Everybody who drives on Las Vegas streets and freeways has seen some stupid, dangerous or insane stuff, and usually all three at once.
Steve Sebelius
![](https://www.reviewjournal.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Steve-Sebelius_031219kc.jpg?w=900&h=600&crop=1)
Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto won her re-election, but by the smallest statewide margin since the man who picked her for the job — former Sen. Harry Reid — nearly lost his own seat.
Attorneys for the Metropolitan Police Department say emails Sheriff Joe Lombardo sent to his political consultants on a department cellphone are not public records.
Nevada used to lead the nation in quirky political happenings, but lately, it seems other states are surpassing us.
The lesson of the San Francisco recalls is not that woke liberalism is at an end, but rather that people prefer basic competence over political correctness.
There’s still some controversy about the order of presidential primary elections, but at least for now, Nevada’s laws make us first in the nation.
The Clark County Education Association didn’t know what the world would look like when it launched a pair of tax initiatives, but then again, it didn’t really care, either.
If Trump’s visit was primarily a political stunt rather than a legitimate attempt to court the Nevada vote — and there’s reason to suspect it was — then give his campaign credit for a well-played weekend.
All five Democrats in Nevada’s congressional delegation have written a letter to Gov. Steve Sisolak and legislative leaders, calling on them to replace the statue of former Sen. Pat McCarran in the U.S. Capitol.
Six Democratic candidates for president went after each other more than in any previous debate, as they struggle for attention and votes in Saturday’s Nevada caucuses.
Longtime Republican ad maker Sig Rogich was co-chairman of a recent diplomatic delegation to China that included top former lawmakers such as Joe Lieberman, Bill Richardson and Billy Tauzin.
Can newspapers save democracy, or is model for the media forever broken? Panelists at the 2019 Los Angeles Times Festival of Books debated that very question.
Teenagers as young as 14 may soon be behind the wheel on Nevada’s busiest roads on their way to school, if a bill proposed by Sparks Republican Assemblywoman Alexis Hansen becomes law.