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Joe Lombardo

Joseph Michael Lombardo (born November 8, 1962) is an American politician and former law enforcement officer serving since 2023 as the 31st governor of Nevada. A member of the Republican Party, he was the 17th sheriff of Clark County from 2015 to 2023, capping a 34-year career in law enforcement.[1][2][3]

Joe Lombardo
Lombardo in 2022
31st Governor of Nevada
Assumed office
January 2, 2023
LieutenantStavros Anthony
Preceded bySteve Sisolak
17th Sheriff of Clark County
In office
January 5, 2015 – January 2, 2023
Preceded byDoug Gillespie
Succeeded byKevin McMahill
Personal details
Born
Joseph Michael Lombardo

(1962-11-08) November 8, 1962 (age 61)
Sapporo, Japan
Political partyRepublican
Spouse
Donna Alderson
(m. 2015)
Children1
EducationUniversity of Nevada, Las Vegas (BS, MS)
Military service
Allegiance United States
Branch/service United States Army
Years of service1980–1986
UnitNevada National Guard
United States Army Reserve

Born in Japan, Lombardo moved to Las Vegas in 1976 and holds degrees from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.[4] He served in the United States Army before becoming an officer in the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department in 1988.[5] He was elected sheriff in 2014 and reelected in 2018.[6] As sheriff, he oversaw the investigation into the 2017 Las Vegas shooting. He won the Republican nomination for governor of Nevada in 2022 and defeated incumbent Democratic governor Steve Sisolak in the general election; he took office on January 2, 2023.[7]

Early life and education edit

The son of a United States Air Force veteran, Lombardo was born in Sapporo, Japan, on November 8, 1962.[8] He lived in Japan for over a decade before moving to Las Vegas in 1976.[9] Lombardo graduated from Rancho High School in 1980.[10]

Lombardo attended the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, from which he received a bachelor of science in civil engineering and a master of science in crisis management.[8] He also completed the 227th session of the FBI National Academy in 2006.[5]

Early career edit

Military service edit

After graduating from high school in 1980, Lombardo joined the United States Army. During his time in the Army, he served in the Nevada National Guard and in the United States Army Reserve. He ended his military service in 1986.[11]

Law enforcement career edit

Lombardo joined the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department as an officer in 1988. He rose through the ranks, becoming a sergeant in 1996, a lieutenant in 2001, and a captain in 2006.[5] He was promoted to assistant sheriff in 2011.[8]

As assistant sheriff, Lombardo was in charge of the law enforcement services group, which included the department's divisions in charge of technical services, information technology, radio systems and professional standards.[9]

Lombardo also sat on the board of directors of the LVMPD Foundation from 2007 to 2014.[9] He retired from the police force after 26 years of service and stepped down from the foundation's board of directors in 2014 after being elected sheriff.

Lombardo had made appearances on the TV show Cops during the early 2000s.[12]

Sheriff of Clark County edit

First term (2015–2019) edit

 
Lombardo as Clark County Sheriff in 2016

On December 4, 2013, Lombardo announced his candidacy for sheriff of Clark County to succeed the retiring Doug Gillespie.[10] He won the primary election and narrowly defeated the Democratic nominee, retired LVMPD captain Larry Burns, in the November 4 general election.[13] Lombardo took office on January 5, 2015.[14] As sheriff he was head of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department, the combined law enforcement agency of Las Vegas and Clark County and Nevada's largest law enforcement agency, overseeing more than 5,000 officers.[15][16]

After becoming sheriff, Lombardo began the decentralization of LVMPD's detective operations, shifting detective operations from centralized crime-specific units to distribution of detectives throughout LVMPD area commands.[17]

In 2016, Lombardo connected the Las Vegas crime increase to a California law called Proposition 47, which is meant to reduce prison overcrowding.[18] Later that year, he responded to questions about a recent spike of violent crimes in Las Vegas, saying that the surge "keeps me up at night".[19][20] He later disagreed with FBI director James Comey's statement attributing a recent spike in violent crimes in Las Vegas to a so-called Ferguson effect.[21] In December 2016, Lombardo supported a high-capacity magazine ban, a call supported by the Las Vegas Sun editorial board.[22] By February 2017, Lombardo had concluded that the number of homicides in Las Vegas increased by an average of 20 each year.[23]

In September 2017, following the arrest of Seattle Seahawks defensive end Michael Bennett in Las Vegas, Lombardo dismissed Bennett's allegations that two police officers who arrested him used excessive force and made vulgar threats, claiming video evidence of the arrest did not corroborate the allegations.[24]

Timeline of the Las Vegas shooting presented by Lombardo

Following the 2017 Las Vegas shooting at Mandalay Bay and Route 91 Harvest, in which 59 people died and 527 were injured—the deadliest mass shooting in the modern U.S. history—Lombardo oversaw the investigation into the shooting and into the perpetrator, Stephen Paddock.[25][26]

Second term (2019–2023) edit

Lombardo won the 2018 primary election with 73% of the vote,[27][28] defeating four challengers.[28] He was sworn in to a second term on January 4, 2019, and during the ceremony touted an expansion of the LVMPD's staff levels during his tenure (an increase of more than 900 officers and 280 corrections officers).[27][29] Later that year, Lombardo's department issued a report recommending many changes to improve the police response to future critical incidents.[30]

In June 2020, amid the George Floyd protests, the LVMPD arrested six people observing a protest along the Las Vegas Strip.[31] Governor Steve Sisolak called for an investigation. Lombardo defended the department's actions by releasing body-cam videos of the six engaging in "antagonizing behavior" and obstructing officers.[32]

As sheriff, Lombardo made an annual salary of $161,000.[8]

In lieu of running for a third term, Lombardo ran for governor of Nevada in 2022. He was replaced by LVMPD undersheriff Kevin McMahill.[33]

Governor of Nevada edit

 
Lombardo campaigning for governor, September 2022

2022 gubernatorial campaign edit

Lombardo announced his candidacy for governor of Nevada on June 28, 2021, to challenge incumbent governor Steve Sisolak in the 2022 election.[11] Lombardo faced 11 other candidates, including the presumptive front-runner, Dean Heller, a former U.S. senator. Lombardo eventually surpassed Heller by double digits in the polls[34] and was widely considered the front-runner by February.[35][36][37] Former President Donald Trump endorsed Lombardo in April 2022.[38] Lombardo won the Republican nomination on June 14, 2022, with 38.3% of the vote, defeating his main competitors, including Heller, Reno-based attorney and former boxer Joey Gilbert, and North Las Vegas Mayor John Jay Lee.[39] On November 12, 2022, several days after election day, Lombardo was projected to win, having defeated Sisolak by roughly 16,000 votes.[40]

