

While his order shutting down our gaming industry was clear, he then fudged it up by declaring that other “non-essential” businesses “should” close. Which means they won’t listen to you.Īnd Sisolak blew it right out of the gate. Particularly, if your orders aren’t consistent and clear – or are clearly hypocritical – people won’t trust you. Sisolak has routinely violated core components necessary for effective leadership. That was a good thing.īut the honeymoon came crashing to an end on Mawhen he unilaterally exercised unlimited “emergency” powers to single-handedly bring the state’s entire economy to its knees with his #SisolakShutdown.Īs Michael Corleone said in The Godfather, it’s not personal it’s business. Indeed, he succeeded in watering down a bill giving collective bargaining rights to state government workers by insisting on adding gubernatorial veto power over such agreements. Nevertheless, I cut him some slack even as he filled his administration with incompetents, left-wing Bolsheviks and affirmative action picks – especially his head of the state’s unemployment office.Īnd I pretty much held my tongue during the last legislative session hoping he would be a bulwark against the worst far-left inclinations of his party in the state Senate and Assembly. He moved all the way over into the left field bleachers! He didn’t just move from center field to left field. Always thought, mistakenly, that he was that rare moderate Democrat who wasn’t reflexively anti-business or captured by the far-left crazies – you know, like Jon Ralston and the millennial kids over at Battle Born Progress.īut something happened to this guy during his Democrat primary campaign for governor in 2018 against consistently-liberal Chris Giunchigliani. In fact, I’ve known Steve for over 20 years. Steve Sisolak for his mishandling of the coronavirus scamdemic than yours truly.


(Chuck Muth) – I don’t think anyone in Nevada has been as hard on Gov.
