First-term Sen. Jacky Rosen (D-Nev.) survives late surge by GOP challenger Sam Brown in race that wasn’t predicted to be so close.
Trump is also leading in Arizona, the final battleground that has not yet been called.
Sen. Jacky Rosen and Rep. Ruben Gallego hold leads in close contests.
The picture so far shows high turnout, key demographic swings for Trump, with the GOP taking control of the Senate, while the House remains uncertain.
Two-thirds of registered Republicans, nearly 60 percent of Democrats, have cast 2024 ballots, with nonpartisans the wild card in deciding the battleground race.
Sam Brown appears to be edging closer to Sen. Jacky Rosen in a contest the incumbent first-term Democrat enjoyed a lead of 5 percentage points in 2018.
As two-week in-person balloting concludes, nearly half of the pivotal purple state’s voters have already made their Nov. 5 choices.
Both tell supporters to get voters to the polls in tossup race to be won by the party that leaves no favorable ballot un-cast.
Registered Republicans have a 5.4-percent advantage over registered Democrats in the early-voting total.
The justices said Republicans didn’t sufficiently show they will suffer irreparable harm absent an injunction.
More than 12,000 Republican voters packed the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas as Election Day approaches.
Republicans also have early and mail-in voting advantages over Democrats in both Arizona and Nevada.
More than ever, state legislatures dominated by a single party are making laws without the need for cooperation from dissenting legislators or governors.
Presidential candidates are homing in on key battleground states in the final stretch.
Vice President Kamala Harris is underperforming among black voters, and black youth in particular, compared to Obama and Biden.
Twice as many Republican voters as Democrat voters had cast their ballots in the Silver State one day after in-person early voting opened.
Early voting runs from Oct. 19 to Nov. 1 in the swing state, which Trump hopes to turn red for the first time since 2004.
Nevada Democrats previously succeeded in removing Greens from the ballot.
First-term Sen. Jacky Rosen (D-Nev.) survives late surge by GOP challenger Sam Brown in race that wasn’t predicted to be so close.
Trump is also leading in Arizona, the final battleground that has not yet been called.
Sen. Jacky Rosen and Rep. Ruben Gallego hold leads in close contests.
The picture so far shows high turnout, key demographic swings for Trump, with the GOP taking control of the Senate, while the House remains uncertain.
Two-thirds of registered Republicans, nearly 60 percent of Democrats, have cast 2024 ballots, with nonpartisans the wild card in deciding the battleground race.
Sam Brown appears to be edging closer to Sen. Jacky Rosen in a contest the incumbent first-term Democrat enjoyed a lead of 5 percentage points in 2018.
As two-week in-person balloting concludes, nearly half of the pivotal purple state’s voters have already made their Nov. 5 choices.
Both tell supporters to get voters to the polls in tossup race to be won by the party that leaves no favorable ballot un-cast.
Registered Republicans have a 5.4-percent advantage over registered Democrats in the early-voting total.
The justices said Republicans didn’t sufficiently show they will suffer irreparable harm absent an injunction.
More than 12,000 Republican voters packed the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas as Election Day approaches.
Republicans also have early and mail-in voting advantages over Democrats in both Arizona and Nevada.
More than ever, state legislatures dominated by a single party are making laws without the need for cooperation from dissenting legislators or governors.
Presidential candidates are homing in on key battleground states in the final stretch.
Vice President Kamala Harris is underperforming among black voters, and black youth in particular, compared to Obama and Biden.
Twice as many Republican voters as Democrat voters had cast their ballots in the Silver State one day after in-person early voting opened.
Early voting runs from Oct. 19 to Nov. 1 in the swing state, which Trump hopes to turn red for the first time since 2004.
Nevada Democrats previously succeeded in removing Greens from the ballot.