Tenure edit

Lombardo was sworn in on January 2, 2023, the same day Cisco Aguilar became Nevada Secretary of State and Andy Matthews became Nevada State Controller.[6][41] On his fourth day in office, Lombardo signed two executive orders to remove remaining COVID-19 mandates and address workforce vacancies and wages.[42][43] On January 12, Lombardo signed two more executive orders aimed at reducing regulatory burdens. The orders would suspend any new regulations from executive agencies, with exceptions for regulations that would affect public health, public safety, pending judicial deadlines and the essential duties of an executive branch.[44]

In his State of the State address on January 23, Lombardo proposed a two-year $11 billion budget that would be the largest general fund budget in Nevada history and pledged $2 billion per biennium for K-12 education—an increase of more than 22% from the previous biennium. He also promised to restore funding to the state's higher education system and proposed adding $313 million into what he announced as the "Nevada Way Fund", a savings fund to be used for infrastructure and development projects.[45][46] On March 1, Lombardo signed legislation to transfer $70 million from the state's general fund to the education fund.[47]

In May, Lombardo proposed implementing a voter ID requirement to roll back vote-by-mail. State Democratic legislators have said the proposal would be "dead on arrival".[48]

In June, Lombardo introduced a bill to the Nevada State Legislature to help fund a $1.5 billion 30,000-seat ballpark built on the site of the Tropicana Las Vegas for the Oakland Athletics' relocation to Las Vegas via partial public financing.[49] During a special session, the bill was amended and renamed SB1 on June 7. By June 15, he signed SB1 into law, which authorized the funding and construction of the ballpark after it passed in the Legislature by a majority vote.[50] In June 2023, Lombardo signed a bill to provide $380 million in public funding for the stadium.[51] Proponents of the public funding package argued that it would be good for Nevada's economy, while some economists argued that studies show these kinds of deals are bad investments for taxpayers.[52]

In September 2023, the work vacancy rate in Nevada stood at 24.3%, virtually unchanged since Lombardo was sworn in as governor.[53] In an attempt to lower the vacancy rate, Lombardo signed an executive order on September 18 that suspended certain minimum qualification requirements for state jobs for at least 90 days.[54]

Political positions edit

Lombardo describes himself as a moderate Republican.[55]

Death penalty edit

In an April 2022 interview with The Nevada Independent, Lombardo said he supports the death penalty as long as there is due process.[56]

Police reform edit

Lombardo has said he opposes the "defund the police" slogan.[56]

Education edit

Lombardo supports an audit of the education system. In an April 2022 interview with The Nevada Independent, he said he would investigate whether education funds are being allocated appropriately on "day one" of his governorship.[56]

Abortion edit

During his 2022 campaign, Lombardo made clear he opposes abortion, but opposes a national abortion ban and supports upholding the codification of abortion rights passed by Nevada voters in 1990.[57] On May 30, 2023, Lombardo signed into law a bill enshrining protections for out-of-state abortion seekers and in-state abortion providers.[58] Lombardo had described his views as "pro-life" and was endorsed by National Right to Life, a Political Action Committee that opposes abortion rights, but, as of May 2023, he was one of three Republican governors, along with Phil Scott of Vermont and Charlie Baker of Massachusetts, to have signed legislation protecting access to abortion services.[59][60][61]

Gun control edit

Lombardo supports universal background checks on people purchasing guns.[62] As Clark County sheriff, he supported a high-capacity magazine ban.[22]

LGBTQ rights edit

Lombardo signed legislation that "prevents insurance companies from discriminating against trans people on the basis of gender identity, while the other measure signed in late May requires prisons to develop regulations to ensure safety of trans and nonbinary people who are incarcerated."[63] But while signing two pieces of legislation to protect transgender and non-binary rights in Nevada, Lombardo vetoed a third bill that would have strengthened protections for medical providers offering gender-affirming care to minors.[64][65]

Voting edit

In an April 2022 interview with The Nevada Independent, Lombardo said he did not believe there was fraud in the 2020 presidential election and saw no reason to believe Joe Biden was not "duly elected". But he said that "the election system has the ability to have fraud in it".[56]

Personal life edit

Lombardo was divorced and has one child from his previous marriage.[66] He married Donna Alderson, a commercial real estate broker, in 2015.[67]

Lombardo is Catholic.[68] In his spare time, he is an off-road racer in the SCORE International racing series.[69]

Electoral history edit

2014 Clark County sheriff election[70][71]
Primary election
Party Candidate Votes %
Nonpartisan Joe Lombardo 41,827 36.26
Nonpartisan Larry Burns 32,620 28.28
Nonpartisan Ted Moody 20,745 17.99
Nonpartisan Robert Gronauer 7,302 6.33
General election
Nonpartisan Joe Lombardo 154,047 51.16
Nonpartisan Larry Burns 147,063 48.44
Total votes 301,110 100.0
2018 Clark County sheriff election[72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Nonpartisan Joe Lombardo 139,132 72.81
Nonpartisan Tim Bedwell 29,939 15.67
Nonpartisan Matt Caldwell 10,241 5.36
Nonpartisan Gordon Martines 8,570 4.48
Nonpartisan Gregory Heiny 3,210 1.69
2022 Nevada Republican gubernatorial primary election[73][74]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Joe Lombardo 87,761 38.40%
Republican Joey Gilbert 61,738 27.01%
Republican Dean Heller 32,087 14.04%
Republican John Jay Lee 17,846 7.81%
Republican Guy Nohra 8,348 3.65%
Republican Fred J. Simon 6,856 3.00%
Republican Thomas Heck 4,315 1.89%
None of These Candidates 4,219 1.85%
Republican Eddie Hamilton 1,293 0.57%
Republican Amber Whitley 1,238 0.54%
Republican William Walls 833 0.36%
Republican Gary Evertsen 558 0.24%
Republican Seven Achilles Evans 475 0.21%
Republican Edward O'Brien 422 0.18%
Republican Barak Zilberberg 352 0.15%
Republican Stanleigh Lusak 229 0.10%
Total votes 228,570 100.0%
2022 Nevada gubernatorial election[75]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Joe Lombardo 497,377 48.81% +3.50%
Democratic Steve Sisolak (incumbent) 481,991 47.30% -2.09%
Libertarian Brandon Davis 14,919 1.46% +0.57%
None of These Candidates 14,866 1.46% -0.48%
Independent American Ed Bridges 9,918 0.97% -0.07%
Total votes 1,019,071 100.0%
Turnout 1,023,617 54.58%
Registered electors 1,875,578
Republican gain from Democratic

