For the first time in decades, The Washington Post will not endorse a candidate in this year’s presidential election, the newspaper’s publisher announced Friday, a decision that sparked widespread outrage among the paper’s staffers.
With early voting underway, false and misleading reports have emerged online. There's a false claim that a video shows ballots for former President Donald Trump being destroyed in Bucks County, Pennsylvania — it's fake.
A man wearing a pro-Trump hat repeatedly punched an elderly election worker in San Antonio, Texas, Thursday evening, according to police, after the worker told him he wasn’t allowed to wear his hat inside a polling place.
The DOJ had sued the state over its purge of suspected non-citizens from voter rolls with less than 90 days before Election Day.
Former President Trump has again questioned U.S. election integrity, claiming without evidence that Democrats are cheating in the presidential race. Experts condemned the rhetoric.
A movement driven by disinformation about Trump’s 2020 defeat has taken over many of the boards that certify elections. It could cause chaos in the weeks ahead.
Some observers see a deeper dynamic: voter reaction to perceived economic anxiety and precarity, the result of which makes people less credulous of official facts and more conspiracy-prone.
A U.S. appeals court on Friday said it was illegal for states to count mail-in ballots received after Election Day, siding with Republicans in a case challenging Mississippi's five-day grace period.
Philadelphia officials opened up their election headquarters where staff simulated how the machines work and why vote counting could be a little quicker this time around.
the Washington Post and LATimes Harris endorsements should be leaked and published elsewhere without delay — not so much to sway voters, because who knows if they ever do — no, to let the owners know that they can ruin their papers but not silence their journalists