Six Republican defendants are accused of plotting to give Donald Trump Nevada’s electoral votes in 2020, even though Joe Biden won the state.
Politics and Government
Direct investments into mining companies have come without needed congressional oversight, three lawmakers say.
There have been increased calls by critics of Homeland Security to require all of the department’s officers who are responsible for immigration enforcement to wear body cameras.
The jobs report and other key economic statistics were previously delayed by a record 43-day government shutdown last fall.
President Donald Trump said Sunday he will move to close Washington’s Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts for two years starting in July for construction.
Here’s a look at proposals likely to die overnight because they were not given a hearing, committee vote or exemption from the first major legislative deadline:
Nevada’s top election official on Friday opened an investigation into alleged voter fraud in last year’s election, saying her office has uncovered evidence that noncitizens had cast ballots.
The bill to ensure the reorganization of the Clark County School District passed the Assembly floor with a 40-2 vote on Friday, sending the measure to the Senate.
A bill mandating testing on all DNA samples collected during sexual assault exams is headed to Assembly the Ways and Means Committee.
Federal election officials are asking Republican Sharron Angle to straighten out forms she filed to declare her candidacy for a House seat in northern Nevada.
UNLV President Len Jessup asked lawmakers Friday for $4 million to plan a new building for the school’s engineering program.
A bill to crack down on the trafficking of sensitive species animal parts was amended and approved Friday by a Nevada Senate committee.
The state Department of Education has received $1.4 million in federal funds for the planning and development of three current and potential charter schools.
The Assembly Government Affairs committee passed a bill that would put in place an inspector general to watchdog state and local agencies.
A bill that would remove urine and saliva screenings from marijuana DUI tests cleared the Assembly Judiciary Committee on Friday’s deadline day in the Nevada Legislature.
