

Primary Election
Party selects its nominee.
Current roleCommissioner
PartyDemocratic
Political ideologyProgressive Democrat
GenderFemale
LocationNevada
BackgroundPublic administrator
EducationTexas A&M University — B.A., Political Science
Notable personal detailsAlexis Hill is an American public administrator and politician who serves on the Washoe County, Nevada Board of County Commissioners (District 1) and previously served as chair of the commission. She has worked in public policy and city planning in the Sparks–Reno area and has also worked in nonprofit roles. She is a Democratic candidate for governor of Nevada in the 2026 election cycle.
Supports ending corporate tax giveaways and raising revenue from property and corporate-owned properties to fund infrastructure, schools, and services; proposes taxing large corporate properties and resetting property tax depreciation to increase government revenue. Advocates temporary rent caps and tying road costs to users, including large companies, to address economic inequality and public funding shortfalls.
Supports expanding access to healthcare and public-health services, with particular emphasis on mental-healthcare expansion, services for aging and disabled residents, and broader supports for working families and caregivers. Advocates funding and programmatic solutions at the state and local level to improve affordability and access rather than pursuing single-payer proposals.
Supports comprehensive immigration reform that creates fair pathways to citizenship, emphasizes due process and humane treatment, and opposes state-level detention centers or use of the Nevada National Guard to round up communities. Views border security as a federal responsibility and calls for partnering with federal agencies rather than building state immigration systems.
Supports conservation, sustainability, and local actions to address climate change; favors public transportation, smart growth, and clean-energy or conservation-focused policy at the county level. Positions emphasize moderate climate investment and local mitigation rather than explicit calls to phase out fossil fuels or adopt Green New Deal–style federal legislation.


Aggregation source: FiftyPlusOne
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