State lawmakers will be spending hours on the Senate and Assembly floors and behind closed doors in caucus meetings as they jam through countless bills that need action by midnight Tuesday.
Politics and Government
Nevada lawmakers changed their focus in the 11th week of the session, shifting to more floor sessions and less time in committee hearings as another deadline approached.
CARSON CITY – The good idea fairy is alive and well in Carson City.
Former presidential candidate Bernie Sanders and Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez worked Saturday to show that progressives and the party are on the same side — against Donald Trump.
President Donald Trump on Saturday awarded a Purple Heart to an Army sergeant recently wounded in Afghanistan, the first of many Trump likely will award during his service as commander in chief of the U.S. military.
Gallup has bad news for President Donald Trump: The number of voters who believe Trump keeps his promises has fallen since he took office.
A spending bill and a threatened government shutdown will greet Congress when it returns from a recess next week.
The Nevada Assembly on Friday unanimously passed legislation that would put in place a Juvenile Justice Bill of Rights for youthful offenders.
Senate Democrats rolled back collective bargaining reforms Friday on party-line votes, approving two bills that Republicans argued gut bipartisan changes enacted two years ago.
The Nevada Senate approved a bill Friday to outlaw possession, sale or purchase of animal parts or byproducts from sensitive species.
Super Bowls, Final Fours, any event in the sports culture seems possible in Las Vegas with the arrival of the Raiders.
The Nevada Assembly on Friday unanimously approved legislation to put more oversight over private, professional guardians.
The Nevada Assembly on Friday passed a resolution strongly objecting to storing spent nuclear fuel and radioactive waste at Yucca Mountain.
Labor leaders on Friday urged Nevada lawmakers to pass a series of laws that they said would add needed protections and training for workers.
For now, state Department of Wildlife will await further reports on the presence of the South American flesh-eaters.