In an election where the future of reproductive rights is on the ballot in Maryland and elsewhere across the country, the state’s all-male congressional delegation stands to gain an influx of women
Republicans are likely to retake the Senate next year. But a few longshot races are still worth paying attention to.
Polls show Angela Alsobrooks and Larry Hogan at everything from a tie to an 11-point race. The cost of living is a key driver in the Maryland Senate election, opinion editor Candy Woodall says.
The 2024 General Election is quickly approaching and with it, the increased pressure of who to vote for, and why. As Marylanders look to make their decision, there’s a chance they’ll gain more candidate choices today.
Maryland election officials can start the process of opening and reviewing mail-in ballots that have been received.
Maryland is about as reliably blue as it can get when it comes to the Electoral College, handing its 10 electoral votes to Democratic nominees through the last eight elections. The Washington Examiner is following the key issues voters care about as they prepare to elect the next president of the United States.
With just weeks to go in the race for U.S. Senate in Maryland, political analysts are taking a measure of the Angela Alsobrooks and Larry Hogan campaigns. Polling conducted by The Hill and the UMBC Institute of Politics,
Abortion rights advocates supporting Maryland’s reproductive freedom ballot question have vastly outraised and outspent their opponents.
Millions of dollars continue to pour into Maryland's Senate race between former Gov. Larry Hogan (R) and Prince George's County Executive Angela Alsobrooks (D), new campaign finance reports show.
ANNAPOLIS, Md. — Maryland’s hotly contested U.S. Senate race between Democrat Angela Alsobrooks and Republican Larry Hogan turned to environmental issues Tuesday.
In Maryland’s Sixth Congressional District, Democrat April McClain Delaney and Republican Neil Parrott exchanged views at a chamber of commerce forum in Hagerstown Wednesday. The candidates are vying for a seat that Rep.
Though he now faces criticism for it, former President Barack Obama opened dialogue for a larger conversation on misogyny in American politics after calling out Black men who have not come out in full-throated support of Vice President Kamala Harris’ presidential campaign.