Pennsylvania is among a handful of states that hold partisan elections for judicial seats. But after a judge is elected to the bench, the partisanship is meant to stop. That’s why, in November’s election,
Fulton County, PA faces more than $1 million in fines for its 2020 decision to try to aid Donald Trump and let an outside party access its voting machines.
On Nov. 4, Pennsylvania voters will choose who they want to lead the local governments that most closely impact their daily lives.
Not only is Pennsylvania a critical swing state, it has also found itself at the center of high-stakes election litigation. In 2020, for example, the state's high court extended the mail-in ballot deadline, allowing thousands more ballots to be counted in that year's presidential race.
In order for Republicans to flip the court, they need voters to unseat at least two of the three justices ahead of the next court election in 2027.
Republicans Brian Burke and Liz Piazza are challenging Democratic incumbent Richard Womack and Joanna Phillips for two seats on Delaware County Council.
When it comes to voting, college students in Pennsylvania have multiple options. Here’s what you need to know ahead of the Nov. 4 election.
But this year, the spotlight is shining brightly on the most consequential of these races, which will determine whether three justices of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court will remain on the bench. While these judicial retention votes usually attract little public interest,
A look at how Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justices Kevin Dougherty, Christine Donohue, and David Wecht have ruled in some of the major cases of their tenure on the state's highest court.
Election officials in Carbon, Montgomery, Luzerne and Dauphin counties confirmed that some voters in their counties had been issued or received duplicate mail ballots.
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