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Lochhead, Colton (January 5, 2015). "Sheriff Lombardo offers lighthearted laughs in swearing in ceremony". Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved December 19, 2016.
  2. ^ Torres-Cortez, Ricardo (December 12, 2016). "Clark County sheriff shares insights on challenges of 2016". Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved December 18, 2016.
  3. ^ Hartman, Jim (September 10, 2022). "Crime: Joe Lombardo's edge in governor's race". Nevada Appeal. Retrieved March 26, 2023.
  4. ^ Schoenmann, Joe (June 27, 2014). "In Clark County sheriff race, Joe Lombardo, Larry Burns will pit police brass against police union". Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  5. ^ a b c . www.lvmpd.com. Archived from the original on November 6, 2022. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  6. ^ a b Lochhead, Colton (November 12, 2022). "Sisolak concedes; Lombardo will be next Nevada governor". Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  7. ^ Carlton, Jim; Flores, Adolfo (November 11, 2022). "Republican Joe Lombardo Elected Nevada Governor". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  8. ^ a b c d Erdman, Shelby Lin (October 2, 2017). "Who is Clark County, Nevada Sheriff Joseph Lombardo?". Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
  9. ^ a b c Bucher, Chris (October 3, 2017). "Sheriff Joseph Lombardo: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know". Heavy.com. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  10. ^ a b Nordli, Brian; Valley, Jackie (December 4, 2013). "Metro Police veteran Joe Lombardo jumps into race for sheriff". Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved December 18, 2016.
  11. ^ a b Golonka, Sean; Snyder, Riley; Rindels, Michelle; Bright, Zachary (June 28, 2021). "Clark County Sheriff Lombardo announces run for governor as Republican; says he'll veto new taxes, take 'law and order' tack". The Nevada Independent. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  12. ^ "Joe Lombardo". IMDb.
  13. ^ Miller, Ross. "2014 Clark County election results". www.nvsos.gov. Retrieved 2022-11-12.
  14. ^ Erdman, Shelby Lin (October 2, 2017). "Who is Clark County, Nevada Sheriff Joseph Lombardo?". Atlanta Journal-Constitution. ISSN 1539-7459. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  15. ^ "11 Best Police Departments in Nevada to Work For (2022 Rankings)". Outside the Badge. January 8, 2022. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  16. ^ Ritter, Ken (July 12, 2019). "Vegas police release report on massacre". Associated Press. Retrieved January 11, 2023.
  17. ^ Lochhead, Colton (July 26, 2015). "3 notable changes since Sheriff Joseph Lombardo took office". Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved December 18, 2016.
  18. ^ Torres-Cortez, Ricardo (March 31, 2016). "Sheriff links Las Vegas crime hike to California law to reduce prison crowd". Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved December 18, 2016.
  19. ^ Juhl, Wesley (April 27, 2016). "Sheriff Lombardo answers questions about recent spike in violent Las Vegas crime". Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved December 18, 2016.
  20. ^ Torres-Cortez, Ricardo (April 28, 2016). "Lombardo: Surge in violent Las Vegas crime 'keeps me up at night'". Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved December 18, 2016.
  21. ^ Juhl, Wesley (May 17, 2016). "Clark County sheriff disagrees with FBI director, says Metro is understaffed". Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved December 18, 2016.
  22. ^ a b "High-capacity magazine ban a must for Nevadans' safety". Las Vegas Sun. December 11, 2016. Retrieved December 17, 2016.
  23. ^ Torres-Cortez, Ricardo (February 24, 2017). "Steady spike in homicides brings new Metro focus on violent crime". Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved January 11, 2023.
  24. ^ "Vegas sheriff: No evidence officers mistreated NFL player". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. September 30, 2017. Retrieved January 11, 2023.
  25. ^ Smith, Mitch; Medina, Jennifer; Williams, Timothy (October 9, 2017). "After Las Vegas Shooting, a Tight-Lipped Sheriff Faces a Maddening Case". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  26. ^ Allen, Karma; Shapiro, Emily; Jacobo, Julia (October 3, 2017). "Las Vegas shooting death toll rises to 59, no apparent connection to international terror". ABC News. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  27. ^ a b Torres-Cortez, Ricardo (January 4, 2019). "Lombardo sworn into second term as sheriff". Las Vegas Sun.
  28. ^ a b Apgar, Blake (June 12, 2018). "Lombardo wins re-election in race for Clark County sheriff". Las Vegas Review-Journal.
  29. ^ Torres-Cortez, Ricardo (January 4, 2019). "Lombardo sworn into second term as sheriff". Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  30. ^ Torres-Cortez, Ricardo (October 1, 2020). "'It just kept getting worse': Lombardo recalls Oct. 1 shooting 3 years later". Las Vegas Sun.
  31. ^ Valencia, Peter (June 13, 2020). "6 legal observers detained as hundreds protest along Las Vegas Strip". ABC3. Retrieved January 9, 2023.
  32. ^ "Las Vegas sheriff defends arrests of protest observers". Tyler Morning Telegraph. June 17, 2020. Retrieved January 9, 2023.
  33. ^ Schnur, Sabrina (October 21, 2022). "Sheriff-elect plans to use drones to monitor violent crimes". Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  34. ^ DeHaven, James (December 1, 2021). "Lombardo looking to leapfrog Heller in race for governor". Reno Gazette-Journal. Retrieved January 18, 2023.
  35. ^ Lacanlale, Rio (February 3, 2022). "Sheriff Joe Lombardo lifts COVID-19 vaccine mandate amid criticism from political opponents". Reno Gazette-Journal. MSN. Retrieved January 8, 2023.
