A Real Choice
Not a career politician. Not backed by special interests.
A wasted vote?
For years, Nevada voters have been told the same thing: that you only have two choices, and anything else is a “wasted vote.” But look around—are things really working the way they should?
Rising costs. Struggling schools. Decisions made far away from the people they affect. And every election, we’re told to pick between the same two approaches and hope for a different result.
Nevada deserves better than that.
Across the country, Libertarians regularly win local races (about 1/3 of the time—last election cycle, Libertarians won 2/3 of the races they ran in).
City councils, county offices, school boards, state legislatures—these are offices that actually touch the everyday lives of Nevadans. They're the offices we should be concerned about as voters.
Help elect a true voice for Nevada.
Building Something Bigger
Winning isn’t just about one election—it’s about building a movement.
Every vote sends a message: That Nevadans want something different.
We’re not locked into this corrupt two-party system forever. Real people—not political insiders—deserve a voice in our government.
Our goal is simple: Reach 10%
Once that threshold is crossed, everything changes: more visibility, credibility, and more opportunities to compete and win.
That’s how movements grow. That’s how real change starts. This is a chance to say that we’re done settling. We’re done being told we only have two options.
Why this election matters
In this race, you have three options:
One represents the political establishment—years in office, backed by corporate donors, asking you to trust that things will improve if we keep going in the same direction.
Another is a campaign that lacks the seriousness this district deserves—missing forums, filing reports late, and offering little clarity on how they’d actually govern.
And then there’s a real choice.
Tighe Galvin is a special education teacher, working every day in the same school district our families here depend on.
He sees the challenges firsthand: students struggling to keep up, teachers stretched thin, and families trying to navigate a system that feels too big and too distant.
Not running to climb a political ladder.
You can vote the way you always have—and hope things change. Or you can make a different choice. A real choice.
