This is again what you would expect out of an elitist from D.C. whose own neighborhood has more security than our border with a gate and security guards,'' Brown said during the live televised debate.
Rosen said she is proud of her record in Washington and defended her support for President Joe Biden's policies intended to ease inflation and make housing more affordable, as well as her efforts to work across the aisle with Republicans.
''My opponent is so stubborn and so extreme he often uses the words 'not negotiable' and 'no middle ground,''' Rosen said. ''I am proud to be one of the most bipartisan, effective and independent senators."
The hourlong appearance hosted by KLAS-TV in Las Vegas was aired live in both English and Spanish. Abortion, inflation and immigration are among the leading issues and voters have been inundated with ads for both candidates.
In answer to questions about the Middle East, both said Thursday night they opposed the president's threat to suspend aid to Israel if Israel does not allow more humanitarian aid to reach Gaza within the next month.