For some, Donald J. Trump’s incessant attacks on immigrants are too much. Still, many appear prepared to look past his escalations and back a candidate they believe will help their livelihoods.
A Las Vegas Republican announced this week he’s dropping legal efforts to purge thousands of Nevada voters before the November election.
You’re the Oracle of Nevada — the one guy in the country who’s been pretty accurate with early-voting data in the past. What do you mean pretty accurate? Sorry, I meant 100 percent. But seriously, my crystal ball has cracks in it.
California and Nevada voters will decide in November if they want to ban forced prison labor by removing language from their state constitutions rooted in the legacy of chattel slavery.
It would be perhaps the most consequential change to Nevada's election laws in decades. Supporters say it would bring thousands of voters back into the fold and
SILVER STATE SLUGFEST — Nevada is the smallest of the battleground states in terms of Electoral College votes, but you’d hardly know it. It’s been inundated by roughly $250 million in ad spending this election cycle, and the two presidential tickets have made a combined 16 visits since March alone.
Nevada Secretary of State Cisco Aguilar has announced the launch of an election text message campaign he says will streamline voter participation and increase access to information about the general election.
All three of Nevada’s Democratic incumbents in the U.S. House of Representatives are cash heavy compared to their Republican challengers, and election forecasts for House races foresee no signs of
Iowa, Kansas, Nevada, Oregon and Rhode Island began early voting on Wednesday, leaving just one state to kick off the 2024 election.
Nevada is one of four swing states, in addition to Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Michigan, where Harris has an edge over Trump, according to Five Thirty Eight averages. Trump leads by narrow margins in North Carolina, Georgia and Arizona. Harris has a razor-thin edge in national polling.
Democrats have to win Nevada, and hold onto their seats in other perennial battlegrounds, to keep their slim Senate majority, as they also try to stem losses or pick up a GOP-held seat in redder states.