Fresh off what many perceived as a convincing debate performance, JD Vance was scheduled to make a Massachusetts funding raising-swing this weekend.
Anyone who is registered to vote can vote early in Massachusetts. During early voting, each city or town in the state is required to have guaranteed weekend voting hours. Each city or town must have at least one early voting site, according to the Secretary of the Commonwealth.
This fall, Massachusetts voters will face the largest crop of statewide ballot questions in years, many of them involving complex issues.
Several Massachusetts ballot questions are shaping up to be expensive, competitive contests. Here's a quick breakdown of the people and groups financially backing the campaigns for and against each measure.
The couple, ages 56 and 54, each face three felony counts of wrongful voting, New Hampshire Attorney General John Formella announced.
Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren and her Republican challenger John Deaton will debate October 15 at WBZ-TV. Moderator Jon Keller wants your questions.
Election Day is Nov. 5. Here's all you need to know about voting and what's on the ballot in Massachusetts. Why it matters: Bay State voters will decide several crucial ballot questions this year, including the fate of the MCAS exam,
As we get closer to Election Day, police in Dartmouth, Massachusetts say there's been a rise in calls related to politics.
The presidential election between Harris and Trump is set for Nov. 5. This is also a chance for many districts to elect new state legislators. Here's all you need to know about your voting options and who's on the ballot.
A Massachusetts couple has been charged felony counts of wrongful voting after allegedly casting ballots in New Hampshire.
GLOUCESTER — Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance swung through deep-blue Massachusetts on Saturday. He asked North Shore supporters to open their wallets for the Republican ticket as protesters, including boot-hatted perennial candidate and Gloucester native Vermin Supreme, demonstrated outside.
For more than 4.6 million people living in the United States, the right to vote has been taken away due to a felony conviction, with some states even placing lifetime bans on the formerly incarcerated.