Nevada onAir

The Nevada onAir Hub is managed by students supporting Nevadans to become more informed about and engaged in local, state, and federal politics while facilitating more civil and positive discussions with their representatives, candidates, and fellow citizens.

  • Nevada onAir is one of 50 state governance and elections hubs that the US onAir Network is providing to help reinvigorate US democracy.  This post has short summaries of current state and federal representatives with links to their complete Hub posts.  Students curate post content from government, campaign, social media, and public websites.  Key content on the Nevada Hub is also replicated on the US onAir nations Hub at: us.onair.cc.
  • Nevada students will be forming onAir chapters in their colleges and universities to help curate Hub content.  As more students participate and more onAir chapters are started, we will expand to include more state and local content as well as increase the number of aircasts – student-led, livestreamed, online discussions with candidates, representatives, and the public.

Find out more about Who Represents Me in Nevada
Learn more about the US onAir Network

Joe Lombardo – NV

Current Position: Sheriff, Clark County
Affiliation: Republican
Candidate: 2023 Governor
Former Position: Army veteran

Joseph Michael Lombardo (born November 8, 1962) is an American law enforcement officer who is serving as the 17th sheriff of Clark County, the head of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (LVMPD), the combined law enforcement agency for Las Vegas and Clark County. Lombardo has held this office since 2015.[1][2][3][4] He is a member of the Republican Party.[5]

Lombardo is not running for re-election as Clark County Sheriff and is instead the Republican nominee for the 2022 Nevada gubernatorial election. Former Nevada Lieutenant Governor Mark Hutchison serves as campaign chairman for Lombardo’s gubernatorial campaign.

OnAir Post: Joe Lombardo – NV

NV Legislature

The Nevada Legislature is a bicameral body, consisting of the lower house, the Assembly, with 42 members, and the upper house, the Senate, with 21. With a total of 63 seats, the Legislature is the third-smallest bicameral state legislature in the United States, after Alaska’s (60 members) and Delaware’s (62). The Nevada State Legislature as of 2019 is the first majority female State Legislature in the history of the United States. The Democratic Party currently controls both houses of the Nevada State Legislature.

Source: Wikipedia

OnAir Post: NV Legislature

Catherine Cortez Masto – NV

Current Position: US Senator since 2017
Affiliation: Democrat
Former Position: Nevada attorney general from 2006 – 2014

Masto worked four years as a civil attorney in Las Vegas and two years as a criminal prosecutor for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Washington, D.C.

Masot became the first woman elected to represent Nevada in the Senate and the first Latina elected to serve in the upper chamber.  In November 2003, Cortez Masto was named executive vice chancellor of the Nevada System of Higher Education.

Quotes:
Wildfires are devastating the West, and today I joined @ClimatePower and @ChiefDave_RFD
to call for action on climate. I’m leading legislation in Congress to combat wildfires back home, but it’s going to take all of us to address the climate crisis and protect our planet.

Nevada Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto’s full speech at the 2020 Democratic National Convention

OnAir Post: Catherine Cortez Masto – NV

Jacky Rosen – NV

Current Position: US Senator since 2019
Affiliation: Democrat
Former Position: US Representative for NV-03 from 2017 – 2019

Rosen’s parents moved to Las Vegas, where Rosen moved after graduating. She took a job with Summa Corporation and worked summers as a waitress at Caesars Palace throughout the 1980s. While working for Summa, she attended Clark County Community College (now the College of Southern Nevada) and received an associate degree in computing and information technology in 1985. She began working for Southwest Gas from 1990 to 1993.

Quotes:
Nevada runs because of our state’s workers – union workers. And strong unions lead to safer workplaces, better pay and quality health care. It is time to pass the #PROAct!  Jul 22, 2021·

Jacky Rosen Calls Out ICE Recruitment, Referencing Employee Who Was Part Of White Supremacist Group

OnAir Post: Jacky Rosen – NV

Nevada Votes in 2024

Federal & state elections on the ballot: US Senator, 4 US House members, Governor, and State Senate and House members

Ballot measures:

The Nevada Division of Elections, part of the Secretary of State, oversees all Nevada elections.

OnAir Post: Nevada Votes in 2024

Nevada Collaborators

The US onAir Network will be working with volunteers from Nevada universities, colleges, and nonprofit organizations to oversee the curation and moderation of posts, aircasts (online discussions), and in person events for the Nevada onAir Hub …  related to federal, state, and local elections and government.

Our first outreach will be to University of Nevada Reno partly because of its proximity to the state capital. We have identified many of University of Nevada Reno’s civic engagement, academic, internship and research programs related to making democracy and civic responsibility a focus of higher learning on their campus … for students, faculty, staff, and local community. This post, over time, will have similar information on other collaborating organizations in the state.

Contact ben.murphy@onair.cc for more information on how to involve your organization.

About Nevada

Nevada is a state in the Western region of the United States.  It is bordered by Oregon to the northwest, Idaho to the northeast, California to the west, Arizona to the southeast, and Utah to the east. Nevada is the 7th-most extensive, the 19th-least populous, and the 9th-least densely populated of the U.S. states. Nearly three-quarters of Nevada’s people live in Clark County, which contains the Las Vegas–Paradise metropolitan area, including three of the state’s four largest incorporated cities. Nevada’s capital is Carson City.

Nevada has a reputation for its libertarian laws. In 1940, with a population of just over 110,000 people, Nevada was by far the least-populated state, with less than half the population of the next least-populous state, Wyoming. However, legalized gambling and lenient marriage and divorce laws transformed Nevada into a major tourist destination in the 20th century. Nevada is the only U.S. state where prostitution is legal, though it is illegal in its most populated regions – Clark County (Las Vegas), Washoe County (Reno) and Carson City (which, as an independent city, is not within the boundaries of any county). The tourism industry remains Nevada’s largest employer, with mining continuing as a substantial sector of the economy: Nevada is the fourth-largest producer of gold in the world.

OnAir Post: About Nevada

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