Midterm Voters Choose To Protect Reproductive Freedom
Voters in California, Michigan, and Vermont embraced constitutional amendments to protect abortion rights, while Kentuckians rejected an anti-abortion amendment.
Voters in California, Michigan, and Vermont embraced constitutional amendments to protect abortion rights, while Kentuckians rejected an anti-abortion amendment.
Some reformers opposed the initiative, deeming it anti-competitive and needlessly prescriptive.
Voters told exit pollsters they had little confidence in the ability of either Fetterman or Oz to represent Pennsylvania.
Early polling showed a majority favored the change, but support fell in the face of opposition from leading Republicans and conservative groups.
Republican Governors Ron DeSantis and Brian Kemp made a name for themselves opposing COVID mandates.
The debate over bail has become a polarizing flash point. But as usual, the answer is more nuanced than either Republicans or Democrats would have their bases believe.
Since approving medical marijuana by a wide margin in 2016, North Dakotans have said no twice to allowing recreational use.
Voters approved a constitutional amendment allowing adults 21 or older to use cannabis and instructing legislators to authorize commercial production and distribution.
"Unfortunately this year, black men have been a very targeted population for misinformation."
It's her willingness to wield state power to punish the ideas and groups she dislikes.
Abolishing party-specific primary elections makes a lot of sense, and might help steer American democracy back towards the center.
Plus: California's latest faux-trafficking sting, judge suspends New York gun restrictions, and more...
Though the candidates have seemingly little in common, either one winning will harm the cause of individual liberty.
Plus: Peter Suderman may or may not attempt a rendition of a famous rap from the movie Bulworth.
Journalists who sound the alarm about Russian propaganda are unfazed by the lack of evidence that it has a meaningful impact.
Plus: University cancels "The Problem of Whiteness" class, Twitter's snowflake-in-chief, and more...
The proposed constitutional amendment would shift the state's balance of political power.
If we go through one election cycle after another and every loser unjustifiably cries fraud, eventually the claim will cease to impress.
Joe Biden adopted his predecessor’s protectionism, threatening our peace and prosperity.
"The fact that [Dr. Oz] can't beat Fetterman in a race is not anything that libertarians should be biting their nails or clutching their pearls over."
Even before his personal foibles became front-page news, the former football star was more like a caricature of a bad candidate.
The most jarring thing about Senate candidate J.D. Vance is how open he is about rejecting the rule of law.
Neither candidate in the crucially important Pennsylvania Senate race has made much of a positive case for his candidacy.
If the midterms favor Republicans, their top priority needs to be the fight against inflation—whether or not they feel like they created the problem.
Biden's planned address on Wednesday night will call out "those who deny the documented truth about election results and those who seek to undermine public faith in our system of government."
Like Arizona's Marc Victor, Erik Gerhardt is a potential spoiler in one of the nation's biggest Senate races. Unlike Victor, he's embracing the role.
Voters will soon cast ballots on a constitutional amendment that seeks to explicitly remove any protections for abortion in the state's constitution.
The Libertarian—who polled as high as 6 percent in the past 8 days—thinks Republican Masters is "gonna be one of us" in the Senate.
Plus: Brazil's Bolsonaro loses, fact-checking Biden on the Inflation Reduction Act, and more...
This November, voters will have the chance to abolish it. They should.
The ballot initiative also would authorize state-licensed "healing centers" where adults could obtain psychedelics for supervised use.
Fetterman has auditory processing issues related to a stroke in May, but still had trouble explaining why he seems to have changed his mind.
Over time, betting has been a better predictor than polls, pundits, statistical models, and everything else.
Plus: Federal court dismisses state challenge to student loan debt forgiveness, not all independent contractors want to be employees, and more...
Many opponents, including the president, criticized the law in misleading terms, obscuring its very real issues.
The governor favors more punitive policing, while his Democratic opponent thinks the governor should have a say in who buys what properties in the state.
In a campaign where much of the focus has been on Donald Trump and January 6, McMullin's CIA career deserves more interrogation.
Marc Victor is gaining ground with a “live and let live” message.
Republicans turned off by Walker at least have a third option, but for House races in Georgia, state law makes it extremely difficult for third-party candidates to get on the ballot.
Who cares if it’s legal if it generates politically advantageous outrage and attention?
Ten years after Colorado and Washington embraced legalization, the movement looks unstoppable.
Until he won the Republican nomination in New Hampshire, Don Bolduc insisted that the presidential election was stolen.
A genuine surprise: Politicians prioritize a bill’s possible success over partisan campaign signaling.
The senator's avowed devotion to federalism is no match for his political ambitions.
Plus: Court-ordered "care," railroad strike averted (for now), and more...
New Hampshire Republican candidates get a leg up from expensive Democratic ad buys.
Biden says Republicans are plotting a repeat of 2020 in 2024. Maybe Congress should do something to prevent that?
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