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Republican Danny Tarkanian announces bid for Nevada attorney general's office

Republican Danny Tarkanian announces bid for Nevada attorney general's office

Yahooa day ago

LAS VEGAS (KLAS) — Republican Danny Tarkanian announced his candidacy for Nevada attorney general on Wednesday, joining Democrat Zach Conine in the contest to replace Aaron Ford.
Tarkanian, son of legendary UNLV basketball coach Jerry Tarkanian and civic leader Lois Tarkanian, vowed 'to defend Nevada families, and bring real accountability to the Attorney General's office,' a campaign website said.
A possible third candidate for the office, Democratic State Sen. Nicole Cannizzaro, has not made an announcement.
Tarkanian has run for office nearly a dozen times. He is currently a Douglas County commissioner, elected in 2020. He narrowly lost a U.S. House seat to Democrat Jacky Rosen in 2016, losing by 3,943 votes.
Former Nevada GOP chair asked Florida police officer if her judge friend could get rid of DUI charge: report
Tarkanian practiced law for seven years and founded the Tarkanian Basketball Academy, a nonprofit organization that works with at-risk youth.
Conine has served as Nevada State Treasurer for the past six years. He announced his candidacy earlier this month.
Ford has announced his intention to challenge Republican Gov. Joe Lombardo in 2026, and he is ineligible to return as attorney general due to term limits.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Democrats to square off in Wayne primary for chance to challenge mayor
Democrats to square off in Wayne primary for chance to challenge mayor

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Democrats to square off in Wayne primary for chance to challenge mayor

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Exclusive: Schumer's new megabill play
Exclusive: Schumer's new megabill play

Politico

time29 minutes ago

  • Politico

Exclusive: Schumer's new megabill play

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How Senate Democrats will do it: Ramp up the public pressure campaign Schumer kick-started Thursday against the backdrop of a rooftop solar field in Manhattan, and force Republicans to take tough votes through eventual vote-a-rama amendments. 'There are a whole number of Republicans, particularly those that have a lot of clean-energy investments in their states, who really didn't like what the House did,' Schumer told Lisa. 'And the question is: Will they be able to put enough pressure on Thune, or even vote [with us] on some amendments?' Why Schumer sees this as a fruitful avenue for attack: A quartet of GOP senators — Lisa Murkowski, Thom Tillis, John Curtis and Jerry Moran — warned their leadership weeks ago against a 'full-scale repeal of current credits.' Tillis has already raised concerns about the House language. Schumer said he's spoken privately to 'a good number of Republican colleagues' who dislike the House's cuts, but declined to name names. 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Hill is eyeing a June 10 markup for a committee vote on the legislation, according to three people with knowledge of the matter who were granted anonymity to discuss unannounced plans. Republicans, with the support of key crypto industry players, are considering tying this bill to different stablecoin legislation and passing both by the August recess. But that could complicate the path forward for the latter. As Senate Banking Chair Tim Scott recently told Katherine: 'Why would we want to do both at the same time when we already have the votes to do the GENIUS Act by itself?' RUBIO'S OVERHAUL — Secretary of State Marco Rubio is pushing to gut his agency's human rights bureau as part of a massive reorganization, according to internal documents obtained by our Robbie Gramer and people familiar with the planning. The State Department sent a document to Congress notifying lawmakers of the changes that call for the elimination of most offices in the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor. That would lead to funding freezes or cuts to programs ranging from internet freedom initiatives in autocratic countries to support for pro-democracy civil society groups facing repression in sub-Saharan Africa. It also calls for the creation of new positions that reflect Trump administration values, including emphasizing debates over digital censorship and creating a deputy assistant secretary of State role focused on 'Democracy and Western Values.' The move is part of a wider effort to reorganize more than 300 bureaus and offices outlined in the document, all to revamp what the Trump administration views as an unwieldy and bloated foreign policy bureaucracy. Best of POLITICO Pro and E&E: CAMPAIGN STOP HUIZENGA DEFIANT — Republican Rep. 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Email us at mmccarthy@ and lkashinsky@ THE BEST OF THE REST New York NGOs Worry They Won't Be Able to Make Up for Steep Medicaid and SNAP Cuts, from Shifra Dayak at NOTUS Trump's Senate Antagonists (Ranked), from Leigh Ann Caldwell at Puck CAPITOL HILL INFLUENCE Former Sen. Jon Tester is joining Unite the Country as a senior adviser. FIRST IN INSIDE CONGRESS: NO TAX ON TIPS TAKEDOWN — The Independent Restaurant Coalition sent a letter urging members of Congress to amend the portion of the megabill that would eliminate taxes on tips to include changes to the way service charges are taxed. The letter was signed by more than 500 business owners and workers from 47 states. The Senate already unanimously passed No Tax on Tips outside of the reconciliation package. CRYPTO GIANT ADDS DEM LOBBYING SUPPORT — Tether has started working with Lilette Advisors, the firm started last year by Biden alumni, on the GOP-led GENIUS Act beginning on May 6, POLITICO Influence reports. Ankit Desai, who worked for Biden during his time in the Senate, is listed as the sole lobbyist on the account. Tether previously added Miller Strategies, Ridgeline Advocacy Group and Jucundus Business Services — additions that made its roster of hired guns overwhelmingly Republican. HAPPY BIRTHDAY Former Rep. Steve Israel … NBC's Frank Thorp … Reema Dodin … Miryam Lipper … Stratton Kirton … Loren Duggan … Nicholas Ballasy … POLITICO's Maggie Miller … Rob Noel … Novartis' Nicole Longo … Jeff Freeland … Chris Gowen … Holland & Knight's Scott Mason TRIVIA THURSDAY'S ANSWER: Shanelle Wilson correctly answered that fiscal 1997 was the last time Congress passed all 12 regular appropriations bills on time. TODAY'S QUESTION, from Shanelle: A proposed amendment becomes part of the Constitution as soon as it is ratified by how many states? The first person to correctly guess gets a mention in the next edition of Inside Congress. Send your answers to insidecongress@

