President Donald Trump sparked controversy by floating the idea of canceling US elections during a speech to House Republicans, though he insisted he was not seriously proposing it and framed the remark as criticism of Democrats.
A federal judge in Washington State ruled Friday that Trump cannot enforce parts of an executive order he issued last year about how elections are run.
The Supreme Court could reshape U.S. elections for years to come as it hears a number of cases with implications for the country’s political landscape. In perhaps the most high-stakes
The nation’s midterm elections on Nov. 3 will likely determine whether Trump’s power is affirmed or curtailed. But before then, there are eight election dates worth putting on the calendar that could shape what comes next.
This year’s midterms will serve as a referendum on the first two years of President Donald Trump’s second term and will shape his final two years in office.
Brazilians will go to the polls on October 4 to elect a new president, the National Congress, and state governors and legislators. The 79-year-old incumbent president, Luis Inácio Lula da Silva, is seeking an unprecedented fourth term.
President Trump insisted more than once during an interview with The New York Times that he “always” respects the results of elections — even as he repeated his attacks on the trustworthiness of a system that twice landed him in the White House.
Taking the stage first Friday morning was Blakeman, who said he wanted “a new governor” when asked by a moderator what he was hopeful for in 2026.
“Voters on the Early Voting Request List should expect to receive their cards by mid-February,” explained Danielle Jensen, Douglas County Election Commissioner. “This card assists our office in processing applications for by-mail ballots more efficiently, and we appreciate voters’ use of the card when possible.”