Nevada
Press Release: Senator Jacky Rosen Advocates for Nevada Families’ Health Care Access Amid Government Shutdown | Stock News
Senator Jacky Rosen advocates for health care affordability in Nevada amidst the government shutdown, highlighting veteran vulnerabilities.
Quiver AI Summary
U.S. Senator Jacky Rosen (D-NV) has been vocal in her efforts to support health care for Nevada families during the ongoing government shutdown. She highlighted data from the Urban Institute indicating that 267,000 non-senior veterans could lose their health care coverage if Congress does not extend enhanced tax credits under the Affordable Care Act (ACA).
In press statements, Rosen criticized Republican lawmakers for not engaging in substantive negotiations and expressed concern over increasing health care costs that could affect over 38,000 Nevadans immediately. Open enrollment for the ACA is set to begin on November 1, increasing urgency for legislative action.
Rosen emphasized that access to health care is a fundamental issue stating, “I’m going to stand up for people to be able to go to the damn doctor.” She called for bipartisan dialogue to prevent healthcare cost spikes while emphasizing the critical role of ACA in maintaining affordable coverage for many families.
Disclaimer: This is an AI-generated summary of a press release. The model used to summarize this release may make mistakes. See the full release here.
Jacky Rosen Net Worth
Quiver Quantitative estimates that Jacky Rosen is worth $16.9M, as of October 10th, 2025. This is the 77th highest net worth in Congress, per our live estimates.
Rosen has approximately $5.1M invested in publicly traded assets which Quiver is able to track live.
You can track Jacky Rosen’s net worth on Quiver Quantitative’s politician page for Rosen.
Jacky Rosen Bill Proposals
Here are some bills which have recently been proposed by Jacky Rosen:
- S.2846: A bill to amend the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 to modify treatment activities for assistance to combat HIV/AIDS.
- S.2762: Supporting Our Seniors Act
- S.2617: Reducing Drug Prices for Seniors Act.
- S.2521: Provider Training in Palliative Care Act
- S.2494: Hire Student Veterans Act
- S.2443: Veterans Jobs Opportunity Act
You can track bills proposed by Jacky Rosen on Quiver Quantitative’s politician page for Rosen.
Jacky Rosen Fundraising
Jacky Rosen recently disclosed $198.8K of fundraising in a Q2 FEC disclosure filed on July 15th, 2025. This was the 437th most from all Q2 reports we have seen this year. 87.4% came from individual donors.
Rosen disclosed $290.2K of spending. This was the 169th most from all Q2 reports we have seen from politicians so far this year.
Rosen disclosed $923.4K of cash on hand at the end of the filing period. This was the 318th most from all Q2 reports we have seen this year.
You can see the disclosure here, or track Jacky Rosen’s fundraising on Quiver Quantitative.
Nevada
DOJ sues Nevada for allegedly withholding voter registration information
The Department of Justice filed a federal lawsuit against Nevada on Friday, alleging that the state failed to provide statewide voter registration lists when requested, according to a news release.
Colorado, Hawaii, and Massachusetts were also sued, bringing the total to 18 states now facing lawsuits from the Justice Department. The department’s Civil Rights Division filed the complaints.
Francisco Aguilar, Nevada secretary of state, was charged with violating the Civil Rights Act after he responded on Aug. 21 to a letter from U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi, saying there was no basis for her request for certain voter information, asserting privacy concerns, according to the lawsuit.
According to the complaint, Aguilar provided a link to the state’s computerized voter registration list. However, the version shared contained incomplete fields, including registrants’ full names, dates of birth, addresses, driver’s license numbers, and the last four digits of their Social Security numbers.
Aguilar’s Aug. 21 letter said his office would follow up, but the attorney general never received the list containing all the requested fields, the lawsuit said.
According to the news release, Congress assigns the attorney general primary responsibility for enforcing the National Voter Registration Act and the Help America Vote Act, both enacted to ensure that states maintain accurate and effective voter registration systems.
The attorney general also has authority under the Civil Rights Act of 1960 to request, review, and analyze statewide voter registration lists, according to the release.
