In the wake of Donald Trump’s 2024 victory, huge numbers of Republicans who previously believed that the economy was “getting worse” and that U.S. elections are not “free and fair” no longer believe those things,
In the aftermath of the 2024 elections, Democrats are less optimistic about their party’s future than they’ve been at any point in the past eight years, according to new Pew Research Center polling released Friday.
The poll found that even Democrat or Democrat-leaning voters have slightly warmer feelings about Trump. In November, nine percent of those voters surveyed said they felt “very warm” or “warm” toward the president-elect. In 2020, that was five percent, and in 2016 it was eight percent.
Despite her loss to President-elect Trump in the 2024 White House race, Vice President Harris is Democrats’ top choice to be their party’s 2028 presidential nominee, according to a new
After a poor performance in 2020, pre-election polls this year were largely accurate in depicting a tight race between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris, though they again underestimated support for the president-elect.
A former Georgia poll worker has been indicted after reportedly issuing a bomb threat against election workers, the Justice Department said in a press release Wednesday. In the release, the
Pollster J. Ann Selzer examined the pre-election Iowa Poll's methods and demographics for clues about its wide disparity with the actual vote
Nicholas Wimbish told the FBI that another person wrote the letter, but the letter was later found in his computer after further investigation.
The results mark a stark shift from 2020, when 69% of Muslim Americans voted for President Joe Biden and 17% voted for Trump. This movement away from the Democratic party was fueled, at least in part, by the U.S. government’s support for Israel’s war in Gaza, Robert McCaw, CAIR’s national government affairs director, said in a news release.
Her final poll of Iowa before the election showed Kamala Harris leading Donald Trump, an outlier and a major miss.
Chuck Curmi was running unopposed for supervisor and he received 98.2% of the vote. He defeated incumbent Kurt Heise in a heated primary in August.
With all eyes on Pennsylvania, officials across the commonwealth oversaw a relatively smooth Election Day. And despite occasional local issues ranging from bomb threats to power outages, the state largely averted many of the concerns that lingered from previous elections.