Republicans are fighting to block a Democratic supermajority in the Legislature. What would happen if they’re unsuccessful?
Politics and Government
Gov. Joe Lombardo will investigate the Clark County School District’s budget in the wake of budget woes that could lead to faculty cuts and overcrowded classrooms.
Going into November’s election, neither Kamala Harris nor Donald Trump has a decisive edge with the public on the economy, a new poll found.
Residents of a neighborhood near Lone Mountain allege that the city of Las Vegas violated open meeting laws around the time it approved the building of a LDS temple, according to a lawsuit.
Many Las Vegas resorts have been feeling the pinch of a shortage of armed security guards recently because of a sudden change in federal regulations, officials said.
Conservationists are bashing the latest move to open more federal land in Nevada to oil exploration, this time in the Ruby Mountains of Elko County.
Tony Podesta had cause to ask Tony Podesta just what happened to him. He stepped down from the firm Monday after it was caught up in Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian efforts to interfere in the 2016 election.
Wednesday marks the first day of open enrollment on the individual health insurance marketplaces. It will last 45 days instead of the usual 90.
President Donald Trump rallied with business leaders at the White House Tuesday as Republicans and Democrats on Capitol Hill took shots at each other on the eve of a tax reform bill in the House.
A bipartisan bill that would provide a framework to restrict and regulate “bump stocks” was filed Tuesday — a day before the one month anniversary of the Las Vegas Strip shooting massacre.
Nevada Democrat urges Homeland Security Secretary-nominee Kirstjen Nielsen to erase proposed budget cuts to the Urban Area Security Initiative grants in light of the Las Vegas mass shooting.
Major tech companies plan to tell Congress Tuesday that they have found additional evidence of Russian activity on their services surrounding the 2016 U.S. election.
A group associated with state Sen. Michael Roberson filed paperwork Monday for an amendment to prevent sanctuary cities in Nevada to be added to the 2018 ballot.
Facebook Inc said on Monday that Russia-based operatives published about 80,000 posts on the social network over a two-year period in an effort to sway U.S. politics and that about 126 million Americans may have seen the posts during that time.
Earl Mitchell has lived in Nevada since 1975. He served more than 20 years in the Navy and Navy Reserve and worked 22 years as a Henderson police officer before retiring in 2008.