Michele Fiore


Michele Ann Fiore is an American Republican politician who was elected in 2017 to the Las Vegas City Council from Ward 6. Previously, she was a member of the Nevada Assembly from 2012 to 2016. Fiore, who represented much of northwestern Clark County, served two Assembly terms. On December 7, 2015, Fiore confirmed that she would not seek re-election and would instead enter the 2016 race for Nevada's 3rd congressional district in southern Clark County. On June 15, 2016 Fiore placed third in the primary race with 18% of the vote. Danny Tarkanian was the winner of the primary with 34% of the vote.
She was born in Brooklyn, New York, and has lived in Nevada since 1993.

Issues

Campus gun carry bill

Fiore is a staunch supporter of Second Amendment Rights; her 2015 Christmas Card shows her family holding their guns. She sponsored Assembly Bill 148 to allow concealed firearms on the campuses of colleges and grade schools and in day care facilities. In an interview with The New York Times, Fiore is quoted saying, "If these young, hot little girls on campus have a firearm, I wonder how many men will want to assault them. The sexual assaults that are occurring would go down once these sexual predators get a bullet in their head."

Same-sex marriage and medical marijuana

Fiore is noted for having been the only Republican to vote for lifting the ban on same-sex marriage and the legalization of medical marijuana.

Description of treatments possible under Right-to-Try bill

Fiore was a primary sponsor of the 2015 Nevada Right-to-Try bill, legislation which allows doctors to perform medical procedures that are being used in ongoing FDA-approved clinical trials, but have not achieved FDA approval, for terminally ill patients who are not responding to traditional medical treatment. On a February 2014 edition of her radio show, discussing Right-to-Try, Fiore described the cancer treatment by Cancer is a Fungus author Tullio Simoncini as an example of treatments that the terminally ill could access under Right-to-Try: "If you have cancer, which I believe is a fungus, and we can put a PICC line into your body and we're flushing, let's say, salt water, sodium carbonate, through that line, and flushing out the fungus.... These are some procedures that are not FDA-approved in America that are very inexpensive, cost-effective."
The following year, on her February 21, 2015 broadcast, the theme was the concept of Right-to-Try; the bill had been introduced in the Assembly the previous week. At the top of the show Fiore raised the topic of her 2014 comments, "an issue that I have gotten a lot of questions about". She said, "I made comments about cancer that I didn't put in the proper context." She had had a friend with cancer who had made "radical improvement using a doctor out of Italy's treatment covered in his book and his book was called Cancer Is A Fungus... it was a tumor therapy of some sort. The point I was trying to illustrate was that people like my friend... should have the right to decide their own fate and try experimental treatments like this." She did not repeat that she believed that cancer was a fungus or that salt water could flush it out. After Fiore addressed the issue she and guest Jackie See, M.D., defended the Simoncini treatment and other alternative techniques as viable and as means by which the United States could lead the world medically if regulation and bureaucracy were reduced and doctors could "explor all the treatments not knowing where the next breakthrough will come from." After the 2015 radio program she received renewed national attention for her 2014 statements.
Using sodium bicarbonate as a cancer treatment is espoused by Tullio Simoncini and is known as the Simoncini cancer treatment. Though this method has not been proven, and no evidence suggests that it or treatment with salt water would work, if either were to be accepted under the bill's requirements it could be legally considered a non-FDA-approved treatment that a terminally ill patient in Nevada could request. The bill that Fiore introduced eight days before her 2015 show requires that the drug, product or device "must have successfully completed Phase 1 of a clinical trial" and that it "is currently being tested in a clinical trial that has been approved by the ."

Controversies

Gun use against law enforcement

In March 2016, Fiore was interviewed by the Las Vegas Sun. When asked about her support of militants involved in the occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge earlier that year, she said,
In April 2016, Fiore was interviewed for the KLAS 8 television show, Politics NOW. While discussing whether the 2014 armed resistance against federal agents was justified, she said,
In May 2016, the Nevada Association of Public Safety Officers sent a letter denouncing Fiore's statements, concluding,
In response, Fiore told KTNV 13 Action News that her original statement referred to federal Bureau of Land Management agents, not local police. She described BLM law enforcement agents as "wannabe cops" and the BLM as "a bureaucratic agency of terrorism that terrorized Americans, especially ranchers." When pressed regarding the meaning of her previous statement, she said,

Involvement in the Bundy standoff

In April 2014, Fiore was interviewed by MSNBC's Chris Hayes and by Fox News's Sean Hannity regarding the armed confrontation at Bunkerville, Nevada between law enforcement officers and Cliven Bundy and his supporters. The interviews were shared thousands of times on social media. Fiore said, "The federal government should not show up with guns to collect on a debt" and called for the termination of "whoever ordered this to be done."

