Residents of Door County, Wisconsin, have a decades-long streak of presidential elections in which they have voted for the winning candidate. The state's Democratic Party chair believes that whoever wins the county will likely win the national election.
Door County, Wisconsin voted for Bush, Obama, Trump and Biden. Here's what voters are thinking in the battleground-state swing county ahead of the presidential election.
A pair of Christian students trolled by Kamala Harris and mercilessly mocked by the crowd at her rally at the University of Wisconsin-La Cross last week insist they were “there for the right
Republican legislators are asking voters for permission to amend the state constitution to clearly prohibit foreign nationals from voting in any election held in the state.
Drop boxes, which had been used for years in Wisconsin until they were mostly banned after Republicans mounted legal challenges, are back. They have become the subject of bitter debate.
More than 50 voters interviewed repeatedly used words like “anxious,” “apprehensive,” “scared,” “worried,” and “terrified” to describe their feelings about the other party’s candidate winning.
Democratic U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin and Republican challenger Eric Hovde have repeatedly accused each other of lying during an often testy and confrontational debate
Kamala Harris is spending practically the whole day in Wisconsin, and for good reason. Democrats see the Badger State as part of their path to 270 electoral votes, but it’s a neck-and-neck race. In a recent survey of swing-state voters by The Wall Street Journal,
Absentee voting via mail in Wisconsin has remained popular across the state since skyrocketing during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Wisconsin voters will decide on a referendum to amend the battleground state's constitution to explicitly ban noncitizens from voting in any elections.
Wisconsin, famous for cheese, Harley Davidson motorcycles and the Green Bay Packers American football team is one of seven states that will decide the 2024 US presidential election. Voting in swing states is hard to predict and can lean Republican or Democrat - that’s why you’re hearing so much about them as campaigning draws to a close.