Civil rights groups sued Georgia on Monday in an effort to extend the state’s voter registration deadline by a week to account for residents who may not have been able to register in the wake of Hurricane Helene,
Fox News Digital heard directly from Atlanta residents about who they think will win the presidential race in Georgia, a key swing state.
Brenda Lopez, chair of the Gwinnett County Democrats, partially attributes the monumental shift to the local party’s voter outreach efforts. Starting in the run-up to the 2016 presidential election, she said they noticed a spike in the number of voters who did not have a voting history in Georgia.
At a Monday press conference at the state capitol in Atlanta, Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger had a message for Georgia voters: Elections in the Peach State will continue to be secure, accurate and on time, in spite of the destruction caused by Hurricane Helene .
Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger offers an update on the ability of the state to hold an election in November.
Georgia election officials are proactively trying to quell any misinformation about the battleground state's voter registration efforts before Election Day.
Election officials in North Carolina and Georgia have reported that all hands are on deck to prepare polling locations for Nov. 5.
An escalating fight between the Georgia State Election Board and Fulton County took some dramatic twists Tuesday, with the county suing the state.
Georgia and North Carolina election officials said Monday that the presidential election in November will not be derailed by the damage left by Hurricane Helene.
So, effectively, when Gov. Brian Kemp won re-election in 2022, he also won the right for all the candidates of his party - the Republican Party - to appear at the top of races on this year's ballot. If Stacey Abrams had won, Democrats would be at the top.
Residents in North Carolina’s Watauga County are focused on survival rather than politics after Hurricane Helene ravaged much of the western part of the state.
U.S. Rep. Andrew Clyde's comments criticizing the Biden administration prompted some boos during the somber event, which otherwise displayed bipartisan unity.