  36. ^ Hartman, Jim (January 28, 2022). "Jim Hartman: Lombardo is GOP's frontrunner for governor". Elko Daily Free Press. Retrieved January 8, 2023.
  37. ^ DeHaven, James (May 15, 2022). "Lombardo remains heavy favorite in NV governor race". Reno Gazette-Journal. Retrieved January 9, 2023.
  38. ^ Olson, Tyler (April 28, 2022). "Trump endorses Joe Lombardo in crowded GOP primary for Nevada governor". Fox News. Retrieved January 3, 2023.
  39. ^ Edelman, Adam (June 14, 2022). "Joe Lombardo wins Nevada GOP primary for governor, will challenge Sisolak". NBC News. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  40. ^ Reston, Maeve (November 12, 2022). "Republican Joe Lombardo will defeat Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak, CNN projects". CNN. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  41. ^ Barth, Megan (January 2, 2023). "Joe Lombardo Sworn In as Nevada's 31st Governor". NevadaGlobe. Retrieved January 7, 2023.
  42. ^ "Newly-elected governor Joe Lombardo announces first two executive orders". KSNV. January 6, 2023. Retrieved January 7, 2023.
  43. ^ Avery, Taylor R. (January 6, 2023). "Lombardo signs 2 executive orders, vows to give state employees a raise". Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved January 7, 2023.
  44. ^ Mueller, Tabitha; Golonka, Sean (January 12, 2023). "Lombardo orders freeze on new state regulations, cuts to professional licensing rules". Nevada Independent. Retrieved January 13, 2023.
  45. ^ "NV governor wants to cut business taxes, suspend gas tax, make biggest education investment in state history". Fox News. January 24, 2023. Retrieved February 2, 2023.
  46. ^ "Recap: Governor Lombardo 2023 State of the State Address". Vegas Business Digest. January 29, 2023. Retrieved February 2, 2023.
  47. ^ "Lombardo signs off on a $70M transfer to state education fund". March 1, 2023. Retrieved March 2, 2023.
  48. ^ Mueller, Tabitha; Solis, Jacob (May 4, 2023). "Democrats: Lombardo voter ID proposal dead on arrival". Retrieved May 7, 2023.
  49. ^ "Sports economists pan public funding for A's ballpark as standard stadium grift". The Nevada Independent. June 15, 2023.
  50. ^ "Nevada governor signs A's stadium funding bill". KLAS. 2023-06-15. Retrieved 2023-06-16.
  51. ^ "Governor signs public funding bill for new A's stadium in Vegas, growing global sports destination". AP NEWS. 2023-06-16.
  52. ^ "Sports economists pan public funding for A's ballpark deal as 'standard stadium grift'". The Nevada Independent. 2023-06-04.
  53. ^ Margiott, Ben (October 4, 2023). "Gov. Lombardo's executive order suspends minimum qualifications for some state jobs to lower vacancy rate". KRNV Reno.
  54. ^ "EXECUTIVE ORDER 2023-10". NV.gov.
  55. ^ "On the record: Republican governor candidate Joe Lombardo". October 11, 2022. Retrieved March 25, 2023.
  56. ^ a b c d "GOP governor candidate Joe Lombardo on COVID, elections and K-12". YouTube. April 26, 2022. Retrieved March 25, 2023.
  57. ^ "Lombardo says he'll oppose US abortion ban if he becomes Nevada governor". September 15, 2022. Retrieved March 25, 2023.
  58. ^ Stern, Gabe (May 30, 2023). "Nevada Republican governor approves abortion protections in rare cross-party move". Associated Press. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
  59. ^ "In rare move, Nevada's Republican governor strengthens abortion rights protections". www.cbsnews.com. 2023-05-30. Retrieved 2023-06-04.
  60. ^ "Nevada's Lombardo becomes third Republican governor to buck GOP trend and protect access to abortion". MarketWatch. Associated Press. Retrieved 2023-06-04.
  61. ^ "Nevada Republican governor enshrines abortion protections". PBS NewsHour. 2023-05-31. Retrieved 2023-06-04.
  62. ^ "Lombardo bucks GOP line on guns, supports universal background checks but pushes back on recent gun control bills". June 25, 2021. Retrieved March 25, 2023.
  63. ^ Lyle, Michael (2023-06-14). "In contrast to red state anti-LGBTQ push, NV's Republican governor signs 2 trans protection bills". Nevada Current. Retrieved 2023-07-11.
  64. ^ "Lombardo, bucking party, signs insurance coverage for gender-affirming care bill". The Nevada Independent. 2023-06-13. Retrieved 2023-07-11.
  65. ^ Zalucki, Rachel (2023-06-13). "Governor Joe Lombardo signs bill requiring health insurance companies to cover 'gender-affirming care'". KTNV 13 Action News Las Vegas. Retrieved 2023-07-11.
  66. ^ Ley, Ana (October 15, 2014). "For Clark County sheriff, it's policy wonk or likable leader". Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  67. ^ Gentry, Dana (June 7, 2019). "Lombardo fails to report wife's income on financial disclosure forms". Nevada Current. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  68. ^ Lombardo, Joe [@JoeLombardoNV] (June 24, 2022). "My statement on the Supreme Court's Dobbs Ruling:" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  69. ^ Racers from 41 States, 18 countries–51st SCORE Baja 1000, SCORE International (November 12, 2018).
  70. ^ "Nevada General Election 2014 Clark County Results". Nevada Secretary of State. 4 November 2014. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  71. ^ "Clark County, Nevada Past Elections". Clark County, NV. 12 June 2014. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  72. ^ "Clark County, Nevada Past Elections". Clark County, NV. 12 June 2018. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  73. ^ "2022 Statewide and Multi-County Candidate Filing - By Office". Secretary of State of Nevada. March 18, 2022. Retrieved March 21, 2022.
  74. ^ "2022 Official Statewide Primary Election Results - June 14, 2022". Nevada Secretary of State. Retrieved July 1, 2022.
  75. ^ "Silver State 2022 - General Election Results - Statewide". Nevada Secretary of State.

