The rich determine which bitter pill to shove down the throats of the 99 percent.
What do the workaday majority of Americans want their lawmakers working on?
On Friday, the Washington Post reported that incoming House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD) has confirmed Congress will not seat Mark Harris, the GOP candidate for North Carolina’s 9th Congressional…
Last year, Wyoming decided to allow voting by all those who have completed their sentences for nonviolent felonies. Alabama restored rights to 60,000 low-level offenders.
Broward had technology in place to do better, but state law blocked its use.
Taylor Sappington is exactly the kind of candidate his party should want in Ohio. But he couldn’t get union support.
Up for re-election in 2020, a vulnerable Sen. Susan Collins faces a tough slog after voting to put an alleged attempted rapist on the Supreme Court.
These states’ drawn-out 2018 counts could hold significance for future voter suppression barriers, ballot design, and voting machines.
State legislative contests are the most affected, but there are implications for the unsettled governor’s race.
Federal court will hear appeal from lawyers for the campaign of Sen. Bill Nelson.
The 2018 midterm election vote on Amendment 4 is a moral victory as well as a political one.
With waits at polling places sometimes exceeding an hour, some voters turn away as poll workers wrestle with malfunctioning equipment and overflow crowds.
The party’s candidates, which a group called America Progress Now is endorsing, say they’ve never heard of it. The group hasn’t registered with the Federal Election Commission as required.
Every student who knocks on my office door on Kent State's campus has likely noticed the illustrated bumper sticker affixed right above the door handle.
Election Day will offer too many opportunites for aggressive individuals to act out the nation's political divisions. Let's hope they behave.