Join us here on Tuesday at noon for our Reddit 'Ask Me Anything' A lot has happened in Indiana politics in 2024, and it might be hard to decipher what exactly is going on in the Hoosier State as you prepare to head to the polls this November.
Hoosiers going to the polls in November will find a question on their ballots asking if they want to amend the Indiana Constitution to revise the list of elected state officials who can succeed the governor.
With less than a month to go before early voting starts in Indiana, Monday marked the first day back for many longtime seasonal poll workers at the Marion County Clerk’s Office, one of many county offices statewide hoping to change Indiana’s historically low turnout rates.
People in Indiana who want to vote in this falls election have about a month left to register or update their registration the 2024 general election deadline is Monday, Oct. 7.
Indiana youth will have the opportunity to design the sticker that Hoosiers receive when they vote in November. Officials with the Indiana Secretary of State’s office
Before a free show put on by Indianapolis-based comedian and actor Mike Epps, Mayor Joe Hogsett told the audience he was “running from things” while talking about being registered to vote.
As November’s general election approaches, Indiana residents will be able to decide on who represents them in the U.S. House of Representatives. For residents of Indiana’s first district in the U.S. House of Representatives,
Indiana gubernatorial candidate Jennifer McCormick fielded questions from a crowded union hall Tuesday evening.
According to the Secretary of State's office, participants must submit their designs via email to [email protected] or on a printed official entry form sent in by mail. The entry form can be found at Secretary of State: 2024 I Voted Sticker Design Competition (in.gov).
Dubois County Councilman Daryl Schmitt is the newest member of the Indiana Senate after a private Republican caucus chose Schmitt Wednesday night to replace Mark Messmer.
Similarly, despite my 40-year history of donating to Indiana University, I have decided to halt my donations until IU President Pamela Whitten resigns or is fired and the trustees cooperate with faculty to find her successor (as they did not do in finding Michael McRobbie’s successor).