External links edit

  • Governor Joe Lombardo official government website
  • Joe Lombardo for Governor campaign website
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
Civic offices
Preceded by Sheriff of Clark County
2015–2023
Succeeded by
Kevin McMahill
Party political offices
Preceded by Republican nominee for Governor of Nevada
2022
Most recent
Political offices
Preceded by Governor of Nevada
2023–present
Incumbent
U.S. order of precedence (ceremonial)
Preceded byas Vice President Order of precedence of the United States
Within Nevada
Succeeded by
Mayor of city
in which event is held
Succeeded by
Otherwise Mike Johnson
as Speaker of the House
Preceded byas Governor of West Virginia Order of precedence of the United States
Outside Nevada
Succeeded byas Governor of Nebraska

lombardo, this, article, about, governor, nevada, fictional, character, list, third, watch, characters, firefighter, american, mobster, joseph, lombardo, joseph, michael, lombardo, born, november, 1962, american, politician, former, enforcement, officer, servi. This article is about the governor of Nevada For the fictional character see List of Third Watch characters Firefighter Joe Lombardo For the American mobster see Joseph Lombardo Joseph Michael Lombardo born November 8 1962 is an American politician and former law enforcement officer serving since 2023 as the 31st governor of Nevada A member of the Republican Party he was the 17th sheriff of Clark County from 2015 to 2023 capping a 34 year career in law enforcement 1 2 3 Joe LombardoLombardo in 202231st Governor of NevadaIncumbentAssumed office January 2 2023LieutenantStavros AnthonyPreceded bySteve Sisolak17th Sheriff of Clark CountyIn office January 5 2015 January 2 2023Preceded byDoug GillespieSucceeded byKevin McMahillPersonal detailsBornJoseph Michael Lombardo 1962 11 08 November 8 1962 age 61 Sapporo JapanPolitical partyRepublicanSpouseDonna Alderson m 2015 wbr Children1EducationUniversity of Nevada Las Vegas BS MS Military serviceAllegiance United StatesBranch service United States ArmyYears of service1980 1986UnitNevada National GuardUnited States Army Reserve Born in Japan Lombardo moved to Las Vegas in 1976 and holds degrees from the University of Nevada Las Vegas 4 He served in the United States Army before becoming an officer in the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department in 1988 5 He was elected sheriff in 2014 and reelected in 2018 6 As sheriff he oversaw the investigation into the 2017 Las Vegas shooting He won the Republican nomination for governor of Nevada in 2022 and defeated incumbent Democratic governor Steve Sisolak in the general election he took office on January 2 2023 7 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Early career 2 1 Military service 2 2 Law enforcement career 3 Sheriff of Clark County 3 1 First term 2015 2019 3 2 Second term 2019 2023 4 Governor of Nevada 4 1 2022 gubernatorial campaign 4 2 Tenure 5 Political positions 5 1 Death penalty 5 2 Police reform 5 3 Education 5 4 Abortion 5 5 Gun control 5 6 LGBTQ rights 5 7 Voting 6 Personal life 7 Electoral history 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksEarly life and education editThe son of a United States Air Force veteran Lombardo was born in Sapporo Japan on November 8 1962 8 He lived in Japan for over a decade before moving to Las Vegas in 1976 9 Lombardo graduated from Rancho High School in 1980 10 Lombardo attended the University of Nevada Las Vegas from which he received a bachelor of science in civil engineering and a master of science in crisis management 8 He also completed the 227th session of the FBI National Academy in 2006 5 Early career editMilitary service edit After graduating from high school in 1980 Lombardo joined the United States Army During his time in the Army he served in the Nevada National Guard and in the United States Army Reserve He ended his military service in 1986 11 Law enforcement career edit Lombardo joined the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department as an officer in 1988 He rose through the ranks becoming a sergeant in 1996 a lieutenant in 2001 and a captain in 2006 5 He was promoted to assistant sheriff in 2011 8 As assistant sheriff Lombardo was in charge of the law enforcement services group which included the department s divisions in charge of technical services information technology radio systems and professional standards 9 Lombardo also sat on the board of directors of the LVMPD Foundation from 2007 to 2014 9 He retired from the police force after 26 years of service and stepped down from the foundation s board of directors in 2014 after being elected sheriff Lombardo had made appearances on the TV show Cops during the early 2000s 12 Sheriff of Clark County editFirst term 2015 2019 edit nbsp Lombardo as Clark County Sheriff in 2016 On December 4 2013 Lombardo announced his candidacy for sheriff of Clark County to succeed the retiring Doug Gillespie 10 He won the primary election and narrowly defeated the Democratic nominee retired LVMPD captain Larry Burns in the November 4 general election 13 Lombardo took office on January 5 2015 14 As sheriff he was head of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department the combined law enforcement agency of Las Vegas and Clark County and Nevada s largest law enforcement agency overseeing more than 5 000 officers 15 16 After becoming sheriff Lombardo began the decentralization of LVMPD s detective operations shifting detective operations from centralized crime specific units to distribution of detectives throughout LVMPD area commands 17 In 2016 Lombardo connected the Las Vegas crime increase to a California law called Proposition 47 which is meant to reduce prison overcrowding 18 Later that year he responded to questions about a recent spike of violent crimes in Las Vegas saying that the surge keeps me up at night 19 20 He later disagreed with FBI director James Comey s statement attributing a recent spike in violent crimes in Las Vegas to a so called Ferguson effect 21 In December 2016 Lombardo supported a high capacity magazine ban a call supported by the Las Vegas Sun editorial board 22 By February 2017 Lombardo had concluded that the number of homicides in Las Vegas increased by an average of 20 each year 23 In September 2017 following the arrest of Seattle Seahawks defensive end Michael Bennett in Las Vegas Lombardo dismissed Bennett s allegations that two police officers who arrested him used excessive force and made vulgar threats claiming video evidence of the arrest did not corroborate