The PAC behind the initiative, which would require Nevadans to show ID to vote in person, says it has enough signatures to appear on the November ballot.
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Nevada
Vice President Kamala Harris is set to visit Las Vegas on Friday following the first 2024 presidential debate between Joe Biden and Donald Trump.
State and national Democrats are leading a lawsuit that seeks to block Robert F. Kennedy Jr. from appearing on Nevada’s presidential ballot, citing state law.
The Washoe County District Attorney’s Office says the family of Senior U.S. District Judge Larry Hicks will host a Celebration of Life in his memory in Reno next week.
A district court judge approved a motion to dismiss the fake electors case, pointing to issues with jurisdiction.
The Service Training Education and Preparation for Veterans Act would align Labor Department grants for community colleges with local veteran labor markets.
Gold Butte became a national monument by presidential decree late last year, but the matter is far from settled to some residents of northeastern Clark County.
Democratic lawmakers, including Rep. Titus of Nevada, express concerns that President Trump could provoke unpredictable Kim Jong-un.
Revisions to two state laws aim to make it easier for Nevada high school students to earn college credits or participate in internships while in high school.
It was only an opening skirmish, but Thursday’s hearing in Senate Finance previewed how desperate liberals are to stop Education Savings Accounts, Nevada’s groundbreaking school-choice program.
Seriously mentally ill inmates housed in Nevada prisons routinely had been placed in segregation units, sometimes for as long as five years at a time, a prison official told the Senate Committee on Health and Human Services on Wednesday.
Seventeen authors will be on hand to sign their works on Sunday at the Leatherneck Club in Las Vegas.
Candidates found in violation of residency requirements by a court would have to refund campaign contributions under a bill introduced Thursday by state Sen. Patricia Farley.
A bill introduced on Thursday in the Nevada Assembly would keep salary raises in place for government employees when union contracts expire.
A bill that would allow 18- to 20-year-olds with military backgrounds or affiliations to carry concealed weapons was introduced Thursday in the state Assembly.