Candidates for U.S. House and Senate who aren’t Democrats or Republicans have more work to do to get on the Louisiana ballot for the 2026 midterm elections.
The U.S. Supreme Court could have a major impact on the 2026 midterm elections as it considers three cases that could change voting rights or election laws.
Louisiana voters should check their mailboxes for a piece of mail explaining the state’s new closed party primary system starting in 2026.
After reviewing state voter rolls going back to the 1980s, Louisiana’s Republican secretary of state announced this month that “non-citizens illegally registering or voting is not a systemic problem in Louisiana.
The assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk has sent shockwaves through political circles, but Republican leaders say his mission is fueling the next generation.
Lawyers representing a group of Louisiana voters challenging the creation of a second majority-Black congressional district in the state told the Supreme Court on Wednesday that a key provision of […]
The Supreme Court will hear a trio of cases in the upcoming term that could have significant ramifications for elections.
Marshall said that voting to enshrine formerly incarcerated people as a protected class in city law — which the amendment would do, supporters say — ups the ante by creating further legal foundations to protect people with histories of conviction, especially where it does not clash with state law.
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