News

What was split-ticket voting's 2024 impact? Donald Trump was declared the president-elect early Wednesday after he won the Electoral College and was on track to take the popular vote.
The Argus Leader had an interesting article about split ticket voting in South Dakota. This is an anomaly I have noticed before. Why does such a staunch Republican state like South Dakota (or ...
Why split-ticket voting is a recipe for what everyone hates most about D.C. If you vote to ensure that a Republican Congress faces President Clinton, you forfeit your ability to complain about ...
Split-ticket voting involves a voter selecting candidates of different political parties for different offices on the same ballot, such as choosing the Democratic presidential nominee and a GOP ...
Turns out, Senate Republicans didn't need split-ticket voters to keep the Senate. Quite the opposite, actually: The 2016 election saw the highest percentage of STRAIGHT-ticket voters in more than ...
Split-ticket voting, once common, has in recent elections been rare in this polarized country. In 2012, for instance, only 6 percent of congressional districts — just 26 out of 435 — went ...
Those voting in Michigan's Nov. 5 presidential election can split their tickets and vote for a mix of Democratic, Republican or third-party candidates. That's different from the Feb. 27 and Aug. 6 ...
A decline in split-ticket voting appears to be just another example of how calcified and partisan our electorate has become. Even fewer Americans may be willing to split their votes this election ...
Central Valley GOP incumbents will likely need support from split-ticket voters — those who vote for some Republicans and some Democrats — to win in November, experts say. How many split ...
Split-ticket voting involves a voter selecting candidates of different political parties for different offices on the same ballot, such as choosing the Democratic presidential nominee and a GOP ...
Split-ticket voting involves a voter selecting candidates of different political parties for different offices on the same ballot, such as choosing the Democratic presidential nominee and a GOP ...