The biggest falsehood of the 2020 campaign is that Joe Biden is the great protector of American political institutions.
Opinion Columns
If you haven’t voted yet, there’s one more opportunity, on Election Day, Nov. 3. The Review-Journal has the resources to help you make your choices.
The 2020 election is not just about Biden sitting on a perceived lead and trying to run out the clock against barnstorming incumbent President Trump.
The shrinking White House press corps.
If you need evidence that Nevada is in play, look no further than President Donald Trump’s travel schedule.
King Steve Sisolak is acting more like Las Vegas Mayor Carolyn Goodman than California Gov. Gavin Newsom when it comes to coronavirus.
American habits and behaviors have been radically disrupted and the full consequences of these changes are still unknown.
If he weren’t the one supporting it, Superintendent Jesus Jara might decry distance learning as an example of systemic racism, implicit bias or both.
Nevada’s unique protest-vote option, None of These Candidates, can’t win a race, but it has been known to attract voters in contests where the human candidates don’t appeal.
“60 Minutes” sat down with President Trump for a long interview, but failed to ask about a story that the mainstream media has all but ignored: potential corruption involving Joe Biden’s son, Hunter.
If wearing masks were the key to stamping out the coronavirus, the pandemic would be over. Nevadans have been donning them for months.
The Clark County Election Department lowered the factory settings on its signature verification machine. So much for matching signatures as an impenetrable guard against election fraud.
The coronavirus debate is about much more than masks.
Casting a vote for President Donald Trump isn’t the same thing as agreeing with all of his tweets.
Anywhere ideology trumps science, public service, history, art and entertainment, ruin surely follows.