A portion of a controversial law championed by Texas Republicans as a supposed voter fraud deterrent was overly vague.
A federal judge ruled on Saturday that part of a Texas law that enacted new voting restrictions violated the U.S.
A Public Policy Polling/Clean and Prosperous America survey of 759 registered Texas voters showed Cruz is ahead of Allred by 47 percent to 46. In a previous August poll, the incumbent led Allred by 2 points (47 percent to 45). The poll was carried out on September 25-26. The results have a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percent.
Attorney General Ken Paxton vowed Monday to block a ruling that he says prohibits his office from enforcing vote-harvesting restrictions and investigating potential violations. A federal judge ruled Friday that a section of the 2021 law aimed at preventing election fraud in Texas violated the First Amendment by placing “an invalid restriction on speech” and the 14th Amendment’s
An Emerson College Polling/The Hill/Nexstar Media poll released Thursday of 950 likely Texas voters showed Trump with a 5-point lead over the vice president (51 percent to 46) in the state. The poll was conducted between September 22-24, and the results have a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.
A new Emerson College/The Hill poll, funded by Nexstar Media, was released Thursday. According to the poll, 49% of voters support incumbent Republican Ted Cruz, while 45% support Democratic challenger Colin Allred.
You may notice that one party's candidate is listed first on most races on your ballot. There's a reason for that, and it has to do with the state's election code.
Ted Cruz's Democratic challenger pushes back at suggestions he's not running an aggressive enough campaign to flip a Texas U.S. Senate seat.
U.S. District Judge Xavier Rodriguez found that a key part of the Texas 2021 omnibus voter legislation is confusing, vague, overly broad, violates freedom of speech along with the 14th Amendment and there is no actual problem of illegal vote harvesting.
There's still time to register to vote in Texas for the 2024 presidential election taking place on Tuesday, Nov. 5.
Pastor Robert Jeffress believes God created the family, the church and the government—the proof is in the Old Testament Book of Genesis and the New Testament's Acts of the Apostles. Jeffress, the evangelical leader of First Baptist Dallas church and its 16,