
Nevada’s Election Shadows: 12 Explosive Revelations That Could Save Our Vote in 2026!
By TheNevadaGlobeStaff, August 4, 2025 6:00 am
Part 1: The Hidden Mess in Nevada’s Voter Rolls, Why Thousands Are Vanishing, and What It Means for You
Hey there, fellow Nevadans, let’s kick this off with a story that hits close to home. Picture this: It’s Election Day in Las Vegas, and you’re fired up to cast your vote for the candidate who promises to fight for our state’s mining jobs and lower taxes. You show up at the polls, only to hear, “Sorry, your name’s not on the list.” Sounds like a nightmare, right? Well, for thousands of folks in Clark and Washoe counties, it’s been a wake-up call to the chaos in our voter rolls.
Back in August 2024, Clark County election officials moved over 100,000 registered voters to “inactive” status. That’s not some conspiracy theory; it’s straight from the county’s own reports. We’re not even talking about the alleged phantom voters who don’t exist, as claimed by folks like Bobby Piton or the teams in New York who exposed issues they found. According to Clark County’s data provided to Nevadans, they did it as part of routine maintenance, targeting people who hadn’t responded to address verification requests. Statewide, by April 2025, Nevada purged more than 162,000 inactive registrations and inactivated another 38,000 after the 2024 general election. Why? Federal law under the National Voter Registration Act requires states to clean up rolls to prevent fraud, like dead people voting or duplicates slipping through.
But here’s where it gets spicy for us conservatives who value fair play. Critics, including the Nevada GOP, argue these cleanups aren’t aggressive enough. Remember the 2022 primaries? Accusations flew that bloated rolls allowed non-citizens or out-of-staters to sneak in votes. In Clark County alone, which holds about 70% of Nevada’s population, officials admitted to finding discrepancies in addresses for folks who might’ve moved to California or Arizona but stayed registered here. One example: A 2023 audit revealed hundreds of voters registered at commercial addresses like casinos, which isn’t supposed to happen.
This isn’t just numbers on a page; it’s about trust. When rolls are messy, it erodes confidence, especially in tight races like our 2024 Senate nail-biter, where margins were under 1%. And get this: the Department of Justice has been sniffing around Nevada’s rolls lately, requesting full voter data in July 2025 under Trump’s push for integrity. What could that mean for future cleanups? Problems like these highlight the need for solutions: pristine voter rolls, mandatory ID, citizen-only voting, and hand-counted paper ballots at precincts to restore transparency.
Folks, if we’re serious about safeguarding our elections, we need to dig deeper into federal involvement. Stay tuned for Part 2, where I’ll unpack the DOJ’s investigations and how they could shake up Nevada’s voting game. You won’t want to miss how this ties into bigger exposés on manipulated counts.
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