Alabama does not have early voting, but it does allow absentee voting. Here are the deadlines and other key things to know.
Voting rights groups have filed a lawsuit against Alabama’s secretary of state over a policy they said is illegally removing naturalized citizens from voting rolls.
A lawsuit brought forward by several advocacy groups alleges that four individuals in Alabama have been unfairly targeted by the state’s voter roll purge ahead of the presidential election
North Carolina had been scheduled to start sending absentee ballots last Friday, but that was delayed after Kennedy sued to have his name removed.
Democrat Shomari Figures and Republican Caroleene Dobson, who are running in the competitive Alabama Congressional District 2 race in November, provided their thoughts on Tuesday's debate.
Mail ballots in North Carolina are also set to go out soon. In-person voting is set to start next week in parts of Pennsylvania and in Virginia.
Voting rights groups filed a federal lawsuit Friday against Alabama Secretary of State Wes Allen, saying his attempt to remove individuals who are not citizens from the state’s voter registration rolls violates the U.S. Constitution and federal law.
The chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee labeled Alabama Republican congressional hopeful Caroleene Dobson as an “extreme and very wealthy” opponent to Democrat Shomari Figures, and as one who supports a repeal of the Affordable Care Act.
Sens. Katie Britt and Ted Cruz tried in June to pass a bill that would threaten to withhold Medicaid funding for states where IVF is banned.
The state welcomed First Lady Jill Biden and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin at Maxwell Air Force Base Friday. The Alabama GOP heard from Republican National Committee co-chair Lara Trump. “I created my White House initiative,
This is an opinion column. Here we are again. A two-week simmer to get everyone all hot and dizzy thinking about a fall Saturday in Tuscaloosa. It began with the Game of the Century in 2011 and somehow got bigger.