Poll shows that a surprising percentage of former poll workers believe that poll workers might try to interfere with the election.
How likely is it that poll workers will attempt to tamper with the election in November? % who say it is very or somewhat likely U.S. adult citizens: 39% People who have been poll workers: 36% Democrats: 28% Republicans: 55% https://t.co/SJ2ktRHVie pic.twitter.com/om64hINTGY
Prosecutors say John Courtney Pollard, 62, threatened a state political party operative, vowing to "skin you alive." He was arrested Monday in Philadelphia.
The survey puts Harris at 45%, Trump at 44%, a closer race than the poll found in August. Then, in the wake of the Democratic National Convention, Harris led Trump by 5 percentage points, 48% to 43%. The poll of 1,000 likely voters, taken by landline and cellphone Oct. 14-18, has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.
Millions of voters have cast their ballots in the 2024 election. But the results offer only a sliver of insight into the final results.
In the latest poll for the race for East Baton Rouge mayor-president, Ted James is in the lead by one percentage point.
A new survey by YouGov shows that Republicans have lost faith in poll workers and fear they will tamper with the election results.
Experts say these poll workers could sow distrust in democracy and bolster court cases challenging the election.
Welcome to the online version of From the Politics Desk, an evening newsletter that brings you the NBC News Politics team’s latest reporting and analysis from the campaign trail, the White House and Capitol Hill.
Almost two weeks to Election Day, I feel more uncertain about this year’s result than any election I’ve covered professionally. Some of that is due to the polls – they’re really tight – but it’s also because for every good signal for Donald Trump,
There's no place in our nation for any attempt to stop the counting of valid votes, prevent legitimate voters from casting ballots or intimidate voters and poll workers.
A bakery near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, is conducting its own presidential poll with cookie sales for each candidate.