News

A new survey finds 80 percent of Californians want the state to control borders with other states "like a country." ...
The suit is co-signed by former provincial NDP leader Alison Coffin, who lost her seat in the St. John’s East-Quidi Vidi district in 2021 by 53 votes.
Voters have to wait until 2026 to cast their ballots and decide the next governor of California. Gov. Gavin Newsom won't be among the candidates.
A 2021 law made universal vote-by-mail permanent in California, meaning every registered voter receives a mail-in ballot roughly a month before Election Day and the ballots are counted as long as ...
26.0 million votes: See the demographics of California’s voting population In 2020, 158.4 million citizens—almost two-thirds of estimated eligible voters—voted in the presidential elections ...
Another Southern California county, San Bernardino County, could still see its results shift in the coming days, with 50.25% of voters opposing the recall so far and roughly 16,000 ballots yet to ...
California on Monday became the eighth, and by far the largest, U.S. state to make universal distribution of vote-by-mail ballots permanent, a practice that became more widespread during the COVID ...
California’s universal voting by mail becomes permanent California’s experiment with mailing ballots to all eligible voters becomes permanent under a law signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom.
The claim traces back to a Sept. 13, Newsmax interview, in which a man named Emon Afshar alleged an election worker told him 70% of voters experienced the issue. In the days following, his claim ...
FILE In this Sept. 13, 2021, file photo President Joe Biden, center, smiles to the crowd as he is flanked by California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Jennifer Siebel Newsom at a rally ahead of the ...
The vote totals are still incomplete, but with about 75 percent of the ballots tallied, 3.3 million Californians voted to recall Newsom and 5.8 million voted to keep him.
Newsom came to the contest with advantages. California’s electorate is less Republican, less white and younger than it was in 2003, when voters booted the Democratic Davis.