the allegations 24 source source source source source Timeline of the Las Vegas shooting presented by Lombardo Following the 2017 Las Vegas shooting at Mandalay Bay and Route 91 Harvest in which 59 people died and 527 were injured the deadliest mass shooting in the modern U S history Lombardo oversaw the investigation into the shooting and into the perpetrator Stephen Paddock 25 26 Second term 2019 2023 edit Lombardo won the 2018 primary election with 73 of the vote 27 28 defeating four challengers 28 He was sworn in to a second term on January 4 2019 and during the ceremony touted an expansion of the LVMPD s staff levels during his tenure an increase of more than 900 officers and 280 corrections officers 27 29 Later that year Lombardo s department issued a report recommending many changes to improve the police response to future critical incidents 30 In June 2020 amid the George Floyd protests the LVMPD arrested six people observing a protest along the Las Vegas Strip 31 Governor Steve Sisolak called for an investigation Lombardo defended the department s actions by releasing body cam videos of the six engaging in antagonizing behavior and obstructing officers 32 As sheriff Lombardo made an annual salary of 161 000 8 In lieu of running for a third term Lombardo ran for governor of Nevada in 2022 He was replaced by LVMPD undersheriff Kevin McMahill 33 Governor of Nevada edit nbsp Lombardo campaigning for governor September 2022 2022 gubernatorial campaign edit Main article 2022 Nevada gubernatorial election Lombardo announced his candidacy for governor of Nevada on June 28 2021 to challenge incumbent governor Steve Sisolak in the 2022 election 11 Lombardo faced 11 other candidates including the presumptive front runner Dean Heller a former U S senator Lombardo eventually surpassed Heller by double digits in the polls 34 and was widely considered the front runner by February 35 36 37 Former President Donald Trump endorsed Lombardo in April 2022 38 Lombardo won the Republican nomination on June 14 2022 with 38 3 of the vote defeating his main competitors including Heller Reno based attorney and former boxer Joey Gilbert and North Las Vegas Mayor John Jay Lee 39 On November 12 2022 several days after election day Lombardo was projected to win having defeated Sisolak by roughly 16 000 votes 40 Tenure edit Lombardo was sworn in on January 2 2023 the same day Cisco Aguilar became Nevada Secretary of State and Andy Matthews became Nevada State Controller 6 41 On his fourth day in office Lombardo signed two executive orders to remove remaining COVID 19 mandates and address workforce vacancies and wages 42 43 On January 12 Lombardo signed two more executive orders aimed at reducing regulatory burdens The orders would suspend any new regulations from executive agencies with exceptions for regulations that would affect public health public safety pending judicial deadlines and the essential duties of an executive branch 44 In his State of the State address on January 23 Lombardo proposed a two year 11 billion budget that would be the largest general fund budget in Nevada history and pledged 2 billion per biennium for K 12 education an increase of more than 22 from the previous biennium He also promised to restore funding to the state s higher education system and proposed adding 313 million into what he announced as the Nevada Way Fund a savings fund to be used for infrastructure and development projects 45 46 On March 1 Lombardo signed legislation to transfer 70 million from the state s general fund to the education fund 47 In May Lombardo proposed implementing a voter ID requirement to roll back vote by mail State Democratic legislators have said the proposal would be dead on arrival 48 In June Lombardo introduced a bill to the Nevada State Legislature to help fund a 1 5 billion 30 000 seat ballpark built on the site of the Tropicana Las Vegas for the Oakland Athletics relocation to Las Vegas via partial public financing 49 During a special session the bill was amended and renamed SB1 on June 7 By June 15 he signed SB1 into law which authorized the funding and construction of the ballpark after it passed in the Legislature by a majority vote 50 In June 2023 Lombardo signed a bill to provide 380 million in public funding for the stadium 51 Proponents of the public funding package argued that it would be good for Nevada s economy while some economists argued that studies show these kinds of deals are bad investments for taxpayers 52 In September 2023 the work vacancy rate in Nevada stood at 24 3 virtually unchanged since Lombardo was sworn in as governor 53 In an attempt to lower the vacancy rate Lombardo signed an executive order on September 18 that suspended certain minimum qualification requirements for state jobs for at least 90 days 54 Political positions editLombardo describes himself as a moderate Republican 55 Death penalty edit In an April 2022 interview with The Nevada Independent Lombardo said he supports the death penalty as long as there is due process 56 Police reform edit Lombardo has said he opposes the defund the police slogan 56 Education edit Lombardo supports an audit of the education system In an April 2022 interview with The Nevada Independent he said he would investigate whether education funds are being allocated appropriately on day one of his governorship 56 Abortion edit During his 2022 campaign Lombardo made clear he opposes abortion but opposes a national abortion ban and supports upholding the codification of abortion rights passed by Nevada voters in 1990 57 On May 30 2023 Lombardo signed into law a bill enshrining protections for out of state abortion seekers and in state abortion providers 58 Lombardo had described his views as pro life and was endorsed by National Right to Life a Political Action Committee that opposes abortion rights but as of May 2023 he was one of three Republican governors along with Phil Scott of Vermont and Charlie Baker of Massachusetts to have signed legislation protecting access to abortion services 59 60 61 Gun control edit Lombardo supports universal background checks on people purchasing guns 62 As Clark County sheriff he supported a high capacity magazine ban 22 LGBTQ rights edit Lombardo signed legislation that prevents insurance companies from discriminating against trans people on the basis of gender identity while the other measure signed in late May requires prisons to develop regulations to ensure safety of trans and nonbinary people who are incarcerated 63 But while signing two pieces of legislation to protect transgender