Statement regarding wanting to shoot Syrian refugees herself

On November 21, 2015, on her weekly AM radio program on KDWN, Fiore explained why she had not signed a Nevada Assembly Republican caucus letter that called for a review of federal safeguards before Nevada would resettle Syrian refugees. She said, "We didn't know anything about the letter, nor did we get invited to be on the letter." She went on, "He's like, 'The Syrian refugees.' I'm like, 'What, are you kidding me? I'm about to fly to Paris and shoot 'em in the head myself.' I mean, I am not OK with Syrian refugees. I'm not OK with terrorists. I'm OK with putting them down, blacking them out. Just put a piece of brass in their ocular cavity and end their miserable life. I'm good with that."
On December 7, 2015, she told the Associated Press, "I was not talking about the refugees." She added, "I do not want Syrian refugees in our state, period," and said that she did not trust the refugee vetting process to screen out terrorists.

2016 holiday photo

In December 2015, Fiore sent her constituents a 2016 calendar, which included a family Christmas portrait under the month of December, featuring her immediate family, all holding guns, and her grandchildren, one of whom was holding what appeared to be a handgun. The photo went viral on Facebook, and drew criticism for depicting a small child holding a weapon.

IRS investigation

In December 2014, it was reported that the Internal Revenue Service had filed dozens of tax liens totaling about $1 million against Fiore and her home healthcare businesses, Always There 4 You and Always There Personal Care. The liens against the businesses involved unpaid employee payroll taxes. In response, Fiore stated, "I am one-hundred percent in compliance with IRS - period." Fiore blamed her ex-husband, who at one time acted as her accountant, and a former employee who stole from her while at the same time sent fraudulent documents to her current accountant to hide the embezzlement.
The fallout from her issues with the IRS led to her being removed as majority leader and chairwoman of the Assembly Taxation Committee. Fiore was reinstated to her former position less than 24 hours after her removal. There were reports that Fiore reacted to the removal by saying there was a war on women in the Assembly Republican Caucus. "It was a total misquote," Fiore said. "Nevada Republicans are not waging a war on women. We have a group in our caucus that are waging a war on conservatives."

Voiding of home healthcare license

On November 3, 2015, the Nevada Department of Health and Human Services's Bureau of Health Care Quality and Compliance voided Fiore's license to operate Always There 4 You, a home healthcare service. Always There 4 You and another Fiore-owned home healthcare service, Always There Personal Care, received about $6 million in Medicaid reimbursements between 2011 and March, 2015. Although in Nevada an unannounced inspection of such companies' business records is required to be completed every 18 months, in 2013 and 2015 health department inspectors were blocked several times from reviewing the records of Always There 4 You. They were denied access by office staff, by Fiore's mother, and both Fiore's mother and Fiore.
In July 2015, after receiving a formal warning, Fiore met with health department officials in "a so-called conciliation process that essentially gives Fiore one more chance to comply". Fiore said that the meeting was "productive" and she was "prepared to welcome inspectors in the future with coffee and doughnuts." In September 2015 an inspector found the Always There 4 You office dark and its door locked, with no notice posted on the premises explaining why. In October 2015 the Bureau sent a certified letter requesting clarification and again reminding Fiore that her license could be suspended or revoked. Fiore did not reply.
On November 3, after officials arrived to find another business moving into the office location, the Bureau administratively closed the Always There 4 You license and notified Fiore. That night, Fiore issued a press release "regarding allegations that her home health care company was shut down by the government." "With the signing of a Notice Of Dissolution last week, I have completely closed my home health care business. While the media will try to tell you that my business was shut down by the government, I would like to lay that rumor to rest."
The next day, the press release contents, under the title "You're Fired, State Inspectors!" and addressed to "Friends", were published on Fiore's website. "You're Fired, State Inspectors!" reproduces an article titled "When 'They' Win, We All Lose," written for a local magazine the month before, which begins, "By the time you read this, my home health care business will be a memory... It happened because 'They' won."
In "You're Fired" Fiore disclosed that she had been closing down her business for eight weeks. Always There 4 You was officially dissolved November 9, 2015.

Blue Lives Matter March

Following the unrest and riots resulting from the death of George Floyd, conservative talk show host Wayne Allyn Root organized a Blue Lives Matter march on Las Vegas Blvd scheduled for June 13, 2020, of which Michele Fiore was to be a co-host. A flyer was circulated with the emblem of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department displayed across the width of the bottom of the flyer. The following day the City of Las Vegas issued a statement saying the event was not officially sanctioned. As well, the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department issued a statement reading, "The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department recently learned of a planned rally for Blue Lives Matter that used images of our badge on their flyers. While we uphold the first amendment right for all groups to peacefully assemble, we did not authorize permission for the organizers to use the LVMPD badge as the department was not part of the planning of this event."
The event was postponed the next day and Las Vegas NAACP President Roxann McCoy said in a news release, “The NAACP Las Vegas is appalled that Las Vegas, Nevada City Council members Mayor Pro Tem Michelle Fiore, Councilwoman Victoria Seaman, Councilman Stavros Anthony do not care to understand Black citizens of Las Vegas and the injustices we constantly endure.”

Elections

She was named Mayor Pro Tem of the City of Las Vegas City Council on July 3, 2019.
She stepped down from her role as Las Vegas City Council Mayor Pro Tem on June 16, 2020 to focus on the country’s racial divide following a couple weeks of controversy after the Clark County Republican Party rebuked “racially charged” remarks made by Fiore at the group’s convention.

Committees