In District C, school board president Evelyn Garcia Morales seeks r-eelection against Tameka Henry, a product of the district and mother of four.
RJ Endorses
Lorena Biassotti, a former stay-at-home mom and Spanish teacher, is running against substitute teacher Kamilah Bywaters in District E.
Aaron Bautista is a special education teacher who’s lived his entire life in east Las Vegas. Mr. Bautista is facing Tonia Holmes-Sutton, who also has experience as a Clark County teacher.
Carlos Fernandez is running in District 1. Matthew Bowen, his opponent, isn’t running much of a campaign.
Amy Carvalho seeks re-election in District 12. She graduated from UNLV and was a business owner. Jonathan Maxham is challenging Ms. Carvalho. He’s a physician who previously served in the Air Force.
Balancing the competing interests within the Nevada System of Higher Education is a difficult, but vital task.
Nevada — where incumbent Democrat Sen. Jacky Rosen faces a challenge from Republican Sam Brown — is home to a vulnerable U.S. Senate seat.
The Board of Regents should be subject to the same level of scrutiny as other state-funded agencies.
Question 7 is a constitutional amendment requiring Nevada voters to present identification before casting a ballot.
Incumbent Councilman Dan Shaw faces Monica Larson in Ward 2.
Incumbent Ruth Garcia-Anderson faces Robert Taylor in Ward 2.
A full listing of the Review-Journal editorial board’s endorsements in the 2022 election:
Control of both the Senate and House is at stake in this election, and the results of Nevada’s federal races could be the decisive factor one way or the other.
Gov. Steve Sisolak, a Democrat, is facing perhaps the most tightly contested election of his career. Polls show him virtually tied in his re-election bid against Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo, a Republican.
Many legislative districts are not politically competitive. But a handful of races could go either way and determine if Democrats snare a supermajority or the GOP becomes relevant in the 2023 session.