Republican Senate frontrunner Sam Brown expresses support for Trump’s pledge to not tax service workers’ tips if re-elected.
Politics and Government
John Lee, running for Nevada’s 4th Congressional District, filed a complaint against David Flippo’s campaign, who he thinks made a website he says is defamatory. Flippo’s campaign denies any role.
Clark County is expected to reach a settlement agreement in a yearslong legal dispute over a development on Blue Diamond Hill.
In Las Vegas, the former president tries to woo the workers who keep Sin City in businesss, announcing he wants to end taxes on tip income if elected in November.
Las Vegas homebuilding industry leaders are backing an effort to make more land available to improve the balance between housing supply and demand.
Starting at the beginning of next year, new business license applicants and those renewing their business licenses on Nevada’s online portal, SilverFlume, will be asked to complete a voluntary survey to help create a database.
Controversial lawman Joe Arpaio will give the keynote address at a conservative gathering in Las Vegas.
Nevada currently has more than 10 legislators, out of just 63, who also have executive branch jobs. Little wonder government keeps expanding.
Five years after resigning from the state Senate amid an arduous divorce, Republican Elizabeth Halseth is planning a comeback for 2018.
The sexual harassment investigation of former state Sen. Mark Manendo cost Nevada taxpayers $67,125.12.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency will open a recovery service center in Carson City to handle calls from Hurricane Harvey survivors applying for disaster assistance.
The owner of a Las Vegas insurance agency announced Thursday that he is running for Congress.
Nevada’s Brian Sandoval is part of a bipartisan group of governors urging Congress to retain the federal health care law’s individual mandate while seeking to stabilize individual insurance markets as legislators continue work on a long-term replacement law.
Two hundred Nevada inmates will likely be sent to an Arizona prison.
Democrats are charging the Trump administration of using a politically driven process to undermine protections to public lands as environmental groups gird for a legal battle to stop the shrinking of national monuments under review — including two in Nevada.