Changes go into effect this year.
Editorials
January represents a time of new beginnings, an opportunity for self assessment and productive change — unless you sit in Congress, where inertia and fiscal fantasy rule the day.
Talk is cheap. Moving isn’t.
Secrecy has turned one major scandal in Clark County government into two.
It’s a lot easier to waste someone else’s money.
Trying to avoid politically motivated prosecutions.
Nothing is more inefficient than the government working at cross purposes. Just look at the Biden administration’s attempts to build charging stations for electric vehicles.
The White House facade came crashing down that evening as President Joe Biden — having been sequestered for a week to prepare — looked worn and weary from the start.
Welcome ex-Californians. But please try not to help turn Nevada into the state you just left.
The high court reigned in the ubiquitous administrative state by putting new life into the Seventh Amendment’s right to a jury trial. In April, it struck a blow for the Fifth Amendment.
The winner in November will be the one who can attract the majority of independent voters to his side — particularly in swing states — including Nevada.
On Tuesday, federal courts in Kansas and Missouri blocked parts of yet another White House effort to buy votes by unilaterally rewriting the law on student loan payments.
There is a distinction between legal and illegal immigration, a reality that many progressives intentionally blur.
Since fiscal 1991, Citizens Against Government Waste has identified a whopping 132,434 earmarks costing $460.3 billion. That’s a lot of slop in the trough.
City, county face financial consequences for property rights violations.
