Every few weeks, a group of active-duty and retired cops gather with election officials to plan for harrowing scenarios on Election Day.
A network of reporters and voting experts gather results from thousands of jurisdictions, checking all of it for anomalies before viewers and readers see the data.
Wall Street money managers highlight national debt, economic growth, and immigration as their hot-button issues. Here's how they're investing.
Super PACs funded by the cryptocurrency industry have spent more than $130 million in one of the largest — and least obvious — efforts to influence the 2024 race.
The winner of the Nov. 5 election between Lourdes Casanova and Jean Marie Middleton will succeed Ted Booras on the Palm Beach County bench.
When the paper shortage was discovered, Gilbert dispatched teams to polling sites with fresh supplies; a local judge allowed polling stations to stay open by two extra hours to accommodate the delays. But as the news of the debacle spread, Gilbert and her colleagues received a slew of vitriolic texts, phone calls and social-media comments:
Fall weddings are increasingly common. But what happens when your nuptials also take place close to a contentious election?
According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, ten U.S. states have laws that explicitly allow for absentee ballots to be counted if the person who cast them dies before the election. Connecticut law permits it only if the deceased was a member of the armed services.
Our reporters and editors break down each state proposition in short videos that aim to cut to the chase and make your voting decisions easier.
Republicans suffered a third blow when an Alabama court ruled on Tuesday that election officials had no right to remove thousands of voters from the register. Judge Anna M. Manasco said that the voters were wrongly marked as "inactive." She also noted that the voters had been referred for criminal investigation.