Attorney General Aaron Ford is Nevada’s top law enforcement officer. That hasn’t stopped him from flagrantly violating Nevada’s public records law.
Victor Joecks
Victor Joecks is a Review-Journal columnist who explores and explains policy issues three days a week in the Opinion section. Previously he served as the executive vice president of the Nevada Policy Research Institute. Victor is also a staff sergeant in Nevada National Guard. Originally from Washington state, Victor received his bachelor’s degree from Hillsdale College.
Coronavirus is hurting the economy. That doesn’t mean the government should try to prop it up with a stimulus package.
The more seriously we take coronavirus, the less serious the outbreak will be. That’s the time-sensitive paradox confronting governments, businesses, travelers and families.
Henderson officials claim they want to hear from residents about a proposed minor league hockey arena. They’ve given no indication, however, that they intend to listen.
Empty shelves at Costco and Walmart show that Las Vegas-area businesses need to start price gouging.
If the people behind a new funding adequacy lawsuit are upset about Nevada’s low quality of education, they should be suing themselves.
If you don’t trust Donald Trump to respond to the coronavirus outbreak, you shouldn’t favor a system that gives a future president like him power over your health care.
To understand why Bernie Sanders’ ideas are immoral imagine if a parent raised her child based on his principles.
Killing a child after she’s been born doesn’t have anything to do with women’s health care. Catherine Cortez Masto and Jacky Rosen think otherwise.
The Nevada Democratic caucuses were so successful that Democrats want to make sure they never happen again. Usually political spin isn’t so obviously self-contradictory.
Boys shouldn’t be competing in girls’ sports. Somehow that’s become a controversial statement.
During 2016, the Trump campaign had a saying, “Let Trump be Trump.” It needs revisiting for 2020: Only Trump can beat Trump.
Henderson is the latest Nevada government agency suckered into giving a pro sports team tens of millions of dollars.
Twenty-nine percent of Democrats identify as pro-life, according to Gallup. The leading Democratic presidential candidates don’t want any of those people in the Democratic Party.
Nevada’s caucuses crowded field favors Sanders