“States have the statutory duty to preserve and protect their constituents from vote dilution,” Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon said in the release. “At this Department of Justice, we will not permit states to jeopardize the integrity and effectiveness of elections by refusing to abide by our federal elections laws. If states will not fulfill their duty to protect the integrity of the ballot, we will.”
Contact Akiya Dillon at adillon@reviewjournal.com.
Nevada
Police: Deadly crash closes all lanes at I-15, Charleston
LAS VEGAS (FOX5) — A deadly crash has closed all lanes at I-15 and Charleston Boulevard, police say.
Nevada State Police posted on social media after 7 p.m. about the crash. Police say drivers in the area should use other routes.
Police have not immediately shared details about the victim or if other people are involved. It’s not yet confirmed if impairment is suspected.
This is a developing story. Check back later for details.
Copyright 2025 KVVU. All rights reserved.
Nevada
Top Interior Department official has ties to Thacker Pass lithium mine – High Country News
This story was co-published with Public Domain.
Karen Budd-Falen, a top official at the Department of Interior, has financial ties to the controversial Thacker Pass lithium mine in northern Nevada — a project that the Trump administration worked to fast-track during its first term. In recent months, the administration took an equity stake in the mine and the mine’s parent company.
After an unexplained delay, Public Domain and High Country News obtained Budd-Falen’s financial disclosure earlier this month, which details her family’s extensive land holdings. Among them is Home Ranch LLC, a Nevada ranching operation valued at over $1 million. Nevada’s business search database shows a Home Ranch LLC that listed Frank Falen as the manager in February 2022. Frank Falen is also the name of Karen Budd Falen’s husband.
In November 2018, not long after Karen Budd-Falen joined the first Trump administration as a top legal official at the Interior Department, Home Ranch LLC agreed to sell water rights to Lithium Nevada Corporation, the company developing the Thacker Pass mine, for an undisclosed amount of money, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing. Frank Falen is listed on the document.
A Home Ranch also appears in planning documents that Lithium Nevada submitted to federal regulators during Trump’s first term. A monitoring plan for Thacker Pass, dated July 2021, notes that the company intended to use existing stock water wells owned by Home Ranch LLC to “monitor potential drawdown impacts” from its mining operations.
The water purchase agreement and other records raise questions about potential conflicts of interest. Budd-Falen was appointed in March as associate deputy secretary to Interior Secretary Doug Burgum — a position that does not require Senate confirmation. She also served as a high-ranking legal official at the Interior Department during President Trump’s first term.
It was during that earlier government stint that her official calendar lists a November 6, 2019 meeting in which Budd-Falen was scheduled to have “lunch with Lithium Nevada.”

In 2019, Lithium Nevada, a subsidiary of the Canadian mining firm Lithium Americas, was seeking speedy approval for its Thacker Pass mine in northern Nevada. In the waning days of the first Trump administration it received just that. In January 2021, the Bureau of Land Management approved the mine project, which includes some 5,700 acres of public land.
The $2.2 billion, open-pit mine project has drawn fierce opposition from area tribes and environmentalists, who argue it threatens water resources, endangered species and sacred cultural sites. Thacker Pass, known as Peehee Mu’huh to the Paiute Shoshone people, was the site of an 1865 massacre of at least 31 Paiute people.
Budd-Falen was being considered to lead the BLM during Trump’s first term, but turned down the director job when she learned that she and her husband would have to sell their interests in their family ranches to avoid conflicts of interest, she told The Fence Post in 2018.
Since returning to power, Trump and his team have again worked to move the project forward, as part of a broader push to boost critical mineral mining in the U.S. In September, the Trump administration struck a deal with Lithium Americas to take a 5% equity stake in both the Thacker Pass mine and the company, in exchange for the release of loan money from the Department of Energy.
Budd-Falen has largely worked behind the scenes at the Interior Department. Little is known about what issues she has focused on since returning to the sprawling agency. Notably, Interior officials have yet to release her ethics agreement, which would detail any companies or projects that are off limits.
“Did she have any oversight of the environmental review process regarding Thacker Pass? It is a big question,” said Kyle Roerink, executive director of the Great Basin Water Network, a water conservation group in Nevada. “If she didn’t recuse herself, it would fly in the face of the impartial decisionmaking that Americans expect from government officials.”
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