Gov. Joe Lombardo and Democrats have shown they can compromise, but also that they can face off in acrimony and veto messages.
Opinion Columns
It’s long past time to do away with a Senate tradition that allows a single senator to thwart a president’s judicial nomination.
A losing Republican candidate says voter fraud cost him a close race for the Clark County Commission, but not in the way you’d think.
Ads targeting both Gov. Steve Sisolak and Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo take some liberties with the truth.
Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo launched his campaign for the Republican nomination for governor last week, but may struggle with how to handle the question of Donald Trump.
Dan “Big Dan” Rodimer clearly wants nothing more than to be in Congress. Which state he represents in Washington is not as important as being there.
North Las Vegas Constable Robert Eliason continues to work in a job state law says he’s not qualified to hold, and which the Supreme Court says he legally forfeited years ago.
Former Nuclear Regulatory Commission Chairman Gregory Jaczko says cheaper, safer renewable energy technology such as solar and wind power is a better alternative than continuing to work to make nuclear power plants safer.
Of all the jobs available to disgraced former Las Vegas Councilman and admitted felon Ricki Barlow, City Hall lobbyist should not be one of them.
CARSON CITY – Everyone’s heard the stories of people wrongfully imprisoned after being coerced into a false confession, spending years or even decades behind bars.
CARSON CITY — Gov. Brian Sandoval this evening vetoed a bill that sought to make some information about public-employee retirees secret, ostensibly to thwart identity theft.
CARSON CITY — With just three days to go until the constitutionally mandated deadline for the 2017 session of the Nevada Legislature, there’s a looming budget problem that could have a huge impact on the state over the next two years.
In the end, it all came down to money.
Hillary Clinton, in what was likely her final visit to Southern Nevada before the Tuesday election, told supporters that she endeavored to be a candidate who gives people someone to vote for, rather than simply collecting votes from people voting against her rival.
Things are looking pretty good for the Democrats, right?
The slow-motion self-destruction of the Republican Party presents its adherents with a tantalizing existential question: Would you rather win an election led by an awful candidate, or lose while hewing to principle?