LAS VEGAS — In their only competitive state Senate debate, Sen. Jacky Rosen (D-Nev.) and Republican candidate Sam Brown traded blows over abortion and investments, but found common ground on flying saucers and little greens. A man.
The two faced off Thursday in a debate broadcast nationally in English and Spanish on KLAS-TV in Las Vegas.
Rosen, who is seeking a second term in the Senate, and Brown, a former Army captain who was seriously injured in Afghanistan, said the government should investigate “unidentified anomalous phenomena” (UAPs, more commonly referred to as UFOs). I believe.
“I think it's important that there be an independent investigation,” Rosen said, adding that the Senate should oversee the investigation.
Brown agreed that the case was worth investigating, but then moved on to talk about other hidden items.
“When we're talking about secrets, the kind of secret that I think Nevadans deserve to know is why Sen. Rosen violated the stock laws multiple times as someone with a $15 million trust. I mean, is it? [and] Their net worth increased by 61% while most of us suffered from rising prices and reduced take-home pay. We’re worried about paying our rent and putting food on the table,” Brown said.
During the controversial hour-long debate, Mr. Rosen repeatedly labeled Mr. Brown a right-wing extremist, and Mr. Brown, a military veteran turned entrepreneur, called the state's young senator an out-of-touch elitist. I had decided that it was.
“Sam would have voted against all of this investment that we're bringing billions of dollars to the state of Nevada,” Rosen said.
Rosen also said the key to stopping food prices from rising is to focus on “price gouging” and stop the merger of the Kroger and Albertsons grocery chains, which would limit shoppers' choices. He said it would be.
Brown said gas station prices are more important in combating inflation. “A lot of that can be influenced by our country's energy policy,” he says.
Brown said Rosen is an “elite from Washington, D.C., who deserves gates and guards in their neighborhoods and safer neighborhoods than their borders, and our borders deserve that. Our communities deserve it.” “We so deserve it,” he said, criticizing Mr. Rosen's support for a lackluster border protection law.

Rosen attacked Brown as an “anti-abortion extremist” who would enact a nationwide abortion ban. Brown said he opposes such a bill.
“I would not vote for a national ban,” Brown said. “I want to share this from my wife's experience. Unfortunately, she fell into an unplanned pregnancy under traumatic circumstances that ultimately ended in an abortion. It was very difficult for her. It was traumatic.”
Mr. Rosen has a 5-point lead in some polls, but Brown's campaign believes he is closing the gap in a race that threatens to tip the balance in the Senate.

