The Nevada State Assembly is the lower chamber of the state Legislature and works alongside the Senate to draft, debate, and enact state laws. All 42 Assembly seats are up for election in 2026, and the Assembly plays a central role in shaping policy on schools, healthcare, housing, jobs, public safety, and state budgeting. Because Assembly members represent local districts and serve two-year terms, these races allow voters to hold lawmakers closely accountable and ensure that policy priorities reflect the needs and values of their communities. These elections matter for democratic representation and for how the state resolves the biggest challenges facing Nevadans.
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At the state level, I support policies that protect public safety, due process, and human dignity while keeping communities stable.
I support limiting local cooperation with ICE in non-criminal cases so victims and witnesses can report crimes safely.
I support funding legal defense for immigrants in deportation proceedings to ensure fairness.
I would expand access to healthcare, labor protections, and education regardless of status to reduce exploitation.
I support driver authorization cards, wage theft protections, and language access in state agencies.
I also support integration programs like English classes and workforce training.
Overall, immigration policy should be humane, practical, and focused on stability—not fear or punishment.
My view is that redistricting should be transparent, nonpartisan, and driven by communities rather than political interests. I support independent redistricting commissions that remove or significantly limit legislative control over drawing district maps. Districts should be compact, respect geographic boundaries, and keep communities of interest together. The process should fully comply with the Voting Rights Act and protect fair representation for historically marginalized communities. Public input and transparency must be required at every stage so maps are not drawn behind closed doors. Ultimately, voters should choose their representatives—not politicians choosing their voters.
One state policy I would improve is the current budget prioritization process, which too often shifts long-term costs onto students and working families instead of fully stabilizing public funding.
To fix this, I would push for a requirement that all major state budget proposals include a long-term impact analysis on affordability and equity before approval. I would also advocate for stronger baseline funding commitments for education and essential services, so they are not dependent on short-term political cycles or fee increases. This would create more accountability, transparency, and sustainable funding decisions.
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