and non binary rights in Nevada Lombardo vetoed a third bill that would have strengthened protections for medical providers offering gender affirming care to minors 64 65 Voting edit In an April 2022 interview with The Nevada Independent Lombardo said he did not believe there was fraud in the 2020 presidential election and saw no reason to believe Joe Biden was not duly elected But he said that the election system has the ability to have fraud in it 56 Personal life editLombardo was divorced and has one child from his previous marriage 66 He married Donna Alderson a commercial real estate broker in 2015 67 Lombardo is Catholic 68 In his spare time he is an off road racer in the SCORE International racing series 69 Electoral history edit2014 Clark County sheriff election 70 71 Primary election Party Candidate Votes Nonpartisan Joe Lombardo 41 827 36 26 Nonpartisan Larry Burns 32 620 28 28 Nonpartisan Ted Moody 20 745 17 99 Nonpartisan Robert Gronauer 7 302 6 33 General election Nonpartisan Joe Lombardo 154 047 51 16 Nonpartisan Larry Burns 147 063 48 44 Total votes 301 110 100 0 2018 Clark County sheriff election 72 Party Candidate Votes Nonpartisan Joe Lombardo 139 132 72 81 Nonpartisan Tim Bedwell 29 939 15 67 Nonpartisan Matt Caldwell 10 241 5 36 Nonpartisan Gordon Martines 8 570 4 48 Nonpartisan Gregory Heiny 3 210 1 69 2022 Nevada Republican gubernatorial primary election 73 74 Party Candidate Votes Republican Joe Lombardo 87 761 38 40 Republican Joey Gilbert 61 738 27 01 Republican Dean Heller 32 087 14 04 Republican John Jay Lee 17 846 7 81 Republican Guy Nohra 8 348 3 65 Republican Fred J Simon 6 856 3 00 Republican Thomas Heck 4 315 1 89 None of These Candidates 4 219 1 85 Republican Eddie Hamilton 1 293 0 57 Republican Amber Whitley 1 238 0 54 Republican William Walls 833 0 36 Republican Gary Evertsen 558 0 24 Republican Seven Achilles Evans 475 0 21 Republican Edward O Brien 422 0 18 Republican Barak Zilberberg 352 0 15 Republican Stanleigh Lusak 229 0 10 Total votes 228 570 100 0 2022 Nevada gubernatorial election 75 Party Candidate Votes Republican Joe Lombardo 497 377 48 81 3 50 Democratic Steve Sisolak incumbent 481 991 47 30 2 09 Libertarian Brandon Davis 14 919 1 46 0 57 None of These Candidates 14 866 1 46 0 48 Independent American Ed Bridges 9 918 0 97 0 07 Total votes 1 019 071 100 0 Turnout 1 023 617 54 58 Registered electors 1 875 578 Republican gain from DemocraticSee also editList of U S state governors born outside the United StatesReferences edit Lochhead Colton January 5 2015 Sheriff Lombardo offers lighthearted laughs in swearing in ceremony Las Vegas Review Journal Retrieved December 19 2016 Torres Cortez Ricardo December 12 2016 Clark County sheriff shares insights on challenges of 2016 Las Vegas Sun Retrieved December 18 2016 Hartman Jim September 10 2022 Crime Joe Lombardo s edge in governor s race Nevada Appeal Retrieved March 26 2023 Schoenmann Joe June 27 2014 In Clark County sheriff race Joe Lombardo Larry Burns will pit police brass against police union Las Vegas Sun Retrieved November 12 2022 a b c Sheriff Joseph Lombardo www lvmpd com Archived from the original on November 6 2022 Retrieved November 12 2022 a b Lochhead Colton November 12 2022 Sisolak concedes Lombardo will be next Nevada governor Las Vegas Review Journal Retrieved November 12 2022 Carlton Jim Flores Adolfo November 11 2022 Republican Joe Lombardo Elected Nevada Governor The Wall Street Journal Retrieved November 12 2022 a b c d Erdman Shelby Lin October 2 2017 Who is Clark County Nevada Sheriff Joseph Lombardo Atlanta Journal Constitution a b c Bucher Chris October 3 2017 Sheriff Joseph Lombardo 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know Heavy com Retrieved November 12 2022 a b Nordli Brian Valley Jackie December 4 2013 Metro Police veteran Joe Lombardo jumps into race for sheriff Las Vegas Sun Retrieved December 18 2016 a b Golonka Sean Snyder Riley Rindels Michelle Bright Zachary June 28 2021 Clark County Sheriff Lombardo announces run for governor as Republican says he ll veto new taxes take law and order tack The Nevada Independent Retrieved November 12 2022 Joe Lombardo IMDb Miller Ross 2014 Clark County election results www nvsos gov Retrieved 2022 11 12 Erdman Shelby Lin October 2 2017 Who is Clark County Nevada Sheriff Joseph Lombardo Atlanta Journal Constitution ISSN 1539 7459 Retrieved November 12 2022 11 Best Police Departments in Nevada to Work For 2022 Rankings Outside the Badge January 8 2022 Retrieved November 12 2022 Ritter Ken July 12 2019 Vegas police release report on massacre Associated Press Retrieved January 11 2023 Lochhead Colton July 26 2015 3 notable changes since Sheriff Joseph Lombardo took office Las Vegas Review Journal Retrieved December 18 2016 Torres Cortez Ricardo March 31 2016 Sheriff links Las Vegas crime hike to California law to reduce prison crowd Las Vegas Sun Retrieved December 18 2016 Juhl Wesley April 27 2016 Sheriff Lombardo answers questions about recent spike in violent Las Vegas crime Las Vegas Review Journal Retrieved December 18 2016 Torres Cortez Ricardo April 28 2016 Lombardo Surge in violent Las Vegas crime keeps me up at night Las Vegas Sun Retrieved December 18 2016 Juhl Wesley May 17 2016 Clark County sheriff disagrees with FBI director says Metro is understaffed Las Vegas Review Journal Retrieved December 18 2016 a b High capacity magazine ban a must for Nevadans safety Las Vegas Sun December 11 2016 Retrieved December 17 2016 Torres Cortez Ricardo February 24 2017 Steady spike in homicides brings new Metro focus on violent crime Las Vegas Sun Retrieved January 11 2023 Vegas sheriff No evidence officers mistreated NFL player Seattle Post Intelligencer September 30 2017 Retrieved January 11 2023 Smith Mitch Medina Jennifer Williams Timothy October 9 2017 After Las Vegas Shooting a Tight Lipped Sheriff Faces a Maddening Case The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 12 2022 Allen Karma Shapiro Emily Jacobo Julia October 3 2017 Las Vegas shooting death toll rises to 59 no apparent connection to international terror ABC News Retrieved November 12 2022 a b Torres Cortez Ricardo January 4 2019 Lombardo sworn into second term as sheriff Las Vegas Sun a b Apgar Blake June 12 2018 Lombardo wins re election in race for Clark County sheriff Las Vegas Review Journal Torres Cortez Ricardo January 4 2019 Lombardo sworn into second term as sheriff Las Vegas Sun Retrieved November 12 2022 Torres Cortez Ricardo October 1 2020 It just kept getting worse Lombardo recalls Oct 1 shooting 3 years later Las Vegas Sun