Vice President Kamala Harris will face questions from undecided and persuadable voters in Pennsylvania on Wednesday as she looks to capitalize in the key battleground state in the waning days of the presidential election.
In an election that will likely be decided on the margins, the votes of Jewish Pennsylvanians could be key to determining who wins the commonwealth’s 19 electoral votes – and with it, the presidency.
All over the country, people with more education are leaning more Democratic, a shift that's reshaping American politics.
Fewer Pennsylvanians are voting by mail in 2024 than they did in in the last presidential election, during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Pennsylvania voters are expected to play a pivotal role in the Nov. 5 general election, with control of the White House and both chambers of Congress and the state Legislature hanging in the balance
An influx of Yelp reviews – many of them bogus – of a Pennsylvania McDonald’s that former President Donald Trump visited Sunday, led the review platform to temporarily freeze the franchise’s Yelp page.
In both presidential elections and midterms since the 1960s, voter turnout among 18 to 24-year-olds has been far below any other age group.
One of the most important signs of how people will vote is how much education they have. Voters who attended college are much more likely to back Democrats, while those without degrees usually go Republican.
Pennsylvania's early voting, also known as "on-demand mail ballot voting" is available until Oct. 29. Here is everything you need to know to vote now.
Pennsylvania election officials say that voters have returned ballots that were ripped, had coffee spilled on them, or even burned