The school board’s evaluation of Superintendent Jesus Jara was simultaneously comedic and tragic.
Opinion Columns
If the media covered pandemics like they do the Portland riots, the coronavirus wouldn’t be dominating the headlines.
Nevada Democrats tried to raise taxes during the special session in order to raise money to close a $1.2 billion budget gap, but fell one vote short in the state Senate.
President Trump has withheld aid from states that want it but has sent federal agents to help police cities that don’t want the help.
A half-century after the earlier revolution, today’s cultural revolution is vastly different — and far more dangerous.
A plan for the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority to acquire the Las Vegas Monorail was foreseen from the start by the man who got the train rolling.
If there was ever a time for Gov. Steve Sisolak not to follow California’s lead, this is it.
There must be no real outrages left in America if so-called progressives have nothing better to do than turn their collective rage on Goya, whose CEO visited President Trump at the White House.
Like it or not, every parent in the Clark County School District is going to be homeschooling next year.
Gov. Steve Sisolak has long had a reputation as a bully. Now, he’s attacking Superintendent Jesus Jara for something Sisolak included in his special session proclamation.
Signature verification isn’t adequate security for an all-mail ballot election. That’s not a just theory. Here’s how I beat the system.
Nevada has had almost as many special sessions in the last 20 years as it did in the previous 135, but voters show little inclination to change things.
Historically, the tips of the spears of cultural revolutions are accustomed to comfort.
Keeping schools closed because of the coronavirus doesn’t make Americans safer and leaves kids behind in education.
Gov. Steve Sisolak’s mask mandate is so overbroad that even some Democratic legislators flouted it.