Trump voters look set to decide the Senate majority. The main fight in Montana is all about how many of them longtime Democratic Sen. Jon Tester can entice to split their tickets.
Absentee ballots are on the way to Montana’s active, registered absentee voters, said Montana Secretary of State Christi Jacobsen in a news release Friday. “Montana’s 56 county election offices are mailing absentee ballot packets to registered absentee voters today as the 2024 General Election is well underway,
Republicans appear poised to take control of the U.S. Senate thanks to the retirement of Sen. Joe Manchin, I-W.V., and a GOP surge in Montana.
Absentee ballots are now in the mail in several Montana counties, including nearly 65,000 for voters in Missoula County.Registered absentee voters can expect to
Republicans are heavily favored to take control of the Senate next year, with GOP candidate Tim Sheehy leading by eight percentage points in his bid to flip one of Montana’s two seats, according to a new poll.
The New York Times/Siena College poll of 656 voters in Montana was conducted in English on cellular and landline telephones from Oct. 5 to 8. The margin of sampling error among the likely electorate is plus or minus 4.3 percentage points.
Jon Tester, running for his fourth term in deep-red Montana, has plenty of billionaire backers—but his single biggest funder can’t be traced.
Montana’s attorney general testified before a state commission during a hearing that could lead to action against his law license
Montana GOP Senate nominee Tim Sheehy said young women are “single-issue voters” on abortion and young voters are “indoctrinated” to support liberal causes, according to audio of the candidate
Abortion is on the ballot in Montana this November. CI-128 could enshrine abortion access in the state Constitution.
Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte is warning President Joe Biden against joining a long list of outgoing presidents who designate new national monuments as their terms end.
This year, Montana voters will consider whether to approve a pair of ballot measures that would make the biggest changes in decades to how the state elects its leaders.