Nevada has had almost as many special sessions in the last 20 years as it did in the previous 135, but voters show little inclination to change things.
Steve Sebelius
Steve Sebelius oversees the Review-Journal's Washington and Carson City bureaus, as well as the reporting team covering local governments in Clark County. He also writes a weekly politics column for the Sunday Viewpoints section. Sebelius previously worked for the RJ between 2000 and 2017. He returned to the RJ in March 2019. Sebelius has been the on-air political analyst for KLAS-TV Channel 8 for 10 years. He also has co-hosted “PoliticsNow,” Nevada’s only political television program, on the channel since 2015.
The Nevada Policy Research Institute has filed a lawsuit contending that nine state lawmakers — including the Democratic leaders of both houses — are ineligible to serve under the state Constitution.
Air America pilots and air crews served this country with bravery during the Vietnam War. This country owes them the same retirement credits that regular soldiers earned.
Twenty years ago, Nevadans voted for a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage; this year, they will have the opportunity to undo that change.
Here are eight things we can learn from Nevada’s June primary, the first mail-in election in Nevada history.
All five Democrats in Nevada’s congressional delegation have written a letter to Gov. Steve Sisolak and legislative leaders, calling on them to replace the statue of former Sen. Pat McCarran in the U.S. Capitol.
State and local elections officials created a safe and convenient way to vote in the June primary, but many voters chose to ignore that and waited in long lines as a result.
The Nevada Republican Party announced Sunday it will cancel its in-person convention set for next weekend at Harrah’s Lake Tahoe.
Cliven Bundy is guilty of many things, but the government shouldn’t get another chance to convict him after prosecutors unlawfully withheld evidence from his defense.
Although most people agree with the idea of wearing masks in public, they have still become a political symbol in a divided nation.
A federal judge has once again rejected a lawsuit filed by a conservative group seeking to stop the June 9 mail-in primary election on grounds contending that mail balloting could lead to voter fraud.
Despite tweeted claims by President Donald Trump, Nevada’s mail-in election is completely legal and claims of fraud are speculative and unsupported by evidence.
Recalls of public officials in Nevada are rarely successful, which is the way it should be, since recall proponents are asking voters to undo the results of a legitimate election.
Shutting down Nevada businesses to flatten the coronavirus curve came at a cost — big budget deficits the likes of which the state has never seen.
Nevadas primary election is just over a month away. Here are some common questions related to the June 9 primary.