Nevada voters will have a lot more to decide this year than simply choosing their favorite candidates. Seven ballot questions — some put forward by the Legislature and some through petition drives — could make significant changes to state laws,
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump spoke at a campaign rally at The Venetian in Las Vegas, Nevada.
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.
President and Democratic candidate Harry Truman passed through Reno and Sparks on a whistle-stop tour as he campaigned by train on Sept. 22, 1948; Truman narrowly won the state's three electoral votes on his way to a win over Republican candidate Thomas E. Dewey.
With less than a month until the November election, the latest Emerson College poll shows Harris with 48 percent support and Trump with 47 percent, though still within a 3.2 percent margin of
NRSC teams up with Sam Brown in new hybrid ads after canceling Nevada reservations, aiming to boost support and navigate the state's key Senate race challenges.
Senator Jacky Rosen holds a lead over Republican Sam Brown in Nevada, even as the state remains tied in the presidential race.
Although the start of early voting in Nevada is still a couple of weeks away, the first votes of the 2024 general election have already been cast.
Federal agencies issued a warning late last week to state elections officials about domestic threats from extremists with “election-related grievances” targeting election workers, political candidates and lawmakers in the
Nevada voters will see a total of seven questions on the November ballot, some to give tax breaks, others to amend the Constitution and one that would radically overhaul the way we vote. Steve Sebelius breaks down questions 4-7.
Former President Donald Trump promised a new wave of legal immigration and greater prosperity for Hispanics as he stopped at a massive warehouse in this city’s enterprise