LAS VEGAS (AP) — Registered Republican voters have — by the narrowest of margins — overtaken Democrats in the pivotal battleground state of Nevada for the first time in nearly 20 years.
The full list of January’s most-read stories: State legislators rejected a proposed bill that would have enshrined a “Homeless Person’s Bill of Rights” in state law, while multiple jurisdictions ...
UFC’s ultimate broligarch on why he’ll always be in Donald Trump’s corner, his passion for high-stakes risk-taking and how he’s already building America’s next great combat sport.
Hundreds of boisterous, upbeat protesters spanned the block in front of the Nevada Capitol in Carson City on Wednesday to ...
The contentious fight between Nevada casinos and the politically powerful Culinary Workers Union Local 226 over legally ...
Governor Joe Lombardo has a problem, one that runs deeper than just tussling with a Nevada Legislature controlled by ...
The lawsuit, filed by members of the Shasta County Elections Task Force, claims that Shasta County Registrar of Voters Tom Toller violated state elections laws and barred election observers from ...
New data from the Nevada Secretary of State’s Office shows that registered Republicans now outnumber registered Democrats in ...
The 2024 judicial candidate briefly known as Madilyn “Leavitt” Cole has dropped her mother’s maiden name as she seeks ...
Nevada state lawmakers pledged Monday to spend the next 120 days leaving behind disagreements from the campaign trail to ...
Every legislative leader from both parties took time today to talk about working together with members of the opposite party — to make Nevada a better place.
Legislators flock to Carson City for the 120-day lawmaking period. What to know about the party dynamics, priority legislation and more.