If the Supreme Court decides that discrepancies did prevent the election for a Clark County commission seat, it would be overturning a lower court ruling.
Search results for:
Oral arguments are expected Wednesday in front of the Supreme Court, where lawyers representing Stavros Anthony and Ross Miller will appear before the justices.
The campaign will appeal to the state’s highest court to weigh in on the Clark County Commission race that Anthony lost by just 15 votes.
Judge Elizabeth Gonzalez ruled against the petition “because the election was not prevented,” despite arguments otherwise by Anthony’s campaign, the court filing shows.
The Clark County Commission on Tuesday certified Democrat Ross Miller’s narrow victory over Republican Stavros Anthony after a recount showed Miller won by 15 votes.
Recount results in the tight Clark County Commission race are expected to be canvassed on Tuesday as the Anthony campaign is critical of an “everchanging number.”
A week-long recount expanded Democrat Ross Miller’s lead to 30 votes over rival Republican Las Vegas Councilman Stavros Anthony for a seat on the Clark County Commission, an official said Friday.
Democrat Ross Miller officially defeated Republican Stavros Anthony by only 10 votes in a race with 139 voting discrepancies. Anthony vowed to fight.
The Commission on Tuesday might reconsider its decision not to certify the results in the District C race. A special election is at stake.
A Clark County district court judge on Friday denied two attempts by Republicans to overturn the Nov. 3 election results in Nevada’s most populous county.