The Clark County Republican Party will resume a July 20 meeting that ended in chaos and without electing new leadership on Aug. 17.
- Home
- >> News
- >> Politics and Government
Clark County
The Clark County Republican Party is in flux as members fight over whether an existing slate of officers may still conduct party meetings.
Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo said Thursday he is considering a run for governor of Nevada.
A district judge on Monday denied a Clark County Commission candidate’s attempt to block the panel from reconsidering its decision to hold a new election in District C.
Clark County has warned voters of unsolicited calls that give “inaccurate information” about whether their votes were counted.
The Nevada Republican Party held a news conference Tuesday to announce another lawsuit centered around the GOP’s continued election fraud allegations.
With the 2020 general election stretching into the weekend without a declared victor, courts in Nevada and beyond may yet play a role in deciding the country’s next president.
A judge ruled Monday that Clark County must turn over some public records to the Nevada Republican Party and President Donald Trump’s campaign, but denied or delayed the lion’s share of Republican requests for information on mail balloting and signature verification.
Incomplete voting totals show that the final day of the two-week early voting period — traditionally the busiest — saw the highest turnout of voters.
A Carson City judge Friday denied to halt ballot counting in Clark County in response to a lawsuit filed by Republicans that contends the county has violated state election law.
More than 17,800 voters descended on the more than 30 early voting sites throughout Clark County as of 3 p.m. Saturday.
More than 17,800 people cast their ballots on the first day of early voting in Clark County as of Saturday afternoon, officials said.
More than 223,000 mailed ballots were returned to Clark County as undeliverable mail during the June primary, according to a new report and confirmed by the Review-Journal.
Three former members of the Clark County Democratic Party’s executive board say personal reasons, not an ideological struggle with the group’s progressive majority, drove their decisions to resign in recent weeks.
Several key leaders within the Clark County Democratic Party have resigned as progressive leadership within both the county and state parties has swelled in recent months.