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.
politics
When it comes to government, you don’t always get what you pay for. Just ask the residents of New York and California.
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.
There is a political and patriotic twist to Valentine’s Day this year. President Trump is making us all fall in love with America again this Valentine’s Day.
At the beginning of his State of Metro speech, Joe Lombardo told the crowd, “We have a good story to tell.” It must not have been that worthwhile, however, because the sheriff didn’t invite most media outlets to cover his speech and didn’t livestream the event.
It’s easy to say you’re against fossil fuels. It much harder to stop using them. Just ask students at Saint John’s College at Oxford University.
Nevada’s caucuses crowded field favors Sanders
To elect a class president, a high school might use Scantron ballots and Google Forms to keep track of who voted. Nevada Democrats will now be using those tools to conduct their presidential caucus. Oh boy.
Sigifredo Araujo says he never signed a union card, but that didn’t stop SEIU 775 from taking dues out of his paycheck.
Pre-K has a decades-long record of failure. Not a good sign, then, that Jesus Jara is pushing for its expansion throughout the Clark County School District.
Medicaid costs are squeezing state budgets around the country, including Nevada. The Trump administration recently unveiled a new tool for states seeking to reign in those costs.
There’s a $505 million disconnect between Clark County School District officials’ words and actions on facility needs.