In August, Nevada government agencies were hit with a crippling ransomware attack. Thankfully, Nevada’s election infrastructure wasn’t affected.But against that
The open house of sorts will take place from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday at the Nevada Legislature's Clark Building, located at 7230 Amigo Street, Room 1651.
Nevada’s top elections official said Tuesday he was concerned about requests from the federal government for sensitive voter data.
Nevada’s election system stayed up during massive statewide cyberattack. Here’s why. Read more from The Nevada Independent.
Nevada’s Secretary of State Office held a demonstration to show voters the technology that will be used in upcoming elections.
U.S. Attorney for Nevada Sigal Chattah said she expects to pursue a variety of investigations, but legal experts said she has conflicts of interest.
Nevadans will use new ballot-marking machines in 2026 that print paper ballots for voter verification before tabulation.
A slew of Nevada Democrats from around the state of Nevada have announced their intention to run for re-election in 2026.
Indivisible Nevada County and the Nevada County Democrats co-hosted the event, which drew at least 200 people. Organizers urged attendees to vote yes on Prop 50 in the November 4 special election—and to encourage their neighbors to do the same. “Vote like democracy depends on it because it does,” one speaker told the crowd.