Some people dream of sugarplums, rainbows, a beach in Maui or a new Ferrari. Obama dreamed about new regulations and lawyers.
Opinion Columns
Is Heller afraid to have a debate with a real conservative? Afraid to answer real questions? Afraid Republican voters will hear what he really thinks?
If Nevada Senate Democrats had their way, you never would have known about the double dippers recently uncovered by the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
Often in politics, it seems we’re talking right past each other.
Keep government out of it. Don’t let government run anything. If anyone should run it, give the health-care system to Amazon or Google or Walmart. But never the government.
Gov. Brian Sandoval opposed the bill to raise the minimum wage in Nevada to $12 per hour; when it arrived on his desk, he promptly vetoed it.
If you’re looking for politics that matter, forget Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ testimony before Congress. Look at what happened just happened in Carson City.
If Trump thought this would kill the inquiry and the story, or perhaps even just derail it somewhat, he’s made the blunder of the decade.
It’s now clear that many Democrats are very confused. They require straitjackets just to keep their stories straight. Where’s Tony Soprano’s shrink when you need him?
To hear the heartbreaking testimony — on both sides — of the so-called death with dignity debate is to plunge oneself into the wrenching maw of doubt.
CARSON CITY — One of the mysteries of the 2017 session is why majority Democrats are introducing bills that would eliminate, roll back or modify some of the education reforms passed in 2015, when Republicans were in charge.
While making definitive predictions with 52 days left in the Legislative session is a good way to end up with rhetorical egg on your face, I’m calling it now: There will be no property tax increase this session.
House arrest, recycling competition and Medicaid highlight day 67 of Nevada Legislature.
It’s Day 8 of the 2017 Legislative Session, and the start of the second week. Committees are getting into a groove, and lawmakers are working with the Legislative Counsel Bureau to perfect language on bills they want to introduce.