David Jolly's Purple Campaign for Florida Governor
David Jolly's Purple Campaign for Florida Governor

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

David Jolly's Purple Campaign for Florida Governor

LISTENING TO FORMER CONGRESSMAN David Jolly talk about his all but certain run for governor of Florida, you want to believe—in his prospects, in the state and national Democratic party, and in a turning point for America. Jolly, 52, has been on a decade-long political journey. He was a Republican during his three years in the House of Representatives, then a disaffected Never Trump Republican, then an independent aligned with Democrats. Finally, last month, he became a registered Democrat. And his words are a balm to a party in dire need of it. 'I am coming into the Democratic party right now because I believe in its strength,' Jolly told me Wednesday on the phone. Republicans, he said, have failed to provide an economy for all people, to ensure government is delivering services to those who need them, and to 'lift up and embrace the diversity of our communities and culture.' He called those fundamental Democratic values and the reasons he is excited to officially join the party. Anything else? 'We get to accept science, and math, and public health. It's pretty incredible, right?' Florida under Gov. Ron DeSantis in many ways has pioneered the worst aspects of Donald Trump's presidency, from hostility to immigrants and voting, abortion, and LGBTQ rights, to attacks on corporations like Disney; from policing libraries and colleges, to installing a discredited anti-vaxxer as Florida surgeon general. DeSantis is term-limited and 2026 will be his final year in office, but Florida Democrats are not exactly greeting the opportunity with unity. Even as Jolly was signing on with them, the Democratic leader in the state Senate, Jason Pizzo, said the party was 'dead' and became an unaffiliated voter—one who might run for governor next year as an independent. One Democrat summed it up this way, Politico reported: 'A goddamn shitshow.' But the larger environment could be read as favorable for Jolly, or as favorable as it gets in Florida. There's an open seat, it looks like he wouldn't have intraparty competition for the nomination, and DeSantis and his wife, Casey, could be engulfed by scandal. The gist: $10 million that was meant for Medicaid ended up at Casey's nonprofit, and then at two dark-money groups, and then at a group (run by DeSantis's then chief-of-staff, now the state's attorney general) trying to block legal recreational marijuana in the state. Legislators investigated, state prosecutors are investigating now, and a federal investigation is possible. The general drift, Jolly says, has already percolated down to normal voters who are not political junkies. It should be noted here that Jolly absolutely is a political junkie. He's a lawyer who worked on Capitol Hill, represented a Tampa Bay-area House district, consulted on dozens of races, and ran in a few himself. Normal voters, political junkies—we welcome all and sundry. Come join the best pro-democracy community on the internet by signing up for a free or paid subscription: So if it sounds like he knows how to frame an issue, he does. He sees Trump's overreach, instability and damaging policies as creating a change environment that will be the backdrop for state races next year, allowing candidates to prioritize state concerns and connect them to the national picture when they want. The top agenda items at Jolly's pre-campaign testing ground, are addressing the unaffordability of property insurance and homes, saving underfunded public schools, and fixing an unsustainable school voucher program. The rest, like those, strike me as ranging from unobjectionable to wildly popular from a Democratic standpoint—codifying the Roe v. Wade abortion framework, improving access to state universities, strengthening the economy and state