Here are three things to watch for on day 64 of the 2017 Legislative session:
Opinion Columns
Senate Majority Leader Aaron Ford, D-Las Vegas, and Assembly Speaker Jason Frierson, D-Las Vegas, attend a church with a pastor who believes that homosexuality is a sin.
What if they held an election and nobody came?
A major reason these fights over Supreme Court nominations have become so bitter and unseemly is the stakes — the political stakes. The Supreme Court has become more than ever a superlegislature.
Only months after raising valet parking fees from free to $13, greedy MGM executives have decided to dramatically raise them again.
Collective bargaining for state workers, Medicaid and union pitches highlight day 61 of the Nevada Legislature.
It was probably inevitable we would end up here, with the scrapping of a Senate rule that lowers the threshold to end debate over a Supreme Court nominee from 60 votes to a simple majority.
Politicians’ reaction to the Review-Journal’s exposé on the systemic waste of tax dollars by the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority is a scandal in itself.
Free meals, driver authorization cards and civics tests highlight three things at the midway point of the 2017 Legislative session.
Well guess what came out earlier this week? Obama’s former National Security Advisor Susan Rice unmasked the names of Trump aides under surveillance and gave the names to none other than the infamous … Ben Rhodes.
The 2017 municipal elections are in the books, and, for the tiny fraction of the eligible voting population who participated, they were sure slightly interesting. Here’s a few thoughts on the morning after the Not-So-Big Day.
Sex education, voter registration and government transparency highlight the day in Nevada’s Legislature.
U.S. Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto says she approached her decision on the confirmation of Supreme Court nominee Judge Neil Gorsuch the way she used to prepare for cases as a lawyer: She did her research.
It would be so much easier for politicians if pesky parents didn’t keep insisting that they knew their children best.
Private prisons, economic development changes and charter school class-size requirements highlight the 58th day of the Nevada Legislature.
