Why Can’t I Vote For Mayor Of Las Vegas When I Live Here
You want to vote for a new Las Vegas Mayor, but the race isn’t on your ballot. Why?
Here’s Why You Can’t Vote For Mayor Of Las Vegas
It’s a very common question in Clark County every four years. Notice I said Clark County? That has something to do with the reason the Las Vegas mayor’s race is not on your ballot. I know – it’s confusing, but actually simple: You probably don’t REALLY live in Las Vegas.
You live in Clark County Nevada, right? Doesn’t matter.
There are five incorporated cities: Las Vegas, Henderson, North Las Vegas, Boulder City – and Mesquite. If you live in any of those cities, you get to vote for members of the city council, and for mayor of your city. But if you live outside of one of those cities, you’re a resident of Clark County.
Yes, your mail goes to a Las Vegas address, but you’re not actually a resident of Las Vegas. So, nope – you can’t vote for Mayor of Las Vegas.
You Can’t Vote For Mayor Of Las Vegas But you Still Have Representation
The Clark County commissioners govern the county areas, like the city council governs the city areas. The county also oversees airport services, county courts, and jails. And county commissioners take turns serving as chair.
Here is a map, provided by the Nevada Current, that shows the Las Vegas city boundaries.
The boundaries can be confusing. A person who lives on the north side of Sahara can vote for mayor, but your neighbor on the south side cannot. Most of Summerlin is in the city of Las Vegas – but parts of Summerlin South are not.
The best thing to do, is to find out where the heck you live. Do you live in the actual, incorporated, city of Las Vegas? Or do you just live in the generic Las Vegas, that is actually all of Clark County, but you call in Las Vegas?
Here is a map that might help. Or you can enter your address here and get some answers. If you’ve lived in Las Vegas, or Clark County for a while, you know how it works. But every time we vote for Mayor, people wonder: Why can’t I vote for Mayor of Las Vegas?
A New Mayor Of Las Vegas Can Be Voted In On Primary Election Day.
If one of the mayoral candidates wins 50.1% of the primary vote today, they will be the next mayor. If the majority isn’t reached, the top two candidates would move to a November 5 run-off.
Wherever you live – VOTE!