Valencia Peter June 13 2020 6 legal observers detained as hundreds protest along Las Vegas Strip ABC3 Retrieved January 9 2023 Las Vegas sheriff defends arrests of protest observers Tyler Morning Telegraph June 17 2020 Retrieved January 9 2023 Schnur Sabrina October 21 2022 Sheriff elect plans to use drones to monitor violent crimes Las Vegas Review Journal Retrieved November 12 2022 DeHaven James December 1 2021 Lombardo looking to leapfrog Heller in race for governor Reno Gazette Journal Retrieved January 18 2023 Lacanlale Rio February 3 2022 Sheriff Joe Lombardo lifts COVID 19 vaccine mandate amid criticism from political opponents Reno Gazette Journal MSN Retrieved January 8 2023 Hartman Jim January 28 2022 Jim Hartman Lombardo is GOP s frontrunner for governor Elko Daily Free Press Retrieved January 8 2023 DeHaven James May 15 2022 Lombardo remains heavy favorite in NV governor race Reno Gazette Journal Retrieved January 9 2023 Olson Tyler April 28 2022 Trump endorses Joe Lombardo in crowded GOP primary for Nevada governor Fox News Retrieved January 3 2023 Edelman Adam June 14 2022 Joe Lombardo wins Nevada GOP primary for governor will challenge Sisolak NBC News Retrieved November 12 2022 Reston Maeve November 12 2022 Republican Joe Lombardo will defeat Nevada Gov Steve Sisolak CNN projects CNN Retrieved November 12 2022 Barth Megan January 2 2023 Joe Lombardo Sworn In as Nevada s 31st Governor NevadaGlobe Retrieved January 7 2023 Newly elected governor Joe Lombardo announces first two executive orders KSNV January 6 2023 Retrieved January 7 2023 Avery Taylor R January 6 2023 Lombardo signs 2 executive orders vows to give state employees a raise Las Vegas Review Journal Retrieved January 7 2023 Mueller Tabitha Golonka Sean January 12 2023 Lombardo orders freeze on new state regulations cuts to professional licensing rules Nevada Independent Retrieved January 13 2023 NV governor wants to cut business taxes suspend gas tax make biggest education investment in state history Fox News January 24 2023 Retrieved February 2 2023 Recap Governor Lombardo 2023 State of the State Address Vegas Business Digest January 29 2023 Retrieved February 2 2023 Lombardo signs off on a 70M transfer to state education fund March 1 2023 Retrieved March 2 2023 Mueller Tabitha Solis Jacob May 4 2023 Democrats Lombardo voter ID proposal dead on arrival Retrieved May 7 2023 Sports economists pan public funding for A s ballpark as standard stadium grift The Nevada Independent June 15 2023 Nevada governor signs A s stadium funding bill KLAS 2023 06 15 Retrieved 2023 06 16 Governor signs public funding bill for new A s stadium in Vegas growing global sports destination AP NEWS 2023 06 16 Sports economists pan public funding for A s ballpark deal as standard stadium grift The Nevada Independent 2023 06 04 Margiott Ben October 4 2023 Gov Lombardo s executive order suspends minimum qualifications for some state jobs to lower vacancy rate KRNV Reno EXECUTIVE ORDER 2023 10 NV gov On the record Republican governor candidate Joe Lombardo October 11 2022 Retrieved March 25 2023 a b c d GOP governor candidate Joe Lombardo on COVID elections and K 12 YouTube April 26 2022 Retrieved March 25 2023 Lombardo says he ll oppose US abortion ban if he becomes Nevada governor September 15 2022 Retrieved March 25 2023 Stern Gabe May 30 2023 Nevada Republican governor approves abortion protections in rare cross party move Associated Press Retrieved May 30 2023 In rare move Nevada s Republican governor strengthens abortion rights protections www cbsnews com 2023 05 30 Retrieved 2023 06 04 Nevada s Lombardo becomes third Republican governor to buck GOP trend and protect access to abortion MarketWatch Associated Press Retrieved 2023 06 04 Nevada Republican governor enshrines abortion protections PBS NewsHour 2023 05 31 Retrieved 2023 06 04 Lombardo bucks GOP line on guns supports universal background checks but pushes back on recent gun control bills June 25 2021 Retrieved March 25 2023 Lyle Michael 2023 06 14 In contrast to red state anti LGBTQ push NV s Republican governor signs 2 trans protection bills Nevada Current Retrieved 2023 07 11 Lombardo bucking party signs insurance coverage for gender affirming care bill The Nevada Independent 2023 06 13 Retrieved 2023 07 11 Zalucki Rachel 2023 06 13 Governor Joe Lombardo signs bill requiring health insurance companies to cover gender affirming care KTNV 13 Action News Las Vegas Retrieved 2023 07 11 Ley Ana October 15 2014 For Clark County sheriff it s policy wonk or likable leader Las Vegas Sun Retrieved November 12 2022 Gentry Dana June 7 2019 Lombardo fails to report wife s income on financial disclosure forms Nevada Current Retrieved November 12 2022 Lombardo Joe JoeLombardoNV June 24 2022 My statement on the Supreme Court s Dobbs Ruling Tweet via Twitter Racers from 41 States 18 countries 51st SCORE Baja 1000 SCORE International November 12 2018 Nevada General Election 2014 Clark County Results Nevada Secretary of State 4 November 2014 Retrieved 2 January 2023 Clark County Nevada Past Elections Clark County NV 12 June 2014 Retrieved 2 January 2023 Clark County Nevada Past Elections Clark County NV 12 June 2018 Retrieved 2 January 2023 2022 Statewide and Multi County Candidate Filing By Office Secretary of State of Nevada March 18 2022 Retrieved March 21 2022 2022 Official Statewide Primary Election Results June 14 2022 Nevada Secretary of State Retrieved July 1 2022 Silver State 2022 General Election Results Statewide Nevada Secretary of State External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Joseph Lombardo Governor Joe Lombardo official government website Joe Lombardo for Governor campaign website Appearances on C SPAN Civic offices Preceded byDoug Gillespie Sheriff of Clark County2015 2023 Succeeded byKevin McMahill Party political offices Preceded byAdam Laxalt Republican nominee for Governor of Nevada2022 Most recent Political offices Preceded bySteve Sisolak Governor of Nevada2023 present Incumbent U S order of precedence ceremonial Preceded byKamala Harrisas Vice President Order of precedence of the United StatesWithin Nevada Succeeded byMayor of cityin which event is held Succeeded byOtherwise Mike Johnsonas Speaker of the House Preceded byJim Justiceas Governor of West Virginia Order of precedence of the United StatesOutside Nevada Succeeded byJim Pillenas Governor of Nebraska Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joe Lombardo amp oldid 1220787545, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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