One of the most closely watched elections in Idaho in 2024 may not involve any candidates or political parties. Instead, Idahoans across the state are following Proposition 1, the ballot initiative that seeks to repeal Idaho’s closed party primary elections.
Voters will decide the future of our country for the next four years as well as many key state and local races in the upcoming November election. Because it’s a presidential election year, there’s been a lot of focus on not just who gets elected but also on how our election system works at both a national and local level.
This is the first story in a two-part series about noncitizen voting in Idaho elections. The second story, focused on the few instances of noncitizen voting in Idaho and federal elections, will publish later this week.
This comes after sitting state senator Rep. Dan Foreman screamed at a democratic candidate during a candidate forum in Kendrick, Idaho, on October 1.
The Idaho House of Representatives may consider amending or repealing the Proposition 1 ballot initiative if voters pass it Nov. 5, two influential GOP legislators told the Idaho Capital Sun.
The deadline to register to vote before the upcoming Nov. 5 general election in Idaho is Oct. 11, the Idaho Secretary of State's Office says.
The Idaho Capital Sun last week published responses to this candidate survey for Idaho’s 1st Congressional District. Thirteen-term Republican U.S. Rep. Mike Simpson, who represents Idaho’s 2nd Congressional District,
One of the things that seems to be missing from the upcoming November election is civility on all sides, and we wanted to find out more about the tenor of the campaigns.
In some of the closest House races in the country, Democratic candidates are leaning into an issue that Republicans have made a centerpiece of their pitch to voters — immigration. The ads show how Dem
On a table at the office of the Waukegan Township Democrats sits a box of postcards with Wisconsin addresses that were collected during a postcard-writing pizza party to help turn out voters there. Leaning against the table are homemade Harris-Walz signs.
Republican U.S. Rep. Russ Fulcher, representing Idaho’s 1st Congressional District, faces three challengers in the November general election.