Former President Donald Trump has once again missed a chance to submit a statement for Oregon’s widely-distributed Voters’ Pamphlet, which was released Tuesday. He will still appear on the ballot.
Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Kamala Harris will appear on Oregon’s ballot this November, but they won’t be the only presidential candidates Oregonians can vote for. Five other nominees will appear on the Oregon ballot, including one who has withdrawn from the race. AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast
Republican incumbent Lori Chavez-DeRemer and Democrat Janelle Bynum are not the only candidates looking to represent Oregon Congressional District 5.
After failing to convince Oregon election officials to bar Libertarian candidates from running for office, the state Republican Party is turning to Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum for help in its attempts to disqualify several minor party candidates.
It wasn’t long ago that Buehler looked to be the new face of the Oregon GOP. A Rhodes Scholar (he played baseball at Oregon State University) and successful orthopedic surgeon, he first ran for secretary of state in 2012, losing to future Gov. Kate Brown.
Voters will be allowed to choose up to six council candidates in order of preference, and candidates will only need 25% of first-, second- and potentially even third- and fourth-choice votes to win.
Democratic incumbent Rep. Mary Peltola and Republican challenger Nick Begich will be joined on the ballot for Alaska's lone U.S. House seat by two serial candidates who received 1% of the vote combined in last month's primary election.
Twice in the past week alone, former President Donald Trump has pushed his often-repeated falsehood that some U.S. states, in their zeal to protect abortion rights, allow for the killing of babies after they are born.
America’s right flank remains the chief purveyor of misinformation, but this summer’s political tumult created ideal conditions for falsehoods to spread among progressives.
Politicians do what they want, with little fear of official sanction, and voters often snub the preferred candidates of party leaders. As a result, voters are in thrall to individual candidates who lack guardrails that compel them to act in the best interest of the party — or the country.
In today’s edition … Competitive house races are ramping up … Anti-Trump Republicans launch multimillion dollar ad blitz.
Jonathan Brater, Michigan's elections director, disqualified West from the ballot on Aug. 16 because of defects in West's "affidavit of identity."