ethics laws, accepting climate science, reducing gun violence, restoring veterans services, and creating 'a Florida for all' where everyone is 'valued, respected, and welcomed.' These are not new positions for him, Jolly says. He left Congress after dropping out of a 2016 Senate race and then losing his House seat that year in a sharp-edged contest against then-former governor Charlie Crist, a Republican turned Democrat who previewed Jolly's path. Looking back, Jolly called himself 'almost a man without a party while I was serving.' While in the House during the late Obama years, he supported marriage equality, climate science, gun control, 'all those things.' He was always, he says, a George H.W. Bush Republican and celebrated when Bush left the National Rifle Association during the 1990s. In December 2015, after Trump proposed a temporary ban on Muslim immigrants and visitors to the United States, Jolly called on Trump to withdraw from the 2016 presidential race. He said he was a born-again Christian and 'the beautiful thing about this country is I can stand here on the House floor, among my peers and in front of the nation, and declare that faith without fear of any reprisal.' Trump's proposed ban, Jolly said, was a 'heartbreaking' affront to that founding principle. Jolly tried and failed to work across the aisle in Congress. Sometimes Republicans told him not to work with Democrats. Sometimes the parties switched places. When Republicans were clamoring for—wait for it—due process in a Democratic bill barring plane travel by people on no-fly lists, and Jolly was trying to add it, Democrats were told not to work with him.1 Now, in his own trial run for an executive job in his new party, Jolly is going where he wants and saying what he wants. He's held a dozen town halls with a dozen more planned, in all parts of Florida, red and blue. He's explaining to evangelical and other faith communities why he thinks Democratic values are more in line with 'biblical thinking.' He's talking to North Florida agriculture communities about why DeSantis and Trump immigration policies are 'tightening labor and driving up costs for them.' And he is talking, a lot, about crime, especially the dishonest GOP conflation of immigration with crime. This serves a double purpose—to remind voters about that $10 million DeSantis family Medicaid scandal, and to drive home that they've been 'told a lie about immigrant crime,' because research shows immigrants are much less likely than native-born Americans to commit violent and property crimes. 'I say if you're native born, an immigrant or a Tallahassee politician, if you break the law, we're coming for you. That means if you steal $10 million from the Medicaid program, we're going to investigate you,' Jolly tells me. His listeners get it, no names needed. The immigration-crime decoupling is a pillar of his probable run and, if it succeeds, a model for Democrats all over. 'If we can take the crime issue back . . . not only have we reset the policy issues in a more accurate framing for voters, but we also shame Republicans for what they've done. These threads of xenophobia and true anti-immigrant sentiment, we expose,' Jolly says. 'Many Republicans might defend those sentiments, but we'll let that contrast speak for itself,' he adds. 'We'll be the party that fights crime but not communities. And they can be the party that continues to fight communities. And I'm great with that contrast.' Now Jolly just has to prove that most Floridians are great with it, too. That's a steep climb, given the state's recent political history and Republican imperviousness to shaming. But the premise is moral and reality-based, and I'd love to see it tested on voters who maybe, possibly, are ready for something new. Share this article with a Floridian. Share 1 Republicans pushing for due process? The past really is a foreign country.

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