Democrats Gain In Governors’ Races, But Miss Chance At History
Democrats made modest inroads on the GOP’s commanding lead in governors’ offices around the country. But did not fare well in marquee races in Florida and Georgia.
Democrats made modest inroads on the GOP’s commanding lead in governors’ offices around the country. But did not fare well in marquee races in Florida and Georgia.
The state approved a key ballot initiative that will restore voting rights to citizens who have served sentences for certain crimes.
Lawmakers in at least three states will have less power to draw political boundaries, while automatic and same-day voter registration is coming in other places. New voter ID laws also got approved.
The next Congress will include the first Muslim women, the first Native American women, and the youngest woman ever elected to that body.
Democrats had a big victory — retaking the majority of the House for the first time since 2011. Senate Republicans expanded their Senate majority, with President Trump helping in key red states.
Despite raising more than $60 million and garnering national attention, O’Rourke was unable to overcome the GOP’s hold on the state.
The Republican clerk’s refusal to issue marriage certificates to same-sex couples made her a flashpoint for controversy in 2015. Now, Davis has lost to her Democratic opponent.
Placing stickers on the suffragist’s gravestone has become a kind of pilgrimage for voters in Rochester, N.Y. With a record number of women running, the tribute has special significance this year.
Italy joins other western countries seeking to help the woman at the center of a simmering dispute between the government and hard-line religious groups.
You may be looking at early exit polls to see how the political winds are blowing. But exit polls are not very helpful in gauging turnout. And because so many people vote early, they are incomplete.
Prosecutors said Sayoc posed “a serious risk of danger to the public” and described him as “a flight risk.” His lawyer made no objection to the decision. Sayoc could face up to 48 years in jail.
We asked voters to share their Election Day stories. Here’s what they told us.
The hotel chain has reached a tentative $7.6 million settlement in a class-action lawsuit. Motel 6 employees in multiple locations provided guests’ names to Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents.
The train had nobody on it. It was eventually deliberately derailed, creating a dramatic crash scene with huge lengths of crumpled, twisted metal on the desert sand next to the train track.
A woman who lived in one of the buildings said she stayed with her parents the night before the collapse because many of the doors in her building wouldn’t close. “It could have been me,” she said.
In court in Germany, Johann Rehbogen is charged with being an accessory in the murders of several hundred Jewish and Polish prisoners at the Stutthof concentration camp in the early 1940s.
A video posted by the U.S. Navy shows the Su-27 roaring alongside the American turboprop plane, “applying its afterburner while conducting a banking turn away.”
RETURN TO THE ELECTIONS HOMEPAGE The returns on this page are from the St. Johns County Supervisor of Elections website.
The surprising decision to divide the win is an anticlimactic ending for a much-hyped, Olympic-style search. The plan promised up to 50,000 new high-paying jobs and drew 238 bids.
American women are more likely to die from preventable childbirth complications than women in other developed countries. A group of obstetricians says hospitals can do a lot to change this.
The Justice Department has asked the court to decide whether the Trump administration can dismantle the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program — without waiting for rulings from lower courts.
Did you vote? Did you vote early? Did you wait in line? NPR wants to hear your voting story! Your response could be used in an upcoming NPR story.
“Victims include women, children, elderly and persons with disabilities, members and former members of the Iraqi armed forces and police,” says a new U.N. report that details 202 mass graves.
After the Pittsburgh mass killing, many are wondering how to turn extremists away from violence and hate. But there is very little research, and even less funding, to make that happen.
There are dozens of competitive races across the country that will determine control of the House, Senate and governors’ seats. Here are the pivotal seats that could unlock what happens.
Researchers expect youth voter turnout to break records in Tuesday’s midterm elections. And that’s important since most attend college in-state, meaning they’re voting in their home state.
Biologists are keen to understand how a type of flatworm known as a planarian uses powerful stem cells to regenerate an entire body from a headless sliver of itself.
A day before mid-term elections, the social media giant announces that it suspended the accounts after it was notified of suspicious activity that may be linked to foreign entities.
The U.S. Olympic Committee has taken steps to revoke the group’s status as the governing body after the sexual abuse of gymnasts was revealed last year, and three CEOs have resigned.
The request followed the execution of another inmate who chose the electric chair rather than lethal injection. Only three states still allow the use of firing squads as a means of execution.
A handful of residents in a multimillion dollar glass tower are arguing the museum has created a state of “near constant surveillance” since opening a terrace that offers one of London’s best views.
Voters in Oregon and Washington will decide Tuesday whether to strip cities of their ability to tax sugary drinks, thanks to ballot initiatives backed by Big Soda.
The polls show a Democratic advantage in the House and a Republican one in the Senate. But be ready for anything because surprises in politics always happen.
The children were taken from a Presbyterian school near the northwestern city of Bamenda, which has been the center of a Anglophone separatist movement marked by violence since late 2016.
Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, the man accused of having run the world’s largest drug trafficking organization, was charged in a 17-count indictment that spans decades. Jury selection began Monday.
In addition to causing shortages of food and clean water, fighting has led to the breakdown of Yemen’s medical system. Half of Yemeni children under 5 are chronically malnourished, the U.N. reports.