-
This year early voting coincides with Halloween, which means you may see a ghoul or goblin exercising their right to vote. You too can dress up if you wish.
-
It’s a race to the finish line as U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, the incumbent Republican, and his Democratic challenger, U.S. Rep. Colin Allred, make their final cases to voters.
-
Under a little-known Texas elections law, state prison inmates who are actively appealing their convictions are eligible to register and vote.
-
Vice presidential candidates are unlikely to make a fundamental difference in this election, but there were some takeaways from an interesting night.
-
A federal judge has ruled that parts of a sweeping Texas voter security law are unconstitutional, and the state can no longer investigate voter assistance efforts as a criminal act.
-
Investigators surveyed 14 polling places in the county last year and found some didn't meet all the department's accessibility requirements.
-
The ruling clears the way for the State Fair of Texas to legally ban firearms from Fair Park beginning Friday.
-
Five people are running to be Austin's next mayor. They discussed the city's issues and future in a live forum Wednesday.
-
Six Trump supporters were accused of intimidating a Biden campaign bus in 2020. Both plaintiffs and defendants saw Monday’s verdict as a victory.
-
The Department of Public Safety and the Department of State Health Services are no longer following court orders to update someone's sex on driver's licenses and birth certificates. Transgender Texans and advocates say this could put their community at greater risk of being denied certain services and threaten their safety.
-
LGBTQ rights advocates targeted the Department of Public Safety with dozens of messages after the agency announced a new policy that blocks transgender Texans from changing the sex listed on their driver's licenses.
-
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and his blind trust own 10 properties from Hawaii to Florida. This year, just one was disclosed to state ethics regulators.