Steve Sisolak

From Conservapedia
This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Real45fan (Talk | contribs) at 04:45, October 1, 2020. It may differ significantly from current revision.

Jump to: navigation, search
Steve Sisolak
Governor of Nevada
From: January 7, 2019 – present
Lieutenant Kate Marshall
Predecessor Brian Sandoval
Successor Incumbent (no successor)
Former Chair of the Clark County Commission
From: January 7, 2013 – January 7, 2019
Predecessor Susan Brager
Successor Marilyn Kirkpatrick
Former Vice Chair of the Clark County Commission
From: January 3, 2011 – January 6, 2013
Predecessor Susan Brager
Successor Larry Brown
Former Member of the Clark County Commission from District A
From: January 5, 2009 – January 7, 2019
Predecessor Bruce Woodbury
Successor Michael Naft
Information
Party Democrat
Spouse(s) Dallas Garland (1987 – 2000)
Kathy Ong

Stephen F. “Steve” Sisolak (born December 26, 1953, age 70) is a businessman and liberal Democrat currently serving as the Governor of Nevada, having been elected to the position during the 2018 midterms. Previously, he served in the Clark County Commission, having been the chair from 2013 to 2019.

Governor of Nevada

2018 election

Sisolak ran for and won the 2018 Nevada gubernatorial election, defeating Republican opponent Adam Laxalt by 4% of the vote.[1] This coincided with the concurrent Senate election where then-incumbent RINO senator Dean Heller lost to Democrat Jacky Rosen by a similar margin.[2]

Tenure

HCQ denialism

See also: Hydroxychloroquine denial

In late March 2020 amidst the CCP pandemic, Gov. Sisolak signed an executive order that limited patients with coronavirus from accessing hydroxychloroquine as a combative measure to recover.[3] He was later found having hoarded the drug,[4] reportedly so it could go to prisoners.[5] Sisolak was also later sued in late April by doctors, and it was noted that his Chief Medical Officer did not have a license to practice medicine.[6]

Lockdown

Sisolak has been threatening the state with additional lockdown restrictions, even while virus cases were declining.[7]

See also

References

External links