In addition to fundraising reported by their campaigns, area incumbent congressional candidates collectively brought in more than $500,000 in their leadership political action committees in the first quarter of the
Wisconsin voters — including those in Grant and Lafayette counties — approved two Republican-backed, election-related ballot measures in last week’s spring primary that have some implications for the upcoming 2024
Wisconsin’s presidential primary results show the ways voters in Grant and Lafayette counties aligned with and differed from voters for each major party statewide, with the state expected to have
Iowa House Republicans passed a bill this week that would reshape social studies education in the state, restricting curricula to topics and ideologies that support majority members’ lens of history.
The gymnasium at Table Mound Elementary School was all but empty when volunteers started counting that site’s ballots in the Republican Party’s Jan. 15 first-in-the-nation Iowa Caucuses last week. A